Crown of the Continent - National Geographic Travel
Transcription
Crown of the Continent - National Geographic Travel
Page 1 What Is Geotourism All About? According to National Geographic, geotourism “sustains or enhances the geographical character of a place—its environment, culture, aesthetics, heritage, and the well-being of its residents.” Geotravelers, then, are people who like that idea, who enjoy authentic sense of place and care about maintaining it. They find that relaxing and having fun gets better—provides a richer experience—when they get involved in the place and learn about what goes on there. Geotravelers soak up local culture, hire local guides, buy local foods, protect the environment, and take pride in discovering and observing local customs. Travel-spending choices can help or hurt, so geotravelers patronize establishments that care about conservation, preservation, beautification, and benefits to local people. Learn more at www.CrownoftheContinent.net. Map Key er w ID DIV H ig h w P 22 u i d (BLOOD I.R.) 6 Road closed in winter k Mil 9080 ft Chief Mountain K 2767 m 10466 ft 3190 m Babb h R McDonald Creek a N HE-SU -T -TO GOING Logan Pass P A R K 6646 ft 2025 m g U n e IVIDE UN NT IN EN TAL D 49 M Triple Divide Peak This spire is the three-faceted jewel in the Crown, dividing Rocky Mountain waters among the Saskatchewan River’s amble to the Arctic Ocean, the Missouri-Mississippi’s slide to the Gulf of Mexico, and the Columbia’s plunge to the Pacific Ocean. t t h T d id M e (photo below) la th Sun Weed Wacker Rodeo FOREST ea Augusta The Old West lingers in Augusta’s cow country saloons such as the Buckhorn Bar, where backcountry wranglers swap tales with cowboys and visitors. But mosey over to the Latigo & Lace cappuccino bar and art gallery, and you’re in a different era, pardner. d W I L D E R N E S S Holland Lake Lodge Una Mt. K Holland Since 1924, log resort has Lake been a scenic base for boating and nature hikes to Holland Falls. 8580 ft 2615 m NATIONAL Missoula Carousel and EArlee Caras Park Ride one of 38 wooden ponies carved to restore this 1918 carousel, while hearing a 400-pipe organ play notes directed by perforations in continuous paper rolls. From here, explore funky downtown Missoula or stroll trails along the Clark Fork River. Seeley Lake Gus, the world’s largest larch tree, dominates hiking and cross-country ski trails at Girard Grove near Seeley Lake. In town, Littlebird’s Schoolhouse Café serves up a health-minded menu—and indigenous art—within log walls axed and adzed just a century ago. E Seeley Lake Tamarack Festival E Seeley 287 9202 ft 2805 m WILDERNESS ot ckfo 113° F or k 93 Race to the Sky 90 EClinton Lincoln E 200 141 ar k HELENA FOREST 200 E Missoula 114°W 2868 m BOB MARSHALL WILDERNESS COMPLEX, MT By horse or by backpack, explore these 1.5 million acres (607,000 hectares) of roadless, wild nature. Forty-five outfitting businesses provide backcountry adventures under Forest Service permit. The complex includes three separate wilderness areas—the Great Bear, the Bob Marshall, and the Scapegoat. Helmville Lolo E Scapegoat Wilderness This area was added to the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex through citizen advocacy. The massive limestone cliffs of Scapegoat Mountain anchor “the Bob’s” Chinese Wall. 9411 ft Red Mountain K NATIONAL E Ovando G Cl Scapegoat Mountain K BLACKFOOT-CLEARWATER WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA Bla International Wildlife Film Festival SCAPEGOAT Blackfoot Challenge Blackfoot Challenge interpretive center in tiny Ovando shows you how ranchers, anglers, and public agencies allied to save 80,000 natural acres (32,000 hectares) from exurban sprawl. Next door, learn about the old days at the Brand Bar Museum. Lake Double Arrow Resort Frenchtown MISSOULA INTL. AIRPORT American Legion Rodeo and Parade FOREST E Missoula Aerial Fire Depot and Smokejumper Visitor Center “Winter surprises the human senses with sometimes deceptive sights and sounds. The roar of a low-flying jet turns out to be the sound of an avalanche plowing its way through dense, cold air. What looks like an approaching swarm of bugs resolves into a synchronized swirl of vividly marked bohemian waxwings, eyes masked in black, tails fringed in yellow, and wings tipped as though dipped in bright red sealing wax.” — David Thomas, Fernie, BC WILDERNESS Seeley Lake RATTLESNAKE 93 “Winter is when mountain ecosystems rest and recharge. Snow is next summer’s habitat for fish and waterfowl, and January's deep freezes limit colonies of insect pests hiding under the bark of pine trees.” — Environmental scientist Erin Sexton, Hungry Horse, MT Augusta S LOLO Ignatius Winter LOBBY OF LAKE MCDONALD LODGE, GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT CHUCKHANEY.COM MONTANA SCENIC LOOP Circumnavigate the Bob Marshall Wilderness on 400 miles (644 kilometers) of two-lane highway studded with hospitable towns and stunning views, including those in the heavily forested valleys between Seeley and Swan Lakes, where you can explore hundreds of lakes and streams. e E St. ERavalli 12 Gibson Reservoir g Fk . Holland Peak K F rk OOP n Cl ar k NATIONAL S. Fo a NATIONAL BISON RANGE KAYAKER AT THE BIGFORK WHITEWATER FESTIVAL, MT CHUCKHANEY.COM V ID L DI E TA EN N e A SCENIC L NTAN MO e y l l V a R E Dixon CLARK g n 9356 ft 2852 m WILDERNESS WILDERNESS E Moiese at he ad CONTIN B O B n o MOUNTAIN GOATS MICHAEL MELFORD I 9289 ft 2831 m a ot ro er MOUNTAINS Ninepipe Res. RESERVATION 200 90 Swan Peak K R r v e R i i itt Fl TRIBAL Sun River Wildlife Management Area The Sun River Canyon reverberates in late fall from the clash of bighorn rams knocking heads for the right to pass their genes through to next spring’s lambs. Below the canyon, in the wildlife management area itself, watch in winter for herds of stately elk and swift and elegant pronghorn antelope. M A R S H A L L ECondon MISSION 212 LEWIS AND F O R E S T MTS. ERonan 9392 ft 2863 m 83 s Wild Hor s B tle L it INDIAN Teton n s Polson A N A T I O N A L a E 48° Pine Butte Guest Ranch The Nature Conservancy runs this ranch resort to share Rocky Mountain Front views and biodiversity and to fund additions to the 100,000 acres (40,500 ha) of ranchland already protected from development along Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front. Rocky Mountain K w i 35 RED BUSES OF GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT Board one of Glacier National Park’s fleet of 33 soft-top tour buses introduced in the 1930s to shuttle sightseers over the Continental Divide. The original red buses built by White Motor Company were restored as a gift by Ford Motor Company, which fitted them with stronger chassis and clean burning propane engines. S M Flathead Lake Mack Days Mission Mountains Wilderness Areas Ragged peaks jut 7,000 feet (2,134 meters) above valley floors in adjoining wilderness areas managed by the Forest Service and Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. Portions of the tribal wilderness are closed to humans when grizzlies congregate to feed on alpine insects. You can find access permits at stores on the Flathead Reservation. CROSS-COUNTRY SKIERS NEAR GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT DIGITAL VISION / ALAMY B E A R W I L D E R N E S S Swan Ecosystem Center The Swan River Valley preserves its uncommon beauty thanks in part to the Swan Ecosystem Center in Condon, where residents support public agencies and private property owners in sustainable management of their lands. Trail maps and wildlife information are available at the visitor center. MISSION FESTIVALS & EVENTS E Flathead Lake S Arm E Pablo Symes Hot Springs Hotel Mission-style Symes Hot Springs Hotel remains contentedly stuck in the 1940s with neither room phones nor televisions. Several nearby businesses also offer mud and mineral baths to soothe away the anxieties of modern times. Dupuyer g ESwan S w a wann Lake E Pablo Reservoir 382 Overnight in a centenarian homestead house dl eF or k n Swan Lake E Main Street and Cherry Festival Music, Crafts, Sports & Nature To Great Falls F L A T H E A D Woods Bay E FLATHEAD From Crowsnest Pass, Alberta, you can glimpse the results of a vast wildfire in the superheated summer of 2003. Further west along Highway 3 in British Columbia, red swaths of dead, fire-prone forest map the invasions of windblown pine beetle swarms. Inn Dupuyer Bed and Breakfast Bigfork Check out the artists and actors in Bigfork, a walker’s delight of galleries, eateries, and Bigfork Summer Playhouse on the north shore of Flathead Lake. Stroll the Swan River Nature Corridor on your own or in a group guided by the Flathead Audubon Society or the Montana Native Plant Society. 