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Pacific Northwest
ACCOMMODATIONS
Bed and Breakfast
Campgrounds
Hotels and Motels
RV Parks
Vacation Rentals
Nearby Attractions
Flathead Lake
Glacier Natl. Park
Natl. Bison Range
Cities and Towns of Flathead Valley
Bigfork
Coram
Columbia Falls
Elmo
Hungry Horse
Kalispell
Lakeside
Polson
Ronan
Somers
Whitefish
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Northwest Montana
Bitterroot Valley
Blackfeet Indian Res.
Clark Fork River
Flathead Valley
Kootenai Valley
Missoula Valley
Seeley Swan Valley
More Montana
Northwest
Southwest
North Central
South Central
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Southeast

Looking toward the Big Arm of Flathead Lake and Wild Horse Island from state highway 28. The town of Elmo and US Highway 93 is seen along the western (left) shoreline. In the background beyond Wild Horse Island are the Swan and Mission Mountains rising to elevations of 6,500 feet and more.
Flathead Lake is the largest natural freshwater lake in the western United States. Lying in the Flathead Valley of Northwest Montana, the lake is more then 300 feet deep and extends north and south some 28 miles and is seven to 15 miles wide.
As you drive and drive on the roads that hug Flathead Lake's shoreline, (US Highway 93 on the west and Montana Route 35 on the east) it's hard to believe manmade dams that are so common in the Pacific Northwest didn't create it. Rather, the lake is a fortuitous product of the activity of ice-age glaciers, and is fed by the Swan and Flathead Rivers.
All manner of water sports are enjoyed upon its 200 square miles of surface. Several state parks and lakeshore communities have boat launches and marinas on the Lake.
You can avail yourself of a boat tour or rent one of the many types of watercraft including canoes, kayaks, windsurfers, hydro bikes, sailing and fishing boats. Serious anglers can arm themselves with heavy-duty equipment and probe the 300-foot deep Flathead Lake for trophy Mackinaw. Lake trout, salmon, perch, pike, bass, and whitefish are found in the Flathead area's many lakes.
Locals know summer has arrived when a steady stream of traffic starts to build on the secondary roads. So in peak season expect to share your enjoyment of the Flathead Valley with many others, although the mountains still offer room to get-away if you are willing to exert yourself.
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Click on Flathead Valley Area Map to locate cities and towns and other features of the Flathead Valley in Northwest Montana. |
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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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Montana
Atlas & Gazetteer. Paperback, 96 pages, May 2001.
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Montana
Adventure Guide. By Genevieve Rowles. 550 pages.
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The Insiders' Guide to Glacier: Including Flathead Valley and Waterton Lakes National Park by Eileen Gallagher, Frank Meile, Mary Pat Murphy, Rima Nickell, Susan Olin. June 1999, Paperback, 498 pages, (non-fiction). A complete guide to Montana's Glacier Country, including Glacier National Park, Flathead Valley, Kalispell, Whitefish and Columbia Falls. An extensive daytrips chapter covers Waterton National Park. Order now...
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