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North Fork road improvements

Larry Wilson | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 6 months AGO
by Larry Wilson
| May 30, 2012 8:09 AM

It has been an interesting week weather wise on the North Fork. One day, I was wearing short pants and a T-shirt in near 80-degree weather. The next, I was back in long johns, long pants, flannel shirt and needing a jacket to go outside. Normal spring weather.

The gardeners were all in favor of the rain we received for the rest of the week, but no one was too happy about the colder weather. It did bring other benefits.

The freshly graded road from Camas Bridge to Trail Creek junction was getting pretty dusty, especially north of Polebridge, and the rain settled it for now. Plus, the Flathead County Road Department began putting crushed rock on the road above Polebridge. When finished, we will have six inches of crush on the entire unpaved portions of the North Fork Road from Camas Junction to about Sondreson Community Hall, plus from the North Fork Road to the Mercantile, much of it treated with magnesium chloride.

As a result, the road is much smoother, and dust levels are much lower — at least for the present. All of this work is the result of several years of National Forest Service Resource Advisory Committee (RAC) program grants and 50 percent county road monies. Less dust and a smooth surface translates to a safer road, as well as being easier on vehicles and folks with asthma or a bad back.

Later this summer, another RAC grant combined with county funds will see work on the road from Canyon Creek to Camas Junction. The project will narrow the road from a 40-foot wide surface to a standard 28-foot wide road. Hope is to preserve what remains of the crushed rock that was applied when the road was widened in anticipation of paving. Paving was blocked by Glacier National Park and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the money went elsewhere.

In addition to concentrating the remained crushed rock, it is hoped that dust will be reduced and that people will drive more slowly. We will see.

As of today, there has not been a reauthorization of funds for the RAC program. However, there is still a possibility that the RAC program will be reauthorized for another three years.

In the past, the RAC program had more than $300,000 kujuygto award each year. Half of the money must be spent on roads, trails and water projects that benefit both Flathead County and the Flathead National Forest.

Projects that have benefited the North Fork, in addition to the road, include trail maintenance, sweet smelling outhouses, tree thinning and weed control, as well as some other minimal timber projects. Grants help more than just government agencies, and allow volunteers to maximize their efforts.

Recipients have included the Back Country Horsemen of the Flathead doing trail work and improvements at Tuchuck Campground and the North Fork Landowners Association and North Fork Protective Association’s weed-control efforts. One of the few government-funded things that make it to “on the ground week.”

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.