93 Lonepine E Four Horns Lake RED BUSES ON GOING-TO-THE-SUN ROAD CAROL POLICH “Once we had 150 glaciers in this park. Now, there are only 26 left, and we expect them all to be gone by 2030.” — Dan Fagre, U.S. Geological Survey’s resident climate watcher a s 209 Flathead 28 Hot Springs E 89 G R E A T R n Bigfork E E Lakeside EBig Glacier Park (photo below) a i Elmo e e a Somers E 2 How This MapGuide Was Made The people of the Crown of the Continent helped build this MapGuide by nominating the places and telling the stories of this region. A diverse regional alliance, the Crown of the Continent Geotourism Council, has formed to engage visitors and residents in strategies that sustain and enhance the special qualities of this transboundary region. n ici E Essex 82 Rollins ed 2 M O N T A N A Flathead Lake Preserving the clarity of Flathead Lake from contamination by industry, agriculture, or careless recreation is a Montana obsession. The state maintains 12 parks and anglers’ access points to the largest body of fresh water in the contiguous western United States. EEast M P OO 5220 ft 1591 m o Tw Climate Change “The glaciers and snow packs supplying water for large, dry areas of both nations are rapidly shrinking. Significantly less water will flow from the Crown in the near future. The frequency and intensity of forest fires and the spread of mountain pine beetle can be expected to increase with the warming climate.” — U. of Alberta Professor David Schindler, Alberta’s preeminent authority on climate change L a OOP IC L EN SC l Marias Pass Arts in the Park FLATHEAD NATIONAL FOREST E Browning IC L C EN AN A NT MO F n Echo Lake Café Join the Swan Rangers here for breakfast before the hiking club’s Saturday outings by boot, snowshoe, or ski. Hungry Horse Reservoir Bigfork Whitewater Festival 48° R E S E R V A T I O N Blackfoot S NA u Hungry Horse Kalispell E Somers Cajun Street Dance A TR AM E A NT MO E G Kila K 464 Road closed in winter Red Buses of Glacier National Park N o E Coram GLACIER PARK INTL. AIRPORT E eek k Cr Cut Ban 3091 m Hike the cliffs above Kalispell to view the Flathead Valley and Glacier National Park. EMarion 47° Glacier Park Boat Company Little Chief has plied the windblown waters of St. Mary Lake since 1925, and has been joined by four younger wooden tour boats on Glacier’s deep-blue lakes. Join your captain for a 2-mi (3-km) hike to St. Mary Falls. Rafting for Refuse 206 Ashley Lake I N D I A N West Glacier E 2 Little Bitterroot Lake ALBERTA BRITISH COLUMBIA MONTANA including Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park 89 Mt. Stimson K 10142 ft Learn conservation forestry from Roy, Ben, and their mom. Sawdust covers the floor but, please, no spitting. Park Café You might have to wait on the porch for your turn at a slice of homemade pie and a milkshake. You might also try the nearby Johnson’s Family-Style Restaurant or Two Sisters Café. In Babb, chow down at the Cattle Baron Supper Club. A RO Jackson Glacier T O-T NG I GO Columbia Falls E 93 B L A C K F E E T Mary St. Mary Lake St. Mary Falls Lone Pine State Park Whitefish Winter Carnival Whitefish, MT (first weekend in February) Parades, fireworks, guided art walk, hockey tournament, musical performances, and the Penguin Plunge benefit for Special Olympics Race to the Sky Lincoln/Seeley Lake, MT (mid-February) Longest sled dog race in the lower 48, featuring over 20 teams from the U.S. and Canada; many volunteers needed—no experience necessary Fernie Griz Days Fernie, BC (March) Parade, carnival, sporting events, and parties to celebrate the season’s snow Flathead Lake Mack Days Polson, MT (spring and fall) Months-long, semi-annual fishing derby to restore native bull trout by removing introduced lake trout International Wildlife Film Festival Missoula, MT (second weekend of May) Headquartered at the Roxy Theater in downtown Missoula and includes a “WildWalk Parade” Family Forestry Expo near Columbia Falls, MT (mid-May) Logging sports, mill tours, nature trail, bird watching, and native plants Bigfork Whitewater Festival Bigfork, MT (end of May) Kayaking races on the Class V “wild mile” of the Swan River for hundreds of competitors, weekend of competition and festivities Waterton Wildflower Festival Waterton Park, AB (mid-June) Celebration of Waterton Lakes National Park’s wildflowers, which make up more than half of all wildflowers in Alberta; guided hikes, workshops, and activities for all ages Rafting for Refuse West Glacier, MT (third Saturday in June) Guides and free rafts available for volunteers to pick trash along two forks of the Flathead River, followed by volleyball and barbecue Coal Miner Days Sparwood, BC (third weekend in June) Community festival with a parade, games, and dances Kite Festival Near Pincher Creek, AB (third weekend in June) Public kite-flying (free kites while supplies last), professional flyers, and plenty of activities for kids American Legion Rodeo and Parade Augusta, MT (last Sunday in June) One of the largest one-day rodeos in the area, Old-Time Wild Cow Milking, and a parade International Old Time Accordion Championships Kimberley, BC (second week of July) Contests for cash prizes among musicians of all ages, dance floor for spectators Weed Wacker Rodeo Sun Canyon, near Augusta, MT (midJuly) Fun weed pull, education about the noxious weeds that threaten the Rocky Mountain Front Somers Cajun Street Dance Somers, MT (third Saturday in July) Cajun food, music, and dancing to raise funds for Somers Volunteer Fire Department Main Street and Cherry Festival Polson, MT (third weekend of July) Flathead Lake’s famous cherries and other local goods from over 100 vendors Arts in the Park Kalispell, MT (end of July) Arts and crafts fair organized by Hockaday Museum of Art, food, entertainment, children’s activities, and local and national artists Seeley Lake Tamarack Festival Seeley Lake, MT (midOctober) Celebration of golden tamarack trees, performances, interpretive center, bike race, fun run, dance, barbecue, maps to the best trees, and Alpine Artisans’ self-guided Tour of the Arts Peigan Friends Along the River Fish Rescue Near Fort Macleod, AB (early October) Volunteer gathering to rescue trout from irrigation canal that quickly dries up when its supply is shut off for the season, responsible for the rescue of over 250,000 fish in event’s first 17 years Santa Claus Parade Fort Macleod, AB (end of November) Largest Santa Claus parade in western Canada, floats, marching bands, horse-drawn carriages, and of course, Santa Claus himself ESt. 213 2 RO AD s Alpine section of road closed in winter RBM Lumber Mill Moose’s Saloon Crown of the Continent Lower St. Mary Lake Take a day climb to a receding ice field, one of several good hikes in Many Glacier Valley Grinnell Glacier D O Road closed in winter Grinnell Glacier Hike N AT I O N A L CO Family Forestry Expo Whitefish WATERTON-GLACIER INTERNATIONAL PEACE PARK Local Rotary Clubs on each side of the 49th parallel inspired the U.S. Congress and Canada’s Parliament to establish the world’s first International Peace Park in 1932. Rotarians, park managers, and school children reaffirm the peace with an annual hands across the border pledge. The conjoined park is now a United Nations World Heritage site. Duck Lake E Lake Sherburne PEACE PARK Lake McDonald E Montana Coffee Traders Tenderfoots might prefer these organic, fair-trade, shade-grown roasts to grounds boiled over a campfire, cowboy style. 49° E 89 G L A C I E R i h (photo below at left) Whitefish Winter Carnival FOREST 115° Carway Whitefish Lake NATIONAL Copyright © 2008 National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C. HANDS ACROSS THE BORDER EVENT CHRIS PETERSON Mountain View INTERNATIONAL FOREST 40 Visit www.CROWNOFTHECONTINENT.net to learn more about the Crown of the Continent and this spectacular landscape. Take your time at this river-rock restaurant and B&B, meticulously constructed over 39 years beginning in 1889. KAINAI GLACIER K Going-to-the-Sun Road An engineering marvel completed in 1932, the cliff-hugging Going-to-theSun Road traverses the Continental Divide. If you’re there in spring, when snowplows clear the higher passes, cycle or walk the traffic-free lower sections. See harlequin ducks ride the riffles of McDonald Creek, and spot grizzly bears emerging amid the avalanche chutes. Trumbull Creek Educational Forest See examples of Montana’s native conifers and learn about sustainable forest management while walking this short and easy trail. Tally Lake 62 Cobblestone Manor Goat Haunt E West Glacier Change is glacial in this gateway village, where you can enjoy the same general store, saloon, restaurant, and service station that have served park visitors since 1938. Whitefish Lake City Beach Downtown Whitefish DOWNTOWN WHITEFISH, MT The smoky tang of steam locomotives once filled the air. Now inhale the sweeter perfume of craft beer and gourmet coffee in this railroad frontier town transformed into a recreation hub with nightlife and an array of top restaurants. Pescado Blanco and Tupelo Grille serve locally grown foods with an ethnic twist. Cardston E IL TRA OY WB O C he Crown of the Continent—spanning corners of Alberta, British Columbia, and Montana—provides visitors with 42,000 square kilometers (16,000 square miles) of spellbinding scenery and a good chance to spy bighorn sheep, mountain goats, elk, or, with luck, the monarch of the Crown—the grizzly bear. The region includes two United Nations World Heritage Sites. One, Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park, protects headwaters of three continental river systems, and affirms the wisdom of transcending political boundaries in the management of shared ecosystems. The second, Alberta’s Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, attests to the region’s 6,000 years of human economy derived from the diversity of the landscape and its wildlife. Not long ago, visitors to remote mountain valleys were likely to be horse-mounted hunters seeking hides and heads as trophies. Today’s backcountry trekkers are most often birders, fly casters, photographers, or snowshoers. Many of today’s year-round residents first came as tourists who, smitten by the mountain vistas, returned with their professions or savings—and their urban tastes and expectations. While ranching and woodcutting continue to define some small communities, demographics are changing rapidly as builders cater to migrants and weekenders who may not be aware of how their choices impact the ecosystems they came to enjoy. Along timbered valleys and across open foothills, landowners, conservationists, and many of the newcomers themselves, are joining to sustain working ranchlands, clear streams, and free-ranging wildlife. Increasingly, those fortunate enough to visit or live in the Crown of the Continent are seeking less to dominate the landscape than to find a personal harmony with it. — David Thomas, writer, Fernie, BC Highest peak in park Bowman Lake FLATHEAD DOWNTOWN WHITEFISH AFTER SEASON’S FIRST SNOW CHUCKHANEY.COM Spring Upper Waterton Lake Kintla Peak K 10101 ft 3079 m f EOlney Travel at dog speed on a snow sled pulled by ten Alaskan Huskies. AK E L Flathe a e BYWAY k WATERTON- e t LAKE KOOCAN USA SCE NI C Par Waterton s Dog Sled Adventures e KL OOP EP AR PE AC g i FARMERS MARKET, MISSOULA, MT PAM VOTH / GLACIER COUNTRY M n h i LO OP St. Mary Reservoir Choose lenient meadow loops or bottom-punishing day rides to ridgelines and high-country lakes. Waterton Wildflower Festival M.V. International Kilmorey Lodge Mt. Cleveland 8036 ft 2465 m l 37 PEACE PARK LOOP tle West Cas a NAT. PARK Comfort her in eiderdown at this romantic inn. Magrath E R E S E R V E) Mountain Meadow Trail Rides Canoe rentals for shoreline bear spotting NATIONAL EP AR K lly E 5 I N D I AN E WATERTON LAKES NATIONAL PARK Hike across wildflowered hills or drive to Red Rock Canyon and be alert for bears. The park is the only protected corridor for Rocky Mountain wildlife moving between Canada and the United States. 