When smoke gets in your lens
Patrick Cote/Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 4 months AGO
Standup paddleboarders cruise around a smoky Flathead Lake on Tuesday afternoon near Lakeside. Though there are a few fires in Montana, most of the smoke is coming from Idaho, Oregon and Washington. According to Flathead National Forest public affairs officer Wade Muehlhof, “We’re not putting up smoke here locally. It’s all coming from the west.” With hot and dry days upcoming in the forecast, Muehlhof stressed the importance of the public reducing possibilities of man-started fires by taking extreme caution with things like cigarettes and chains dragging behind vehicles. The fires in the Kalispell area were kept under two acres this past weekend. According to the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, lightning storms last Friday and Saturday lit up the night sky with an impressive show resulting in eight fires; most were west of Kalispell in the Pleasant Valley and Hubbart Dam areas. (Patrick Cote/Daily Inter Lake)
ARTICLES BY PATRICK COTE/DAILY INTER LAKE
Obit DePratu
Bob DePratu
Bighorn Sheep
Wildlife biologists perform health tests on a bighorn ram Wednesday morning at Big Arm State Park. The sheep are not tranquilized but blindfold to help keep them calm during the tests. Feb. 26, 2014 in Big Arm, Montana. (© Patrick Cote/Daily Inter Lake)
Libby Runner 1
Patrick Cote/Daily Inter Lake After finishing the final leg of her 91-mile fundraising run, Kelda Latham-Bennett, right, is greeted by Special Olympics athlete Chrissy Siefke in the Flathead Industries parking lot Monday afternoon. Latham-Bennett raised more than $4,000 for Special Olympics of Montana by running from Libby to Kalispell. The two-day run started Sunday at Achievements' Parkside Thrift Store in Libby and concluded Monday afternoon at Flathead Industries in Kalispell. Monday, June 4, 2012 in Kalispell, Montana.