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MSU Teton County Extension
PO Box 130 * 1 Main Ave S., Courthouse
Choteau, MT 59422
406-466-2491 Office * 406-590-2492 Cell
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Lake McDonald, Apgar, MT in Glacier National Park |
We are just a short time away from the NEAFCS conference and
you may have wondered about the absence of any blog posts for the last several
weeks. As I suspect is true of most
Extension professionals, I have had a very busy summer. I was trying to live up to my motto, “Better
a full life than a dull life.” Professionally, my schedule included 4-H
Leadership Retreat, 4-H Textile Show, 4-H Fair, 4-H Congress and 4-H Camp. Personally, my schedule included a friend’s
daughter’s wedding, Fourth of July festivities in Choteau, and swim meets. My daughters both swim competitively in the
summer. Because of all these events, I
feel like I got to see much of our great state of Montana. I do, however, feel like we could play a game
of “Where’s Wolery?” If you want to get
out your Montana map, you can see if you can spot some of the places I’ve been
this summer … Great Falls, Lewistown, Jordan, Glendive, Wibaux, Chester,
Joplin, Conrad, Apgar, Columbia Falls, Helena, Seeley Lake, Lincoln, Missoula, Stevensville,
Hamilton, Como Lake, Lake McDonald, Monarch, Bozeman, Townsend, Augusta … I don’t
know how many miles I’ve traveled this summer and I’m not going to take time to
count, but it is a bunch and I never left the state!
It makes me think of a piece I wrote for a Montana
literature class (way) back in college:
Miles.
Friday. I’ve traveled fifteen-hundred and thirteen
miles since last Friday. Never left the
state.
Montana.
Hinsdale to Joplin. Two-hundred and nine miles. Six turns.
One into the yard.
Forty
five miles an hour through Hingham. I
slow down to sixty-five. Too many
miles. Too few cops.
Five
in the family. Three vehicles headed the
thirty miles north. Auction today.
Twenty-six. Thirty-five.
Never been able to keep a count of the grain bins shining in a row. Eight years old. Someone said there was money
in them. I imagined coins. Grain.
Highway
painted at the edge of town. Identifies
the year and the kids who are free to leave.
Outrider
Drive Inn. The building has been gone for years. Sign is still there.
Gravel. Meet a tractor. Wave.
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Sweet Grass Hills, Montana |
Sweet
Grass Hills give the sun something to hide behind. Blue cardboard cutout silhouette is ominous
as it is backlit – violent orange. Sky.
Clouds. Land. Forever stretches of blue sky. Shapes
in the clouds.
Five
different towns. Five different Stockman’s Bars. Never been in one.
Seventy-three
miles an hour makes raindrops swim up the windshield. A futile attempt to escape the blades.
Every
so often, deer. Usually one solitary one
watches while I pass.
Scanning. Always.
Mountains, trees, curves along rivers,
Flat, straight, huge …
Open …
Miles …
If you want to fill some of your remaining summer days or
the miles you travel with some good Montana literature, my FCS colleagues and I
have compiled a list for you. Check your
local library for the books in either print or audio form. (I enjoy audio while
traveling or while I’m cleaning at home. It is amazing how much longer you can
scrub if you have a good book in your ear!) The list features either Montana authors
or Montana topics. Perhaps some of the
books will inspire you to travel a few extra miles while you are in Montana. Plus, since Big Sky Resort was conceptualized
by Chet Huntley, who was a man of words as an NBC broadcaster, but Montana
native, it is only fitting that we share a few Montana words with you as you
head to Big Sky Resort. Incidentally,
Huntley attended school in Saco, Montana, for a while and I’ve driven by the
Huntley School hundreds of times in my life.
My husband is from Saco!
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Bonus: The first person to add a comment identifying which book is not about Montana or by a Montana author will receive a small gift. Add your name and university. Hint: Western Region might have the best chance. |
Here is a list of some suggested Montana Reads in no
particular order:
Montana Reads
Books and Authors
All But the Waltz, by Mary Clearman Blew
Blind Your Ponies, by Standley Gordon West
Bound Like Grass, by Ruth McLaughlin
Breaking Clean, by Judy Blunt
A Bride Goes West, by Nannie T. Alderson and Helena
Huntington Smith
Charlie Russell’s Yarns, by Charlie Russell
Dancing at the Rascal Fair, by Ivan Doig
English Creek, by Ivan Doig
Fire and Brimstone, by Michael Punke
Fool’s Crow, by James Welch
It’s Just Grass and Water, by Wally McRae
Last Bus to Wisdom, by Ivan Doig
Legends of the Fall, by Jim Harrison
Montana: High, Wide
and Handsome, by Joseph Kinsey Howard
Montana: High, Wide and Handsome (Volume Two), by Rick
Graetz
Paper Talk: Charlie
Russell’s American West, by Charlie Russell and Brian W. Dippie
Plenty-Coups: Chief
of the Crows, by Frank B. Linderman
Pretty Shield:
Medicine Woman of the Crows, by Frank B. Linderman
Ride with Me, Mariah Montana, by Ivan Doig
Rima in the Weeds, by Deidre McNamer
A River Runs Through It, by Norman Maclean
Stick Horses and Other Stories of Ranch Life, by Wally McRae
Ten Tough Trips: Montana Writers and the West, by William
Bevis
The Big Sky, by A.B. Guthrie
The Horse Whisperer, by Nicholas Evans
The Last Best Place:
A Montana Anthology, by William Kittredge and Annick Smith
The Smoke Jumper, by Nicholas Evans
The Virginian, by Owen Wister
This House of Sky, by Ivan Doig
Tough Trip through Paradise, by Andrew Garcia
Trash Fish: A Life, by Greg Keeler
We Pointed Them North, by E.C. Abbott and Helena Huntington
Smith
When You and I Were Young, Whitefish, by Dorothy Johnson
Wind from an Enemy Sky, by D’Arcy McNickle
Winter Wheat, by Mildred Walker
Wolf and the Winds, by Frank B. Linderman
Young Men and Fire, by Norman Maclean
One of my colleagues, Phyllis Hansen, sent the following list. She and her daughter buy books about Montana
locations as they travel the state.
These are some that are their bookshelves.
A Guide to Historic Bozeman, by Jim Jenks
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Glacier Day Hikes, by Alan Leftridge
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Glacier Ghost Stories, by Karen Stevens
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Haunted Montana, by Karen Stevens
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It Happened in Montana, by James A. Crutchfield
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Jerry's Riot: The True Story of Montana's 1959 Prison
Disturbance, by Kevin S. Giles
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Miracle on the East Ridge, by Pat Kearney
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Montana Off the Beaten Path, by Michael McCoy
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More Haunted Montana, by Karen Stevens
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Nothing To Tell: Extraordinary Stores of Montana Ranch Women
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Out of the Night: A story of the tragedy and hope from a
survivor of the 1959 Montana-Yellowstone Earthquake,
by Irene Bennett Dunn
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Taken By Bear in Yellowstone, by Kathleen Snow
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Women in Wonderland: Lives, Legends and Legacies of Yellowstone
National Park, by Elizabeth A. Watry
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Young Men and Fire, by Norman Maclean
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You might check out these two links for more reading
material.
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Como Lake |
Feel free to add your favorite book/author from Montana or share
one from your state in the comment section below!