6 Cameron Lake Nasukoin Mountain K EStryker B HE -S OR s e AD l g IS l n R 9645 ft 2940 m Kintla Lake EHill Waterton Reservoir WATERTON LAKES Mt. Blakiston K Fortine E NATIONAL FORESTS Millions of acres of public land guarantee freedom to roam. Many state, provincial, and federal agencies care for these lands, but the U.S. Forest Service manages the greatest acreage by far. Across five national forests, visitors can find solitude and discover nature. Ideal for raft or kayak, three forks of the Flathead River are congressionally protected as Wild and Scenic Rivers. Glenwood Red Rock Canyon e FLATHEAD FOREST R AMT National Geographic and the people of Alberta, British Columbia, and Montana present this Geotourism MapGuide to the Crown of the Continent region. Lead project partners include the National Geographic Center for Sustainable Destinations, National Geographic Maps, and Crown of the Continent Geotourism Council, with regional coordination provided by the National Parks Conservation Association and the Chinook Institute for Community Stewardship. sustains or enhances the geographical character of a place — its environment, culture, aesthetics, heritage, and the well-being of its residents. i a d NATIONAL Lake Koocanusa This transboundary reservoir fills and flushes according to demand for power at Libby Dam and the downstream needs of endangered Kootenai River white sturgeon. The name of this 90-mile (145-kilometer)-long impoundment is an amalgam of Kootenay, Canada, and USA. PEA C Libby Dam “More and more of our customers demand fresh local food, such as grass-fed local beef steaks. For us, that’s an important part of the wilderness pack trip. It just tastes better.” — Corlene Martin, Bob Marshall Wilderness camp cook, Choteau, MT geo.tour.ism (n): Tourism that stle g a “Who's your farmer? People want to know. Family farms are central to the culture and beauty of the Flathead Valley. This area is well known for wild foods like huckleberries, morel mushrooms, whitefish, and venison, but we also have the right soil and climate to grow cherries and plums, pork and beef, and all kinds of vegetables. Local farmers have developed a marketing network to provide local food to restaurants, markets, bakeries, and a bed and breakfast. Our FarmHands map guides you to 60 Flathead farms and 28 businesses that serve local food.” — Pam Gerwe, Purple Frog Farm, Whitefish, MT We gratefully acknowledge funding support from the following: Alberta Ministry of Tourism, Parks, Recreation and Culture; Alberta SouthWest Regional Alliance; Glacier National Park with the Glacier Natural History Association; Henry P. Kendall Foundation; Kootenay Rockies Tourism, British Columbia; The Sustainability Fund; Trail of the Great Bear; Travel Montana geotourism consortium, including the Montana Department of Commerce, the regional tourism commissions of Glacier Country, Russell Country, and Gold West Country, and the visitors bureaus of Flathead Valley and Whitefish; U.S. Department of the Interior-Bureau of Land Management; U.S. Forest Service with Montana Scenic Loop; University of Montana Public Policy Research Institute; Waterton Chamber of Commerce; Waterton Lakes National Park; Wilburforce Foundation; and Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative. Text by David Thomas and Steve Thompson; David Jeffery, editor. Ca n GLACIER NATIONAL PARK Lace up your boots and explore this backcountry wilderness woven with 700 miles (1,100 kilometers) of hiking trails. While just a few glaciers remain, the park’s majestic landscape is the product of massive ice sheets sculpting ancient sea beds into rugged mountains and emerald valleys starting two million years ago. S Eating Local H R l Yaak E a AKAMINA-KISHINENA W Eureka E 508 M.V. International Built at Goat Haunt, Montana, the wooden-hulled International never motors far from home. Climb aboard the vessel that since 1927 has shuttled 1.5 million visitors across the liquid border shimmering between its port of birth and Waterton Park townsite in Alberta. RESERVE PROVINCIAL PARK KOOTENAI 93 e e a ERoosville E (B L O O D y ar E The Great Canadian Barn Dance and Family Campground d n TOBACCO PLAINS INDIAN RESERVE Port of Roosville n n a o Grasmere Lake Koocanusa R West Castle River Valley Spring wildflowers draw botanists and photographers to West Castle Wetlands Ecological Reserve. In the surrounding valley, trout stalkers prefer late summer when rivers flow low and clear over multihued cobbles. Cross-country skiers like mid-winter best, while birders are happy anytime. E CANA DA UNITE D STATE S o e 8566 ft 2611 m d AREA a W Stand Off ton ter Alberta beef and prairie potatoes, with side of stomp Mt. Haig K 93 49° p t h CONSERVATION c OLD GROWTH COTTONWOODS, BC Veloured in dense green moss, 400-year-old black cottonwood trees congregate on the side of the Elk River at Morrissey Bridge. A nature walk steers you around wet spots and avoids sensitive cottonwood roots. s t Y HERITAGE a E Elko 5 Creek The Nature Conservancy of Canada's Waterton Park Front Prairie and mountain ecosystems clasp like fingers where ranches border the national park. A visitor centre and nature trail at Waterton Springs Campground describe how ranchers and Nature Conservancy of Canada saved 11,878 hectares (29,350 acres) of grasslands for grazing and wildlife. FOREST G KAI N AI Peigan Crafts Mocassin Factory Bloomin’ Inn Beauvais Lake Provincial Park LETHBRIDGE COUNTY AIRPORT 2 RESERVE Brocket E E Pincher T Lethbridge E Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden Experience artful blends of vegetation, rock, and water in the Nikka Yuko Garden’s celebration of Japanese culture, which was originally rooted in southwestern Alberta by compulsory wartime migration from coastal areas. 3 NORTH AMERICA’S ROCKY MOUNTAIN MAJESTY NATION Oldman River Reservoir Lebel Mansion and Allied Arts Council M O U N TA I N S M BROADWOOD Macleod Santa Claus Parade PIIKANI Crown of the Continent 113° Oldman River Valley Wilderness Park E Fort Peigan Friends Along the River Fish Rescue Kite Festival Buy Local Patronize businesses that support the community and its conservation and preservation efforts. Seek out local products, foods, services, and shops. When you support the people who support the place, they’ll usually reward you with a richer, more memorable trip. Volunteer A great way to get to know a place—and the people who work to protect it—is to lend a hand. Options abound: Repair hiking trails, pull invasive weeds, restore streamside habitat, catalog historical artifacts. Roll up your sleeves with the Bob Marshall Wilderness Foundation or the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Take a Hike The region features thousands of miles of hiking, biking, and horse trails. Local volunteers lead various nature groups on educational day hikes to watch birds, identify wildflowers, and explore public wildlands. Outings are free, but your donation will support conservation. Visit First Nation and Tribal Lands On a First Nation Reserve or American Indian Reservation, you are a guest where people live and work. Taking photos and video can be a sensitive issue, so ask permission first. A great time to visit is during traditional pow wows. Dirt Roads Many of the roads between towns and public recreational lands are not paved. Take it slow, keep the dust down, and give the wildlife a brake. Don’t drive off road, and please respect private property. Bears, Cougars, and Wolves With one of North America’s wildest landscapes come many animals that can eat you. Don’t let them. Hike in groups, lift your voice, photograph from afar. (Actually, history records no people-eating wolves in North America. As they recolonize historic territory, let's keep it that way.) Step Away from Your Car Travel options abound so you may better appreciate the scenery and meet others. Glacier National Park provides a free shuttle service across the Going-to-the-Sun Road. Drivers double as cultural guides on the Blackfeet-run Sun Tours, or try the elegant convertible-top red buses. Amtrak provides passenger service along Glacier’s southern border. For muscle-powered transport, pedal the unpaved Great Divide Mountain Bike Route on both sides of the border. Leave No Trace Take only photographs and leave only footprints. Travel on existing trails and camp on hard surfaces. Keep campfires small in established fire pits. Pack out garbage if no trash receptacles are nearby. Let animals eat natural foods rather than yours. Thinking of Moving Here? If you