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Where to stay and
what to do in
Hungry
Horse
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Glacier National Park
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Flathead Valley
Bigfork
Coram
Columbia Falls
Hungry Horse
Kalispell
Lakeside
Polson
Ronan
Somers
Whitefish
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 Hungry Horse, population about 900, is one of those small
communities likely to be overlooked on the way to Glacier
National Park, which lies just 10 miles to the east. But it's
worth a stop, either for a traveler's rest break or a place to spend the
night prior to a full day in the park. Worth checking out are the
several roadside stands offering various concoctions made from native
huckleberries. The best are the huckleberry milk shakes that leave
you wanting more. A worthy side trip is the nearby Hungry
Horse Dam (406-387-5241) and the 34-mile-long Hungry Horse
Reservoir. A road circling the reservoir provides easy access to
many hiking areas in the nearby national forests and wilderness areas.
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Go Northwest!
Bookstore
Best selection of books on the
Northwest.
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Moon
Handbooks: Montana
by W. C. McRae, Judy Jewell
February 2002, 5th edition, Paperback,
480 pages, (guidebook)
Filled with upscale resorts and restaurants and
more low-to-mid-priced lodgings and dining options, this guide also contains
vignettes on the theatrical career of Calamity Jane and how Meriwether Lewis
named the prairie dog.
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