Vicious Chihuahua, Loitering Cows, 911 for Snow White, Mini Horses, Notebook Assault, Child Barricaded

Montna Police Reports10:46 a.m. A woman on Klondyke Loop reported that her daughter pushed her dresser in front of her door and refused to go to school.

11:14 a.m. A woman called in to ask if a deputy would accompany her while she removed her belongings from her ex-boyfriend’s house.

11:25 a.m. Several residents of an apartment complex on Southside Drive reported that local transients have been sleeping under their porches and parked vehicles.

12:21 p.m. A habitually naughty little chihuahua was loose and chasing children through the streets of Somers.

2:10 p.m. A 2-year-old in Columbia Falls called 911 looking for Snow White.

4:18 p.m. An intoxicated Hungry Horse man threatened to beat someone up.

9:13 p.m. Ten cows were seen loitering on Amdahl Lane.

9:33 p.m. A dozen or so teenagers were heard screaming help near a church on Whitefish Stage. Apparently this was a youth group and no one actually needed help. They were told to be quiet.

2:12 a.m. Two miniature horses were seen on McCaffery Lane in Bigfork.

3:44 a.m. A woman on Shady Lane hit her husband with a notebook.

MORE>>> Flathead Beacon

When 40 Acres = 18,000 Acres

snowy mountains montanaSometimes a little means a lot.

Certainly that’s the case with a mere 10-yard-wide connection of private land with public land that will provide a wealth of access to hunters and hikers in the Big Snowy Mountains starting Oct. 26, the opening of the deer and elk rifle season. 

That’s when property acquired by the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, which is selling the 40-acre parcel to Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, will be opened to public use. The land is located about 20 miles south of Lewistown, west off Red Hill Road.

“This is a major, major access point,” said Bruce Auchly, information officer for FWP in Great Falls.

South of Lewistown

The land is located near the northeast corner of the Lewis and Clark National Forest, which surrounds the Big Snowy Mountains, an island range in central Montana. On its southwest corner the small parcel barely touches the forest land, but it's a sufficient abutment to allow hikers and hunters into No Name Canyon and the East Fork of Big Spring Creek, as well as the surrounding area — about 18,000 acres.


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An Unexpected Victim of Climate Change: Moose

Montana moose climate changePolar bears serve as the poster children for climate change. But global warming also threatens many other species that don't get as much news coverage.

Moose in the Rocky Mountains become the latest climate change catastrophe icon recently, as their populations have plummeted with warming temperatures. But it's not just heat stress that is killing them off. Biologists are finding brain worms, liver flukes and ticks, as many as 150,000 on a single moose, are infecting the population to death.

Increased temperatures are allowing northern forest ticks to survive over the winter, when the blood-suckers and their eggs would normally die. This leaves an infected moose with no respite as the ticks breed again in the spring. The moose will continue to scratch and rub off its fur, develop anemia, and eventually die of emaciation.

MORE>>>Discovery

Another "Best" for the Last Best Place

Montana young adultsA new survey shows that more folks may want to swap beaches and cities for big skies and open spaces.

Popular states like California and New York are no longer topping the "best states" list in the opinion of America's new workforce - with the latest survey showing that Montana ranks fourth in the nation.

"You can go forty minutes in any direction and do pretty much whatever you want, fish or hunt," said student Brad Harrelson.

"There are plenty of jobs and it's definitely a growing state," added Professor Paul Pope.

The Treasure State is a hot commodity, showing up as one of the best states for young adults.

"This economy has created some very steep challenges for young people, they are graduating from college with an unprecedented amount of student loan debt and they're entering a job market where the unemployment rate for young people is about thirteen percent," said senior financial analyst Richard Barrington.

MORE>>>KPAX

Mountain Lions Now Touring Missoula

Montana mountain lion"Parents:  We want to inform you that three mountain lions were seen on the 2600 block of Arcadia on Sunday, October 13, 2013. These mountain lions were two blocks from Cold Springs Elementary School. Bob Wiesner from FWP is in the area tracking the mountain lions with dogs this morning. He can be reached by cell phone at 406-240-3296 with any reports about mountain lion activity.

"Please continue to send reports to Mr. Wiesner and report to www.missoulabears.org and the Missoula Bears Facebook page."

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Helena Geocaching a National Award Winner!

Helena Montana geocachingRand McNally has long pointed the way to destinations for travelers, but it’s now directing those who enjoy geocaching to Helena.

The company’s Best of the Road awards, which in past years has celebrated towns for most fun, most patriotic, friendliest, most beautiful and best for food, added a category this year for best for geocaching.

Geocaching is kind of a game of hide and seek. Caches, which can be small, hand-sized containers or metal boxes about the size of a shoebox, are hidden and people use GPS devices or smartphones with global positioning system technology to try to find those caches.

A cache can be little more than a logbook, pencil or a few trinkets for people to take with them as a souvenir in exchange for something they leave behind for the next person to find. The contents of a cache can also be more elaborate.

“Geocaches on the Helena GeoTour are so rewarding that even locals swear they learn new things about their town,” the Rand McNally website noted in its praise of Helena from among five finalists.

“I was convinced by the words taken directly from the geocaching community: This is an authentically engaging place to geocache. You can feel the historical connection to the gold treasure hunters from long ago while using today’s satellites and smartphone apps. The gorgeous scenery just adds to the adventure,” a judge wrote on why Helena was honored.

MORE>>>Billings Gazette

Police Report: Howling Dog, Random Explosions. Happy Goats At Large, Jeep Runs Stop Sign, Quonset Intrusion

Flathead Police Report9:12 a.m. Reportedly, a hound dog on Flathead Drive has a strong set of lungs.

10:55 a.m. A Somers resident complained that she habitually wakes up each night because another local woman likes to stay up late exploding things.

10:58 a.m. A Kalispell resident complained that someone broke into his quonset hut.


11:11 a.m. A resident of Highway 35 in Kalispell reported that her debit card and mail key had been stolen.

2:16 p.m. A wallet found in the woods was returned to its owner.

4:00 p.m. A Lakeside resident reported that the neighbors were out chopping down trees on their property line.

6:24 p.m. Numerous loose goats ran free and happy near Highway 206 in Columbia Fall. They were rounded up and returned to their pen.

8:18 p.m. Someone watched a Jeep run a stop sign on Airport Road.

9:24 p.m. A Valley Rose Lane resident called 911 to report that his drunken roommate had returned home. He didn’t want to deal with her and planned on leaving, but anticipated that she would trash the house while he was out.

More>>>Flathead Beacon

Montana 7th BEST for Taxes-2014

Montana taxesMontana has the seventh best tax climate for businesses in the 50 states in the 2014 ratings released Wednesday by the Tax Foundation.

Gov. Steve Bullock and a Montana Chamber of Commerce executive praised the state’s ratings as showing Montana is an attractive place to do business.

The director of the Montana Budget and Policy Center said the ratings fail to measure the state’s quality of life or the business climate that helps sustain it.

Montana ranked eighth in the foundation’s 2013 business tax climate index released last year.

However, a foundation spokesman said the group revised its methodology this year and applied it to last year’s rankings. Montana moved up to seventh last year under these revised calculations.

In any event, Montana was in the top 10 both years, in part because it doesn’t have a statewide general sales tax.

MORE>>> The Missoulian