plan to relocate, live in town or close by. The fragmentation of working farms and forests into rural subdivisions and small ranchettes harms water quality, wildlife habitat, native plants, and traditional livelihood. With global warming, the risk of dangerous forest fires has soared along the valley fringes and forested foothills. Crossing the Border Enhance your adventure by exploring both countries. We value our cross-border visitors. Please check for current border crossing requirements. Watch Piikani Blackfoot artisans make moccasins, mukluks, and mitts. Bellevue Underground Coal Mine Chill in the Bellevue Underground Coal Mine where the tunnel’s breeze stays a constant 7°C (45°F). Back on the surface, slurp a shake through a straw, or race melting ice cream around the lip of a crisp waffle cone, at the Old Dairy ice cream shop. ROCKY MOUNT Island Lake Lodge Visit an uncut remnant of an ancient interior rainforest in Cedar Valley. Oldgrowth western red cedar trees were spared by logging company executives who preferred a wilderness setting for their retreat at Island Lake Lodge. Now a resort, forest and lodge are open to you for rigorous hiking, crosscountry skiing, and refined dining. LUCASIA RANCH Traded for a horse in 1881, this former Blackfoot grassland camping site treats you and other bunking dudes with a taste of roping, branding, and rounding-up. ALBERTA t es Crowsn Continental Divide Pacific and Arctic air masses clash over the Continental Divide at Crowsnest Lake, funneling furious but warm winter winds through mountain gaps and causing abrupt transitions in species of trees, wildflowers, and birdlife. Water from Crowsnest Lake flows east to Hudson Bay. Adjacent Summit Lake empties westward towards the Pacific Ocean. Moyie Lake 116° g lk E Granum Crowsnest River Shallow riffles, deep pools, and runs too rocky for drift boats make the Crowsnest River above Lundbreck Falls a treasured preserve for traditional dry fly anglers who prefer to walk and wade, sometimes casting with rods hand-crafted from Chinese bamboo and silk lines braided in France. ELundbreck E (photo at left) E Galloway Ol dm an ECowley Old Growth Cottonwoods 3 OLD GROWTH COTTONWOODS STEVE SHORT n 3 Ko o te 93 Isadore Canyon Trail na A link in the national Trans Canada Trail system, Isadore Canyon Trail will give you an easy mountain-biking E Wardner route along a right-of-way abandoned by the Canadian Pacific Railway. Chris’ Restaurant Fresh cut fries authenticate Fifties’ menu and decor. Fernie Griz Days E Crowsnest EPass a 3 Fernie 50°N LCrowsnest Pass l 95 Bull Bull River Guest Ranch Allison/Chinook Lake Cross-Country Ski Trails E Hosmer y Girls Bugle Band Catch, if you can, the Cranbrook Girls Bugle Band blowing their vintage brass bugles—as they have at regional events since 1941. DIVIDE L i L NTINENTA AI E IDE) DIV EAT (GR TR RO A D YO N E RANGELAND The Gap F E AN Cranbrook LE E C HERITAGE “The Continental Divide is the high vertebrae of the West. It is there that the soul of the Westerner resides.” — Ian Tyson, singer, songwriter, ranch owner Michel 4452 ft 1357 m Claresholm c v CO 95A CREEK Crowsnest Mountain 9138 ft K 2785 m K 93 BLACK FOREST RESERVE E Wardner-Fort Steele Road Take the Wardner-Fort Steele byway for intimate close-ups of mountains rising sharply from flat ranchlands, herds of foraging elk, flocks of wild turkeys, sand cliffs densely colonized by swallows, and the chance of finding a gold nugget in Wild Horse Creek. TE TS OR R-F NE RD WA E Wycliffe Steele EStavely r i an C Cr. E Fort Coal Miner Days Sparwood E Frontier Western Shop Saddles, duds, and horse feed draw cowboys, working and wannabe, to ranch country’s emporium of Western ware. o m ld L O O Mark Three Bars Cattle & Guest Ranch Shoot skeet, fish with a fly, sit a saddle, or soak in a spa. Bob Creek Wildland Bob Creek Wildland protects Whaleback Ridge and one of Alberta’s most important elk ranges. At the southern limit of this backcountry preserve, which has no visitor facilities, the Oldman River breaks free of the mountains through a narrow slot locals call “The Gap.” lo il ROCKY W GUESTS ON HORSEBACK AT LUCASIA RANCH RENÉ VAN BAKEL Fording El k Motorboat fishing and RV camping on the Cowboy Trail Coal Mine Tours Mountains are moved in sky-high, open-pit coal mines. Join tours from visitor centres in Elkford or Sparwood. Stroll Sparwood’s mining mural trail. E Wasa G o B IL RA OY T C OW B Mt. Lyall K 9684 ft 2952 m Former fish camp for First Nations still attracts anglers Marysville Falls w Chain Lakes Provincial Park Tornado Mountain K 10167 ft ST. MARY’S INDIAN RESERVE le tt Li 2 93 Kimberley MAP DATA DERIVED FROM: DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES CANADA; MIISTAKIS INSTITUTE FOR THE ROCKIES; MODIS/TERRA VEGETATION CONTINUOUS FIELDS, NASA; NASA EARTH OBSERVATORY; NATURAL RESOURCES CANADA, CANADIAN FOREST SERVICE PACIFIC FORESTRY CENTRE; OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY LANDSCAN 2004™/UT-BATTELLE, LLC; SRTM DATA, INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR TROPICAL AGRICULTURE (CIAT); UMD GLOBAL LAND COVER CLASSIFICATION, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND Chimney Rock B&B Bed down at a working ranch where a stewardship ethic makes home on the range for wildlife as well as livestock. Livingstone Falls FISHER PEAK A vigorous hike to the spire of Fisher Peak offers a stunning view of two provinces and three states. National Hockey League’s local hero Scott Niedermayer used his champion’s right to a day with the Stanley Cup and hoisted the trophy at the top of Fisher Peak. 10 10 0 km 2542 m Elkford E BRITISH COLUMBIA 0 mi 8340 ft Mt. Burke K M O U N TA I N S SCOTT NIEDERMAYER WITH STANLEY CUP ATOP FISHER PEAK ALAN MAUDIE PHOTOGRAPHY International Old Time Adminstered by UNESCO, the World Heritage List recognizes the most significant cultural and natural treasures on the planet. Albers Conic Equal-Area Projection Standard Parallels 47° and 50° Longview Jerky Shop 95 EAccordion Championships Other protected area Frank Lake Longview E oo d EAT 2782 m Geotraveler Tips: National forest or reserve National park R W r. eC Indian reservation or reserve 23 E Cayley E GROWING POPULATIONS From Calgary’s oil-fueled sprawl to lifestyle-driven migration into western Montana, you can see regional growth consuming open spaces and intruding on mountain views. Environmentalists, ranchers, and developers are struggling to balance the Old West ethos of unchecked liberty on private land and the New West Nanton E commitment to conservation. Canadian Grain Elevator Discovery Centre Premier Lake Provincial Park CANADIAN ROCKIES INTL. AIRPORT High River ( GR K 9128 ft 3099 m St. Mary Urban area Protected Areas an E VID L DI TA EN NTIN Mt. Head Josephine Falls Your reward at the end of a 3-km (2-mi) walking trail is rarely-viewed Josephine Falls, a 25-m (83-ft) tumble of foaming water set in a secluded canyon landscape. Whiteswan Lake Marysville E National Wild and Scenic River SCALE 1:500,000 E) 9987 ft 3044 m Flats 95 Scenic route Old m CO Abruzzi Courcelette Peak K te hi 50°N World Heritage site 114°W ELK LAKES PROVINCIAL PARK Go light on the land to see remnant glaciers, wildflowers, and old-growth forests of Elk Lakes, a wilderness sanctuary for backpackers, canoeists, and kayakers. No vehicle camping, motorized boating, or mountain biking permitted. 541 Clean, cold mountain waters are spectacular for whitewater rafting, fishing, canoeing, sailing, and swimming. You can explore new places with park rangers, guides or hiking groups, such as the Castle Crown Wilderness Coalition in Alberta or Montana Wilderness Association. Kimberley Hike, cross-country ski, or ride your bike in the Kimberley Nature Park, one of Canada’s largest municipal parks at 800 hectares (1,800 acres). Wild mushroom ravioli is served at the Old Bauernhaus Restaurant, a German farm building first registered in 1640 and moved to Canada in 1987. Other point of interest BOULDER GLACIER, GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT, CIRCA 1910 MORTON ELROD / GLACIER NATIONAL PARK ARCHIVES int Mt. 10719 ft K 3267 m “Hunting is the main business of most wilderness outfitters. But many clients are interested in guided backcountry pack trips just to view wildlife or fish alpine lakes in a wild, quiet place.” — Anna Fontana, Elk Valley Bighorn Outfitters, Cranbrook, BC ECanal Joffre Diamond Turner Valley ELK RANGE AND LOWER ELK LAKE CASEY BRENNAN nw di o se K 11250 ft Mt. 3429 m Natural or scenic area To Calgary E l “You can discover something new every day in these beautiful mountains and valleys, and often you can discover a little more about yourself. This is a great place for learning vacations, such as Elderhostel and nature adventures offered by the Glacier Institute or Waterton Natural History Association. Wildflower walks and bird watching are especially popular, either on your own or with volunteer groups like Audubon or the Native Plant Society.” — Nancy Zapotocki, conservation educator, Kalispell, MT 116° EBlack 115° C Outdoor Recreation Museum BOULDER GLACIER, GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT, AUGUST 2007 DAN FAGRE AND GREG PEDERSON / USGS CYCLISTS ON GOING-TO-THE-SUN ROAD, GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT HEATH KORVOLA / AURORA PHOTOS Festival PEAKS OF THE CROWN OF THE CONTINENT MICHAEL MELFORD 3:32 PM E PACK TRAIN IN BOB MARSHALL WILDERNESS DEWITT JONES / CORBIS 3/6/08 St .M Crown-Continent-Pol 47° High Country Lodging “These historic lodges tell the story of the region’s rugged nature—the howling winds of Waterton, the ancient forests of Glacier, the limestone chiseled from these mountains. Many of these rustic chalets and hotels were built by Great Northern Railway