Monday 7 August 2017

Great Divide Mountain Bike Route (Whitefish to Helena)

Another week on the trail and over 700 miles ridden. The scenery changed from mountain wilderness with clear lakes and rivers to rural to a landscape heavily impacted by humans, especially around Helena.
The first acknowledgement of the trail in 3 weeks!

Country living in Montana.



 Pine trees everywhere - even the phone tower looks like a conifer!

Bigfork is a small detour, but well worth it. A cute little arty town on Flathead Lake with chalet style buildings, great food and a brewery.


Between Bigfork and Holland Lake, the trail leads mostly through forest with snapshots of views of the surrounding landscape. It's fun but hilly riding on mostly gravel roads and some single track. Below a beaver dam. 

There is always plenty of surface water to filter and drink.



Camping at Cedar Creek (note our neighbours lent us chairs!) .... 

 ... and at Holland Lake.


Due to an historic heat wave in the Pacific Northwest of the US, the fire danger was extremely high. Several fires were out of control exactly where we were heading! Three sections of the trail were closed and we had to divert onto main roads between Holland Lake and Lincoln. Kirsten was very disappointed we could't stick to the trail. 

Seeley Lake was on evacuation stand-by and the lake was closed off to all activities to allow fire fighting aircraft to scoop water. There were at least six planes circling over us all afternoon.

Early the next morning - time to leave.

Salmon Lake, a gorgeous spot we would have missed if we were on the trail. 


After about 30 miles on the road, we were rewarded with a fabulous breakfast at Ovando.


It was too hot to ride again, so we spent a lazy afternoon reading books in the shade (Harry Morgan Campsite on Blackfoot River). A thunderstorm over night hopefully extinguished some fires, rather than started new ones!

The next day, after another 30 miles on the road and another hearty breakfast (including about ten cups of weak but free coffee), we were back on the trail. After Lincoln, the fires were finally behind us!

There is still smoke in the mountains.


More forest trails with squirrels and chipmunks everywhere.







Barbara Nye in Canyon Creek welcomes cyclists with a cold drink! She also provides a free cabin (fully furnished), free camping, free food and a solar shower!


The resident lama took a liking to Kirsten - I'm not sure it was mutual.

I was mesmerised watching the hummingbirds - very hard to photograph though!


After another two crossings of the Continental Divide, we head downhill towards Helena.



Helena was originally a mining town after gold was found in 1864. It has an interesting history and some very nice buildings. A great place for a day off! 

We went on a tour of the Montana State Capitol building, which was restored after a 7.5 magnitude earthquake in 1959.


Charles M. Russell painted Montana landscapes and historic events around 1890-ies. He is called America's cowboy artist.
 

We still have to watch out for these....

1 comment:

  1. Love the photo with Kirsten and the Llama. I hope the only bear you see that close-up in your journey is a stuffed one!

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