| Holter Lake with the Sleeping Giant in the background |
And, I've taken full advantage with hikes to the Holter Lake area in the Big Belts and the Two Med in Glacier Park.
I'm still testing that left foot and can report it's performing beautifully.
At Holter, we started the hike at Juniper Gulch, hit a high point, and traversed a ridge on a long loop.
Along the way we got breath-taking views of the Sleeping Giant and Oxbow Bend in the Missouri River and enjoyed a surprising number of early alpine flowers: Pasque, prairie smoke, kitten tail, yellow bells, larkspur, douglasia, phlox, vetch, shooting stars, two kinds of biscuit root (lomatia) and rock cress.
The fabulous views of a glass-like, mirror Holter Lake were enhanced by bright blue skies and a light breeze.
The weather encouraged us the next day to go to Glacier National Park's Two Medicine area for a hike up the road to Two Med Lake. The road is blocked at Running Eagle (Trick) Falls making the trek a round-trip four-miler.
There were only patches of snow on the sides of the road, and no ice or snow on the road.
The north and east faces of the mountains had good snow up high, but there were open slopes on south and west slopes.
After going to the lake, we walked its shore back to Pray Lake where we spotted a scroungy looking young moose browsing willows and unfazed by our presence. The road in the campground was also clear.
We normally make a late March-early April trip to Two Med Lake, but usually on skis, snowshoes or Yak-Tracks. Some years at this time of year the snow is piled up well over our heads and cover the restrooms at the lake; the campground is nearly impassible.
Because the weather was so clear, Two Med attracted a crowd, many, we found, from the West side.
As we drove through East Glacier Park on the way to Two Med we saw the remains of several wind storms, the most recent March 19, that knocked down thousands of trees. Many were piled in front of businesses. There were some areas where formerly tree-covered patches were now reduced to dirt. The trees in front of the East Glacier Lodge took a big hit and many were stacked in piles.
I can't imagine what the backcountry trees or the Continental Divide Trail look like.