to lure visitors to the new national parks nearly a century ago when people journeyed between chalets by horseback.” — Alicia Thompson, Glacier Park, Inc., Columbia Falls, MT “Rooms with a view come in all shapes and sizes. The region boasts thousands of public and private campsites for tents and RVs. Or you can ponder the stars through the top of a Blackfoot tipi. The aroma of grilled saskatoon pancakes will lure you from your guest ranch bunk. Huckleberry muffins will entice you from the fluffy warmth of your bedand-breakfast inn. Creature comforts in the Crown of the Continent are as diverse as the ecosystem itself.” — Beth Russell-Towe, Trail of the Great Bear Learning Travel, Waterton, AB Page 1 Rocky Mountain Front Natural or scenic area Other point of interest World Heritage site (Mo kins sti) Tribal name [Elbow River] G CALGARY INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT 21 22 115° E Exshaw Bo 114° w Calgary 51° [Elbow River] , ( aknuqtap¢ik) [Elbow] BAR U RANCH DEB PIGEON / PARKS CANADA 24 1 2 22X E Carseland 2A R E E Sh 40 eep w in r inte e O n K Mt. Joffre a y Mt. Head K 9128 ft HEAD-SMASHED-IN BUFFALO JUMP PAUL A. SOUDERS / CORBIS hw ee Cr e l s i l 3 Piikani Nation Annual Celebration Creek h e stl Ca [W lea C r Mt. Cleveland K ad the Fla ork N. F t e i O f s h R a l n i Alpine section of road closed in winter g e U WOLVERINE IN GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT CHRIS PETERSON AY ‘ ‘ n n d a Una Mt. K r 9202 ft 2805 m R ˘ ˘ Arlee Seeley L. Arlee Fourth of July Celebration Seeley Lake E Seeley Lake Varied displays in mucked out horse stalls Red Mountain K Craig et urn LE W (r Wolf Creek EClinton NATIVE AMERICAN WARRIORS AT GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MT BETTMANN / CORBIS a r Step back to where the gold-mining boom went bust in 1905. n e 141 t 90 R Drummond a E Lake Helena Hauser L. n g Goldcreek HELENA REGIONAL AIRPORT e E Helena Avon E East E B 12 Elliston 90 LEWIS AND CLARK PASS A moderate, two-mile climb rewards you with the wild vistas that awed Meriwether Lewis in 1806. If you see a grizzly bear, consider calming your pulse at the nearby Hotel Lincoln, a historic and cozy refuge favored by participants in winter’s Race to the Sky sled dog race. ‘ ˆ or n ‘ ‘ ‘ ig h 113° Helena 287 E E Garrison Canyon Ferry Lake G 15 ‘ M ts . 44° Our tribes, the easternmost in the Salish language family, occupied most of central and western Montana, northern Idaho, and eastern Washington. In the traditional way of life, we moved across this vast area gathering, hunting, and fishing the abundant and varied plants and animals. We still practice these traditional ways as we strive to keep our critically endangered language alive. Today, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes integrate our cultural values and heritage into an advanced program of environmental and natural resource management on the Flathead Reservation and throughout our aboriginal territories for the benefit of future generations. — Tony Incashola, Salish-Pend d’Oreille Culture Committee and Clayton Matt, Natural Resource Director and Member of Salish Tribe ith Sm G 47° n s a i n t o u Fo rk 111° M Garnet Ghost Town of the LGates Mountains FREEZEOUT LAKE Birds by the hundreds of thousands and humans by the handful congregate at Freezeout Lake to celebrate early spring. Tundra swans, snow geese, and 200 other migrating species start in mid-March to use the lake as a staging point, while they wait for nature’s traffic control system to indicate that their far northern destinations are open for feeding and breeding. ) te rou 114° Holter Lake DE la rk v Ri 200 Lincoln E (Nl~ ayccstm) ˇ [Place of the Small Bull Trout] C E 200 Missoula ri O u )( g so ay Bi is akat er] [ l t B e Hi-Country Trading Post and Upper Blackfoot Valley Historical Museum IS M E CLARK (water t 434 Blackfoot E E rn D AN IS LEW Our language is unrelated to any language in the world. Maybe that’s because our traditional territory in these mountains is so remote. Fewer than 50 people still speak fluent Ktunaxa. We made a dictionary and work with Kootenai elders in Montana to save our language from extinction. At the time of Creation, we were given our language and this territory to care for. We are still negotiating a treaty with Canada and British Columbia for rights to our ancestral homeland and to protect the water. Our language and our land go together. — Liz Gravelle, Ktunaxa Elder, Tobacco Plains, BC Ovando E Highwood Mountains 3 EBelt Armington E g B i EFrenchtown These are the traditional territories of the Blackfoot, going back thousands of years. All of this is sacred: lakes and rivers, the forest, the prairie, the mountains where our people go for vision quests. The water starts from this place and flows to the ocean from our land. Today, the biggest issue for the Blackfoot nations is clean drinking water and our legal water rights. We continue to negotiate with the government to protect our water. We understand that we ultimately are responsible for the protection of our territory, water, and the retention of our language and culture. — Earl Old Person, Chief of the Blackfeet Nation, MT 9411 ft 2868 m Elk Country Visitor Center The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation’s visitor center celebrates the conservation of public wildlands, working ranches, and forests where elk herds can thrive. The autumn bugling of lustful bulls is a call to arms for hunters seeking winter meat and trophy antlers. 87 Raynesford bo Historical Museum 89 15 Ulm E De ar n Lewis & Clark Festival 200 S or E Great Falls Mountain K N s WYOMING gh G 287 e n Bi Fort Shaw g s. i B GREAT FALLS INTL. AIRPORT E n ou ESimms 200 E Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument Interpretive Center Learn here about the fractured uplands bordering the Upper Missouri River. Once a hideout for desperados, this new national monument remains much as Lewis and Clark saw it two centuries ago. Float and fish the river, or drive the landscape’s rough wagon tracks in a rugged vehicle—but off-road is off-limits. C. M. Russell Museum Painter’s brilliant pigments preserve a faded West. Montana Atlatl Mammoth Hunt a E 87 Vaughn E River ri Missou Floweree E Scapegoat I ˘ 21 EAugusta k ˘ 89 Old Trail Museum North America’s original transcontinental highway, the Old North Trail is said by some to be the pathway used by migrants from Siberia to populate the Americas. Known for certain is the trail’s use for millennia by native peoples moving north or south along the Rocky Mountain Front. l Ignatius 8580 ft 2615 m Benton Lake Carter E Fairfield E Gibson Res. C .S Freezeout Lake Su A a ‘ a ‘ First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park For at least one thousand years, before horses and guns made the work easier and safer, Plains Indians stampeded bison over this ledge to be finished off by the spears and arrows of hunters waiting below. Pishkun Reservoir e Mt ne to ws o l l Ye Billings Yellowstone Lake Grizzly Marathon (return route) d lt selshell Fort Benton E WIS LE hea at Be Mus 15 i) Expect no High Noon justice at this courthouse in the middle of Main Street. s l rk F g Canyon Ferry Lake 48° “Today’s adventurers can trace the routes of our national trailbreakers—David Thompson in Canada and Lewis and Clark in the American West—as they explore what we now call the Crown of the Continent. Amtrak riders still follow the original trans-Rockies route of the Great Northern Railway, while motorists in Canada parallel the tracks of Canadian Pacific’s Crowsnest Route. The two railroads opened the Crown to settlement in the late 19th century, bringing with them the wood cutters and miners whose descendants share the valleys with today’s so-called ‘amenity migrants’—those among us who first come to visit, and then return to stay.” — John Kinnear, Crowsnest Pass, AB Teton County Courthouse i ‘ DIVIDE w Atha ba AL e Bi a Helena Brady E Selis ´ (Salish) / Qlispe´ (Pend d’Oreille) MONTANA (Nl aycčstm) [Place of the Small Bull Trout] Fort Peck Lake 219 L t Missoula i (Am i s kapo Om ak [S o u t h Big Riv a tay) (Omakat a y) er] R i g v i [B er] Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center First non-native tourists found a route to the Pacific Ocean in an 1803-06 odyssey along Missouri and Columbia Rivers. As a modern explorer you can trace the journey more quickly at Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center. 