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North Fork summer in full swing

Larry Wilson | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 5 months AGO
by Larry Wilson
| July 18, 2012 8:05 AM

July has had a hot beginning, and not just because of the weather. As always, the Fourth of July parade at Polebridge started the real North Fork summer.

Thanks to Ray Brown, the parade had a new, patriotic twist. Ray organized a reading of the entire Declaration of Independence just before the parade began. Readers were mostly veterans, starting with World War II veteran Carl Pittman. The large crowd was attentive and respectful, and everyone I talked to said it was a great addition to the celebration.

In addition to a large crowd, there were many American flags, a ton of good looking, happy kids and interesting floats which mostly had some kind of political message, ranging from “Big dogs not fat cats” to “Trap mice not wolves.”

There were more Democrats in the parade than I thought existed in Flathead County and, of course, the Republicans managed to make their opposition of Obamacare known. My personal favorite was the singing country band that this year expanded to a pickup towing two trailers. I also liked the Chinese dragon.

The Fourth continued with a square dance at Sondreson Hall, and there has been some kind of social event nearly every day since, ranging from hikes to cribbage and river rafting to bocce ball. Until July 11, when a “firewise” seminar and the Interlocal Agreement focused on serious issues rather than purely social events.

The North Fork Landowners Association’s fire mitigation committee, led by Molly Shepherd, organized an extremely informative and educational panel of landowners who spoke and showed pictures of their experiences with wildfire, as well as how to manage forested property to minimize fire risk and promote their goals for their property.

Allen Chrisman, a retired forester and firefighter, stressed the variety of goals in managing his family’s forest. These ranged from protecting buildings from fire, reducing fuels, producing timber for harvest and protecting wildlife — from birds and small mammals to ungulates and predators.

Larry Kinsolving, whose entire forest burned in 2003, talked about the effects to reduce erosion and create a healthy forest after a fire, and Jerry Wernick combined both fire preparation and timber management as necessary.

The seminar, from 9:30 a.m. to noon, was followed by the Interlocal Agreement from 1 to 3 p.m. Most agencies and private groups merely informed attendees what they are doing or plan to do in the near future.

Only real complaints I heard regarded the poor boat launch slides at the Canada Border and Ford Cabin and the lack of sanitary facilities at the Sondreson River Access Site. Forest Service failure to accommodate recreational use is inexcusable to me.

Also, one resident was incensed regarding Glacier National Park’s lack of information regarding their “dark skies” initiative.

Neither Flathead County or the Border Patrol saw fit to send a representative to the meeting.

ARTICLES BY LARRY WILSON

June 24, 2015 7:50 a.m.

Fire season in the North Fork early

I am writing this column on June 21st, the first day of summer and Lee Downes' anniversary of his 21st birthday. June is supposed to be one of the wettest months of the year, if not the wettest. It will really have to pour it on between now and the 30th for that to be true this year.

September 23, 2015 6:14 p.m.

North Fork escapes fire season, again

As I write this on Friday, we are moving into the last weekend of summer. By the time the paper comes out, it will be the first day of fall. Cool damp weather the last week plus the time of year causes me to believe the fire season is virtually over. Sure, we could still have wildfires but it is unlikely we will have any large stand replacement fires. Apparently, the North Fork has dodged the bullet - again.

July 1, 2015 1:03 p.m.

Fire season cooking

The worrywarts can stop worrying about whether or not we will have a severe fire season. It is now almost a certainty. Not only have we had a very dry June, normally one of the wettest months, we are experiencing hot drying weather not usually seen until late July and August. Today (Friday) is expected to reach into the 90s and we may have 100 degrees on Saturday and Sunday. Never before has Flathead County had 100 degrees in June.