Montana
Related: About this forumI grew up in Montana.
Life being a random as it is, I haven't visited in almost ten years.
I am hoping to make a trip there soon.
I can't remember when the lilacs bloom.
Any suggestions?
jalan48
(14,483 posts)It's a beautiful spot, albeit conservative politically.
grasswire
(50,130 posts)But you could contact the tourism bureau and ask. May be later on the highline.....and IIRC that's your area?
2naSalit
(93,115 posts)Still got some snow in the high country. Montana is kind of big, what part are you from?
grasswire
(50,130 posts)...of your childhood.
Ptah
(33,517 posts)Rhiannon12866
(223,448 posts)Delmette
(522 posts)I live in Helena and my tulips and daisies are already popping up. There are no buds on trees and bushes yet.
June has always been the time for lilacs, but you might keep in touch with this group to see what the weather is doing.
grasswire
(50,130 posts)I can almost taste dinner at the On Broadway.
Delmette
(522 posts)Ptah
(33,517 posts)I will check with my cousins, aunts, uncles and friends.
Montana seems to have too many variations in weather depending on where you are at.
I hope you have a great vacation.
BlueMTexpat
(15,502 posts)April, early May.
Where do you want to go and what do you want to see to renew your roots? Glacier Park in the NW and Yellowstone in the SW are always big attractions but openings depend on the snow levels. Others include the Little Big Horn Battlefield site and various marker sites along the trail followed by Lewis & Clark on their way west, Fort Benton and Great Falls (near where L & C found the Great Falls of the Missouri River). The Charlie Russell Museum is in Great Falls. Russell was Montana's "cowboy artist" and was friend to the late great Will Rogers. The main university towns of Bozeman & Missoula are great, with lots of liberal spots and activities. Missoula also hosts the tiny but staunchly pacifist Jeannette Rankin Peace Center and the wonderful Maureen and Mike Mansfield Foundation, created to promote understanding among peoples of Asia and the US. Helena is famous for Last Chance Gulch where the big gamble paid off and gold was discovered. Flathead Lake, with its valley and the beautiful Mission Mountain range, is lovely and nearby Bigfork is an arts center. The Confederated Tribes (Flathead, Salish, Kootenai) reservation is on the way to Flathead Lake.
The emphasis, as you may remember, is primarily on outdoor and sporting activities and there are lots of little jewels than can be discovered. Check out for example, the range of B&Bs in the state, a great way to meet people. Two I can recommend heartily are the Stone School Inn in Valier and the Great Northern Bed and Breakfast in Chester, where the lovely Patty Aaberg and her husband, New Age musician Phil, host. Both Patty and Phil are longtime family friends. My mother actually taught at the Stone School Inn during WWII when it was still a working school. Another jewel is the Isaac Walton Inn falling midway between East and West Glacier on US#2, originally built to house the train crews who had to operate the engines to assist the trains over the Continental Divide.
These are just a few places off the top of my head and there are lots, lots more. MT is purple, rather than red, independent rather than R, like many of the western States. There are lots of good Dems there, some very liberal, some more centrist. Unfortunately, due to some very unpopular USSC decisions, corporate money from outside the state is pumped in to support very conservative R candidates, which is why a total zilch such as comparative outsider Steve Daines won the Senate race in 2014. Those same elements are pouring money into the gubernatorial race this year and I hope that people are not duped again.
Sorry for the essay - didn't mean to ramble on so much. But MT is my birth state and I still love it and those I know who live there. I'll be there myself for about a week later this month and am looking forward to that.
Carlo Marx
(98 posts)I live in Bozeman, which is in southwest Montana. We're the gateway town/airport to Yellowstone, though it's still an hour and a half drive. Bozeman is the type of town you visit and don't want to leave. The spring weather here is typically about 2-3 weeks behind Missoula (northwest mt) My yard is full of lilac bushes and they usually come mid to late May, early June. Things might be early this year.
I would recommend coming late June early July; the wildflower are everywhere and the rivers start clearing up from spring runoff. Montana is the Mecca of fly fishing. We have the most liberal stream access laws in the US and do not stock the rivers and streams--they're all wild fisheries. I live just 6 miles from town but had a moose in the yard a couple weeks ago.
Jbradshaw120
(80 posts)South Central Montana. Our lilacs always bloomed early June. I'm in Billings now. We had a light winter, so I wouldn't be suprised if they boomed early like late may.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)and it was simply gorgeous. Breathtaking. Warm enough, green everywhere, spectacular (my best friend lives in Bozeman....).
The lilacs are probably done by then, though...