287 ECondon g Great Falls 48°N EPendroy Choteau E n Missour ˇ ’ étkw) (Yawu nik A.kuqnuk) (Clq [Broad Water] [Monster Lake] T River ai) ] E a Flathead Lake ittle te) a R l N EDupuyer “In 1873, my great-grandfather, Michael Phillipps, was the first white man to cross the Crowsnest Pass—and he did it from West to East.” — Lexine Phillipps, Cranbrook, BC he S. Fo n OLD NORTH TRAIL (historic route) (Poyi [L i Tah Bears Paw Mountains ou (M [B e Lake Elwell k nr a on a k t Tetis Sistver] i k st R i n a u re g Mil (re Bynum Reservoir n CANADA U.S. IS tur Conrad an Co CO W Sun E a Cypress Hills LE a Sw s atchew S a sk Lake Frances NT Two Medicine Dinosaur Center See hatchling bones from a fossil nest and join in active dinosaur digs along Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front. Explorers and Pioneers 44 her e- R ’ w s) q ns] ,w m o n t ai o n s i , m n M q et hing Mou e l - Som (S n y You-Surround Lake Diefenbaker [Bear River T w i [ P l ac e -W Ravalli Valier Butte (K Marias tai) h yai o Sistac ] EBynum M ESt. E EHeart N e n g R a S s Dixon Four Horns L. 5220 ft L d n Fl a (N thead tx w [Ri. e´ tk w ver ) ] 93 Ktunaxa / Ksanka / Kootenai [Black Coal] Kalispell n u s] t] tain Gian oun y of ] 100 a i 52° tai) ach ist iver] R o Tribal name translation 83 Fort Connah Moiese E E Lake 89 S [Two Spotted Bear Ranger Station ˇ ’ li´ s) (Xntsnmé Clq . [Ninepipes Lake] Blackfoot Confederacy / Niitsitapi n an w a bi y [Elbow River] ERonan 90 S Browning k Tribal name e a er um ol h 2767 m [Chief Mountain] Salish, Pend d’Oreille, and other Salishan tribes EPablo Charlo E Flathead Reservation Trading Post and Mission Furs and souls drew traders and missionaries to native lands, where relics of commerce and conversion will brief you on the troubled integration of cultures. Inside St. Ignatius Mission Church, art interprets Jesus and his mother as native North Americans. Nearby, Fort Connah was an outpost of imperial Britain's Hudson's Bay Company. ch e Ktunaxa (Mo kins sti) me [ 135 Sa e D Chief Mountain K 9080 ft (Ninastako) Blackfoot Confederacy 100 Perma SASKATCHEWAN (Sik-ooh-kotok) Tribal Territories About 1800 0 km ) East Glacier Park ddl e Fork F lat Ninepipe Res. , 47° ew a Lethbridge Lake Koocanusa Pablo Res. 108° th ttl (Mokinists [E l b o is S w Kootenay River (Wu u aq lsmaknik akinmituk) [River Water People] ~ w) (Sqlsewlk [Kootenai Waters] 9138 ft 2785 m K Crowsnest EPolson EParadise w sk at Bo [Elbow] 35 Hear oral history directly from the contemporary custodians of Salish and Kootenai tribal heritage, adjacent to tribal headquarters and community college. E BROWNING Unfurl your bedroll beside a crackling campfire, eat a traditional meal of roast buffalo, and arrange a cultural tour at Blackfoot Tipi Village. Compare early and modern Indian art at the Museum of the Plains Indian, Blackfeet Heritage Center, and Lodgepole Gallery. See descendants of original Spanish mustangs, working beavers, and an occasional wandering grizzly at Blackfeet Buffalo Horse Coalition ranch, where your visit will require prior arrangement. E Marias Pass 93 (Qln i) [Referring to Raw Camas] rk Fo k tk ar w e´ r] Cl (NtxRive N or [Elbow River] IDAHO 0 mi Camas Prairie , . [Monster Lake] The Peoples Center e in ic s i ) d e Ka iver] M yo R Two K i nc o ( N a t un d a Placid L. Re d ( aknuqtap¢ik) e Standing Arrow Pow Wow Blackfoot Old and weathered, but still active backcountry ranger station North Shore of Flathead Lake The Flathead River disperses through cottonwood stands and reedy sloughs where waterfowl and raptors thrive. Federal Waterfowl Production Area is closed to humans during spring nesting but is bliss for birders the rest of the year. 93 W Calgary M d s M akis) [¢i) [Bo ountain yM iist uq (M Nalm [Rock s ) u i w ut kx w x c ( a (X c WASHINGTON Sna 382 28 e) 115° 112° Cranbrook Mountain Coeur d’Alene Lake ˇ~ ’ étk ) (Clq [Broad Water] (Yawu nik’ A.kuqnuk) o [S (wat er rou t ot rro te w ) it ew~lk Waters] e B S esh ttl lye -fr Li (Q hing t 200 OM PSO N a k Spokane h ) TH Homesteader Days Celebration GLACIAL LAKE MISSOULA During the last ice age, 13,000 to 15,000 years ago, an ice dam in a narrow canyon in northern Idaho periodically gave way, releasing raging torrents from a 2,000-foot (610meter)-deep lake in western Montana. The legacy of these floods, which are recalled in Salish-Pend d’Oreille Coyote stories, can be seen in the scablands of eastern Washington and the huge ripple marks in Camas Prairie. (Mo kins sti) L. Pend Oreille t t u te Hot Springs E DA VID atchewan c bia um Flathead Lake w [Big Island] NATIONAL BISON RANGE Established in 1909 and stocked with descendants of bison rescued from extinction by Pend d'Oreille people this sanctuary protects hundreds of bison on 18,500 acres (7,487 hectares) of rolling grassland and forest. Take short nature walks from access points along 24 miles (39 kilometers) of road loop. Saskatoon Sandpoint a e (la 28 B o Franklin Delano Roosevelt Lake E H i l l s e Hills] TRAIN OVER OLDMAN RIVER, LETHBRIDGE, AB JAMES P. BELL d [Sweathouse Lake] ˇ ´ ˇ m) (Ctise [Something Sweet] R Castlegar Mi ˇ~ ´ (Slaqi Clqli) ESwan S i k s) weet Pin 444 MONTANA Swan Lake ‚ , Elmo E (Kwilqanqmi) ALBERTA Lower Arrow Lake E EBigfork Wild Horse,Island Edmonton Kootenay Lake Lakeside Rollins N Upper Arrow Lake Mt. Aeneas [no known translation] EPlains C E ns or S Brown E THEODORE ROOSEVELT INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY Goat Lick Overlook (Nasuqut) Despite an international line and national policies that divided families and toppled traditional governance, the first peoples of the Crown of the Continent have maintained cultural ties, languages, and inter-tribal cooperation across borders. Historically, tribal territories shifted and overlapped, but at European contact the region was dominated by three linguistic groups. Long the great warriors of the eastern slopes, the Blackfoot Confederacy includes the Piikani, Siksiska and Blood/Kainai Nations in Alberta and the Blackfeet Nation in Montana. On the west side are the mountain bands of the Ktunaxa Nation in British Columbia and the Ksanka/Kootenai in Montana. Farther south, the Interior Salish people, including the Bitterroot Salish and Pend d’Oreille, are closely related to other Salish-speaking nations in British Columbia, Washington, and Idaho. All of these nations and tribes invite visitors to their pow wows, museums, and interpretive centers. Revelstoke Somers unt ai Mt. 6958 ft K 2121 m s s 2 2 Izaak Walton Inn 82 BISON DONALD M. JONES 48° First Peoples, Two Countries Golden l n N Kila (K u G r a t lot M o Y i i o od C BLACKFEET BUFFALO HORSE COALITION, NEAR BROWNING JOHN STEPHEN HOCKENSMITH E Browning 49 1591 m Built to lodge railroad plow crews, hotel now shelters hikers TI and cross-country skiers NE Watch eye-level eagles and hawks pass by the tallest peak in the Jewel Basin Hiking Area in autumn. E 2 EMarion Freedom to roam for big mammals—lynx, wolves, bighorn sheep, moose, and elk—brings you great wildlife viewing. Underwater, native bull trout and cutthroat swim up to 100 miles (161 kilometers) between lakes and mountain brooks to spawn. BRITISH COLUMBIA l u THOMPSO y 15 EShelby Watch mountain goats clamber up mineral cliffs along the river. A pioneering wildlife underpass allows salt-seeking goats to safely cross U.S. Highway 2. 35 EKalispell Ashley L. [Blo E 3091 m l o 2 Little Bitterroot Lake “When someone asks us what our grizzly bear population is, we tell them we don’t have one. We share them with our neighbors. The average home range of an individual grizzly bear is larger than this park. Bears and most large mammals need a variety of food sources during the year. The fact that they move freely across borders is why this is one of the few places where grizzly bears survive.” — Cyndi Smith, conservation biologist, Waterton Lakes National Park, AB sk Hungry Horse Reservoir Sunburst Mt. Stimson K Road closed in winter 10142 ft F M VID DA ro 93 “There is no better place in the world to view a wolverine than Glacier National Park, especially along the Highline Trail. They thrive here because there’s great sub-alpine habitat and so many prey species, such as mountain goats, marmots, and squirrels.” — Jeff Copeland, Forest Service biologist, Missoula, MT Kinbasket Lake a V) a´ d a a pLake] e h n l f th e a t (S[End o F l Fisher Animals on the Move nd Kalispell Historic Walking Tour Step into early 20th-century Main Street. The optimism of Kalispell’s pioneer boosters endures in the grand architecture of Hockaday Museum of Art, Conrad Mansion, Museum at Central School, and Red’s Wines and Blues restaurant. North American Indian Days 89 2 206 S w2128 m e e t Cut Bank Great pillars of old-growth fir dominate lobby G West Butte K 6983 ft 2 Hand-hewn grand hotel Horse UNITE D STATE S Creek Cut Bank Glacier Park Lodge EHungry 49° E Lake McDonald Falls GLACIER PARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT St. Mary Lake E Coram E Columbia 213 (Pah Tompks Sii Kimii) [Lake Inside] Lake McDonald Lodge h 40 ER NORTH ) AT (AMTRAK GRE GO N R le 8565 ft 2611 m s E -S -THE -TO IN G ilk i) M Ta h Tar] ive Many Glacier Hotel Lakeside Swiss-style lodging makes this 1914 hotel a cozy base for hiking Glacier’s biggest concentration of trails or for resting blistered feet aboard a red bus, cruise boat, or leather saddle. St. Mary Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park / Áísínai’pi National Historic Site Abundant First Nations petroglyphs, covering sheer sandstone cliffs, and native grasses and wildlife are protected as part of the Blackfoot spiritual heritage. CANAD A E Coutts AIL (historic route) i a Wildflower Herbarium at Whitefish Library Whitefish Lower St. Mary Lake Glacier Natural History Association revives former Great Northern passenger stop Restored to its 1910 style when opened as a railway hostelry Tally L. Logan Pass 6646 ft 2025 m (Ya.kil Haqwilnamki) [Where They Dance] Whitefish Lake Bonita Sweetgrass E 464 Lake Sherburne West Glacier E Belton Depot Great Northern Railway Depot If you’re a railroad buff, you’ll love this historic depot, the busiest Amtrak stop Libby between Seattle and Minneapolis. The Dam depot doubles as Whitefish Museum. EDel 111° lk Mi Milk River E Shanks L. Duck L. E Belton Chalet Whitefish, MT PRINCE OF WALES HOTEL NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE, UPPER WATERTON LAKE, AB Afternoon tea, British style, makes this 1927 architectural expression of rustic grandeur a restful vantage point for your contemplation of Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park. 89 Road closed in winter Mt. Brown K 62 E HIGHLINE TRAIL Polebridge Taste Polebridge Mercantile’s hefty sandwiches on freshly baked bread, and sample cold brew from the Northern Lights Saloon. Off-thegrid and a long haul from asphalt, Polebridge shows you a favorite haunt of the backcountry set and a littleused portal to Glacier National Park. EMagrath P TR P-U OO h S 93 IL W N RA Chief Mountain 9080 ft K 2767 m (Ninastako) [Chief Mountain] Logging L. Short nature trail cuts through old railroad camp and Forest Service headquarters, now an outdoor education center E 37 17 Bowman Lake Ant Flat Ranger Station PRINCE OF WALES HOTEL HARRY PALMER WH W E 36 e E Carway Road closed in winter Babb E E Polebridge Stirling ) k) s a w ha is a s] ig il e nd W ak bov Sou p A t ( a ater as i Fortine 10466 ft 3190 m Quartz L. Etzikom C ou le Stirling L. 112°W RACE TO THE SKY SLED DOG RACE PATTI CARPENTER e Kintla Lake route) ric BUFFA IL (histo LO C A R OW T 5 E Lake Stryker 567 M e n g R a g Upper Waterton 8036 ft K Nasukoin Mountain 2465 m Lake Koocanusa (photo at right) K 10101 ft Kintla Peak 3079 m 4 Remington Carriage Museum See working wheelwrights heat and shrink steel bands around wooden wheels for Remington Carriage Museum’s display of 225 horsedrawn vehicles. Ride restored coaches, wagons, or sleighs behind Clydesdales, Canadians, Quarter Horses, or Shires. Maskinonge Lake Near the entrance to Waterton Lakes National Park, this lake is a seasonal favourite for birds and birders. The Blackfoot people trace the origins of the sacred beaver bundle, with its preserved animal hides and waterfowl skins, to this place. Prince of Wales Hotel CANADA 508 Tobacco Valley Historical Village Pioneer buildings were moved to save them from drowning when Libby Dam created Lake Koocanusa in the 1970s. Browse Fewkes General Store for historical artifacts. And if you buy a locally made quilt you’ll be helping provide funds for village upkeep. e UNITED STATES EEureka Mountain ViewE K Mt. Blakiston 9645 ft 2940 m g (original site) St. Mary Reservoir Cardston 5 E Rendezvous Days Rexford n LETHBRIDGE COUNTY AIRPORT Fort Whoop-Up 5 RD . n m 93 E a G m a Transboundary Flathead Grizzly bears, wolves, and wolverines radiate from this unpopulated transR boundary valley, refreshing neighboring wildlife populations stressed by human settlement. Known as the North Fork in Montana and simply as the Flathead in British Columbia, this broad valley’s gravel roads should not be traveled without spare tires and a patient attitude. Chin Lakes Jensen Reservoir U Lus sier R Roosville E d y E Grasmere Port of Roosville KOKANEE SALMON RUNS Witness late summer bounty when grizzly bears, ospreys, and eagles congregate at Kootenay River tributaries. Kikomun and Wild Horse Creeks set a feast for all when waters run red with spawning Kokanee salmon. 116° 2 Waterton Reservoir Kootenai Brown Pioneer Village This haven for rescued 19th-century structures is a good starting point for you to wander along Alberta’s Cowboy Trail through the Rocky Mountain foothills, where film crews are sometimes as common as cattle drives. a a Koocanusa 49° a n to ista r] a ter inai S ive (Ka Chiefs R ) i a cht any ista r] [M ais S ive en utenai R u ly (K [ K el B e l d n a d o a c r Tobacco Plains National Aboriginal Day Celebration Lake sc Kainai Indian Days Stand Off E Horsefly Lake Reservoir International Pow Wow ar E Brocket The Gathering See wild raptors between rescue and release. [Black Coal] Fort Whoop-Up and Indian Battle Park North America’s last intertribal clash here in 1870 was followed by a treaty between plains-roaming Cree and foothills-resident Blackfoot. Native peace was exploited by whiskey smugglers who plied the WhoopUp Trail between Fort Whoop-Up and Fort Benton, Montana, and prompted the formation of today’s Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The fort has been reconstructed at Indian Battle Park. 3 Pincher E Coaldale E E(Sik-ooh-kotok) Visit Alberta's oldest theatre, the Empress, for films, performing arts, and daily tours. A IL COWBOY TR te) (historic rou t t [Coyo E 93 120° Lethbridge E Main Street Fort Macleod Provincial Historic Area Oldman River Res. Alberta Birds of Prey Centre ECoalhurst Fort Macleod 6 d ) hea Flat Skinku¢ ] k e Ther kami (Qan e is Sitting M Elko Taber Ri aka ve ta r] y El k te hi W Fordi ng L a Galloway E 50°N E w ELundbreck st sne htai) c Cowley E t s aRiver] i C S sas odge e o t (Mais en L 112°W Oldman E Granum H W ild CreHorse ek ow i n Mark Cr. W p ENobleford Hillcrest Cemetery The 189 coal miners who died in Hillcrest Mine’s 1914 explosion are buried in mass graves, grouped according to the religious cultures of the mostly young and immigrant men. l Wardner E lk EMoyie E kli) (Kya ointer] Moyie Lake u FORESTRY IN THE CROWN First a source for railroad ties in the late 1800s, and then for construction lumber, the forests on the wetter, west side of the Continental Divide are equally valued today for recreation, wildlife habitat, and clean waters. Modern foresters strive for sustainability but now must fight increasing wildfires and proliferation of mountain pine beetles as climate change warms and dries woodlands. E Keho L. 3 [Rav P [Two i v l l G i M c 3 Crowsnest Pass THE FORT MUSEUM OF THE NORTH WEST MOUNTED POLICE Red-coated precursors to Royal Canadian Mounted Police were dispatched to Fort Macleod in the 1870s to stop American whiskey traders from abusing Blackfoot First Nations and defying Canadian sovereignty on the Prairies. Museum and musical rides honour Canada’s tradition of cavalry riding to the rescue of natives, not interlopers. Visit the nearby restored 1884 police barracks and interpretive centre. 36 E ALBERTA 2 k South Livingstone Raptor Watch Site Watch migrating golden eagles ride updrafts along the eastern flank of the Rocky Mountains. See them best from the ridge called Piitaistakis, or “The Place of the Eagles,” by Piikani Blackfoot. Lundbreck Falls E ECarmangay Mud L. ro 3 93 r c Va l l e y Fernie Sam Steele Days 4452 ft 1357 m F E Cranbrook Crowsnest Pass ow Barons ai) chtRiver] k) 95A Crowsnest Pass Doors Open and Heritage Festival 23 Little B i ll ok k i in to ic 3 9138 ft 2785 m K Y , ay Fort Steele E 95 Crowsnest Mountain Elk E Range ngstone Sparwood E top a snow-dusted peak in October, a friend and I hear an elk bugle. Scanning meadows below with binoculars, I spot instead a silver-tipped grizzly bear, flexing its massive shoulder hump to excavate glacier lilies. “This is his place,” my friend says. “He owns this country.” Indeed, while we have eliminated grizzlies in so many places, a robust population freely roams the Crown of the Continent, from mountaintops and plunging valleys to fescue prairies and cedar rainforests. Think of these magnificent bears as wary sentinels of change. For millenia they watched over people who honored their power. The Ktunaxa called to the bear spirit for guidance and protection, while Blackfoot traditions tell of the Medicine Grizzly who rescues and nourishes a young boy. Explorers David Thompson, Meriwether Lewis, and William Clark learned the ancient wisdom of mutual respect the hard way. After several violent confrontations, provoked by nonlethal musket fire, en route to these mountains, Lewis determined to live and let live: “I find that the curiossity of our party is pretty well satisfyed with rispect to this anamal.” From their silent perches, grizzlies witnessed the first trains cross Crowsnest and Marias Passes, followed by settlers to populate the Rocky Mountain Trench, and Flathead and Elk Valleys. By the turn of the 20th century, the bear’s outlook dimmed as wildife was slaughtered across the continent. Here, however, grizzlies persevered into a new era of wildlife restoration, wilderness designation, and cross-border stewardship. Today, they are a source of fierce local pride and the namesake of many businesses and festivals. As the great silvertip disappears into the forest that bright October afternoon, I am the observer, humble and grateful that such a place may yet be found. — Steve Thompson, writer, National Parks Conservation Association, Travers Reservoir EClaresholm ( Ol [O Napiot dm sis ld M an’s R tachtai) an iver] [Tw (Na oM ed 22 o e L s S is odg ta es Livi t G P o 10167 ft 3099 m A E te) Tornado Mountain K Historic Downtown Fernie Canada’s best-preserved mountain-style railway station and a slate-roofed courthouse stake out Fernie’s heritage as a prosperous mining town. The Brickhouse, in a century-old bank building, and the Curry Bowl will serve you offbeat food. Work those calories off with mountain sports, which now challenge mining and timber cutting as economic mainstays. Canadian Museum of Rail Travel Hints of dining car flirtations and parlour car cigar smoke haunt the vintage trains waiting forever at the Canadian Museum of Rail Travel. Stay in nearby CPR House, once the grand home of the railway’s regional superintendent, and now a bed and breakfast. HEAD-SMASHED-IN BUFFALO JUMP, WORLD HERITAGE SITE Before guns and horses, First Nations hunters stalked bison on foot and stampeded the animals over cliffs. Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump remains an important cultural site where Blackfoot First Nations share their history and values—a stop you won’t want to miss. e ingston Liv K E Wasa Champion rou AT DIVIDE) NTAL DIVIDE INE 93 Sullivan Mine Interpretive Centre Ride open railcars into rock tunnels where miners demonstrate their trade underground. Learn about the $80 million Mark Creek watershed restoration project that has returned native cutthroat trout to once-polluted waters. KOKANEE SALMON RUNS FLORIAN SCHULZ / WWW.VISIONSOFTHEWILD.COM Elk Fort Steele Heritage Town Rescued pioneer-era structures, summer street theatre, and grazing Clydesdales recall Fort Steele Heritage Town’s origins as an outpost of the North West Mounted Police who came to tame itinerant gold seekers from America’s wilder West. n itu te Koo , akinm k le] kni Peop lsma ater w ) u aqRiver W ew~lk ters] [ a s (Wu (Sql enai W Wycliffe Elkford WITNESS FROM THE MOUNTAIN ALONG THE TRAIL OF HISTORY TR Frank Slide For an intimate view of the mountain collapse that buried 90 sleeping residents, drive the unpaved track between the railway line and the Crowsnest River, running from the main Hillcrest access road to Frank Industrial Park. See the full panorama of the 1903 disaster from the Frank Slide Interpretive Centre. E Va l l e y 95 CANADIAN ROCKIES INTL. AIRPORT (GRE BRITISH 93 [Koo E Kimberley (Ka intak) [no known translation] COLUMBIA 95 St. Eugene Mission and Ktunaxa Interpretive Centre Erected to expunge Ktunaxa First Nation language and culture in favour of English and Roman Catholicism, the imposing St. Eugene Mission residential school is now a native-owned luxury hotel, casino, and golf resort. Inside, visit an interpretative centre that honours Ktunaxa history and renewal, as land and social rights are acknowledged by courts and governments. Top of the World Provincial Park Chert for tools and weapons was quarried by the Ktunaxa inside today’s Top of the World Provincial Park. If you’re a skier, snowshoer, angler, hiker, or horseback rider you’ll enjoy wilderness trails and campsites that are closed to vehicles powered or pedaled. Whiteswan Lake s 50°N NT Flats CO e ECanal C g [Two Lakes] 22 .M 9987 ft 3044 m OIL AND GAS DRILLING Western Canada’s first producing oil well was drilled in 1902 near Waterton Lake. It was short-lived, but today drillers and ranchers tussle about a lacework of new gas wells on Alberta’s foothill prairie. In Montana, U.S. officials banned oil and gas leasing on public lands of the Rocky Mountain Front. British Columbians weigh impacts to nature against industry requests to extract methane from underground coal in the Elk and Flathead Valleys. historic A IL ( Courcelette Peak K n ( akisq’ nuk) FORT MACLEOD GUNTER MARX / ALAMY g Hi i) a Columbia Lake d oo COWBOY R Fairmont Springs E Hot The Living Heritage McGregor Lake 541 2782 m Lussier Hot Springs From steamy hot to merely tepid, find your comfort level among the cascade of primitive rock pools alongside the bubbling Lussier River, just inside Whiteswan Lake Provincial Park. Test the waters' therapeutic benefits, long known to the Ktunaxa people, and said to increase with dips in the adjacent, frigid river. 95 Frank Lake E Longview Windermere Lake 93 23 2 ta 11250 ft 3429 m Invermere EHigh River E 24 W y ed na Clo e ot t BAR U RANCH NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE OF CANADA The Bar U Ranch spills eastward from the Rocky Mountains across the rolling grasslands of Alberta’s Highway 22 Cowboy Trail. Now a national historic site, the Bar U transports you back into an era when horse-drawn chuck wagons followed cattle drives, rather than race each other around a rodeo track. s Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park The Blackfoot nations and Canada signed an 1877 peace treaty at this natural ford of the Bow River, known for centuries by the Siksiksa people as Sooyooh’pawahko, or “underwater bridge.” The park offers First Nation guides, indoor exhibits, tipi lodging, and ceremonial dances. t Ko o bia Black Diamond E Lower Kananaskis Lake Upper Kananaskis Lake ch o m lu Co FIRST NATION SACRED PLACES Special places are still revered and should be respected by all. High on many ridges are the rock shelter remains of vision quest sites, many that face Chief Mountain, the Blackfoot home of thunder. Crowsnest Mountain is where the Raven lives. Glacier’s Lake McDonald is home of a Kootenai sacred dance. Okotoks Sir Douglas E LWA Y Bo (Mokinistsis w [Elbow RSistachtai) iver] L K 11175 ft Mt. 3406 m K Wings over the Rockies CAN ADIA N PACIFIC R AI Assiniboine 116° Radium EHot Springs 901 St 11870 ft K 3618 m Mt. 51° Eagle Lake [L y i i itt COLUMBIA WETLANDS Swans, eagles, ospreys, herons, and ducks rest here on their seasonal migrations. Both the Columbia and the Kootenay Rivers originate here, flowing out of the wetlands in opposite directions, to merge hundreds of kilometres later, at Castlegar, BC. (Mo kins sti) 8 Spray Lakes Reservoir Strathmore (P o 51° E 1A E 113° 9 TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY STATUE OF DAVID AND CHARLOTTE THOMPSON, INVERMERE, BC ROSS MACDONALD, PARKS CANADA CATTLE ROUNDUP, PORCUPINE HILLS, AB DESIGN PICS INC. / ALAMY SNOW GEESE CHUCKHANEY.COM E Canmore International Pow Wow Lethbridge, AB (last weekend of February) Contemporary Aboriginal arts festival, includes competition dances Rendezvous Days Eureka, MT (last weekend in April) Live entertainment, a car show, international wrestling championship, parade, and many family attractions Wings over the Rockies Radium Hot Springs, BC (early May) Explores bird life in the expansive Columbia Wetlands through presentations, nature walks, horseback riding, river floats, canoe trips, workshops, and exhibits Homesteader Days Celebration Hot Springs, MT (second weekend of June) Family fun weekend featuring an auction, games, rodeo performance, quilt show, live music, antique car show, arts and crafts, and a parade The Gathering Pincher Creek, AB (mid-June) Cowboy poetry and music, dancing, crafts, and a rodeo Tobacco Plains National Aboriginal Day Celebration Grasmere, BC (June 21) Dancing, feast, and traditional horse ride across the U.S.-Canada border Sam Steele Days Cranbrook, BC (third weekend of June) Festival named after a legendary figure of the Canadian West, includes sports, games, competitions, and a parade Lewis & Clark Festival Great Falls, MT (late June) Celebrates Lewis and Clark’s adventure through tours, exhibits, demonstrations, kid’s activities, and reenactments Arlee Fourth of July Celebration Arlee, MT (July 4) One hundred year old Pow Wow, including singing and dancing contests, gambling, food, arts and crafts, and a parade North American Indian Days Browning, MT (second week of July) Spotlights authentic Blackfeet traditions with four days of dance contests, sports, youth rodeo, and a parade Kainai Indian Days Stand Off, AB (third weekend of July) Dance contests and a drum competition Standing Arrow Pow Wow Elmo, MT (third weekend of July) Social gathering featuring Pow Wow dancing and traditional food Piikani Nation Annual Celebration Brocket, AB (first weekend of August) Dance competition, handgame tournament, drum contest, rodeo, and softball matches Crowsnest Pass Doors Open and Heritage Festival Crowsnest Pass, AB (early August) Heritage hikes, tours of historic buildings and gardens, storytelling, and family fun Grizzly Marathon near Choteau, MT (mid-August) Abundant chances to see wildlife along the course, possibly including grizzlies Montana Atlatl Mammoth Hunt First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park, near Ulm, MT (early September) Contests based on mammoth hunting using atlatl, primitive bow, knife, and tomahawks O hB m ig 93 Heritage Days & Pow Wows CONSULTANTS: DORAN DEGENSTEIN, FORT WHOOP-UP NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE (WHOOP-UP TRAIL ROUTE); ANDREAS N. KORSOS, ARCTURUS CONSULTING (DAVID THOMPSON ROUTES) So ut Banff E FESTIVALS & EVENTS 10 10 0 km (Am is k [ apo COLUMBIA WETLANDS FLORIAN SCHULZ / WWW.VISIONSOFTHEWILD.COM SCALE 1:666,600 0 mi rou te) Lake Minnewanka Tribal name translation Adminstered by UNESCO, the World Heritage List recognizes the most significant cultural and natural treasures on the planet. Albers Conic Equal-Area Projection Standard Parallels 47° and 50° 12 GRINNELL GLACIER, MT CHUCKHANEY.COM Draped over the Front’s wind-swept foothills, ranches worked by generations remain much as when first they were homesteads. And today’s ranchers want to keep them that way. Working with conservation-minded neighbors and organizations, traditional lifestyles are being preserved on private and public lands. Conservation isn’t new here. For the past 100 years a patchwork of wildlife refuges, legislation and conservation easements have protected working farms, ranches, and wildlands while providing rich habitat for wildlife. — Gloria Flora, retired National Forest Supervisor, Helena, MT 1 Copyright © 2008 National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C. GRIZZLY BEAR IN WATERTON LAKES NATIONAL PARK, AB ROD SINCLAIR Museum CONTINENT AL D IVI Visit www.CROWNOFTHECONTINENT.net to learn more about the Crown of the Continent and this spectacular landscape. NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN DAYS, BROWNING, MT DONNIE SEXTON / TRAVEL MONTANA Historical site We live on the eastern slopes where the prairie meets the mountains. Visitors discover a dramatic landscape at the ragged edge between civilization and wildness. Our guests are eager to learn how our cattle grazing rotation helps restore streams and protect native plants. After visiting, they often support our effort to establish this special place as off-limits to gas drilling. — Debbie Webster, Chimney Rock Bed and Breakfast, Webster Ranch, AB National Geographic and the people of Alberta, British Columbia, and Montana present this Geotourism MapGuide to the Crown of the Continent region. 1 Map Key Festival es 2:00 PM ] 3/6/08 y ( [B a n k s P a t o x Dam ia ag Pi i n g sk t h oo eR ) iv er Crown-Continent-Hist Landforms and Watersheds “In some places, the oldest layers of sedimentary rock lie atop younger strata, flipped like flapjacks in a frying pan by the tectonic crush of the Pacific and North American plates. Later successive ice ages scraped the lower valleys into smooth troughs that direct the Crown’s rainwater and snow melt toward the plains and coasts.” — Mike Pennock, mining geologist, Fernie, BC “Truly, the Crown is the water tower of the continent, and the water is as clean as any on the planet. From these high mountain headwaters flow three of the largest rivers in North America—the Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Missouri/Mississippi.” — Jack Stanford, Director, University of Montana Flathead Lake Biological Station