Grizzlies On the Move, Back to the Wide-Open Prairie
Increasing grizzly activity raises questions about just what constitutes potential bear habitat in Montana.
NewWest Missoula
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More FeaturesBob Wire Has a Point (It's Under His Cowboy Hat)
Mr. Coffee, Meet Mr. Fist
For most of us functioning adults, we just can’t start the day without that steaming mug of joe. It’s not just the caffeine, but it’s also the ritual, the comfort of the warm cup between the hands, the jolt of heat and aromatic bitterness with every sip. There’s also the communal aspect, taking a little time between work crises to slurp a little mud with your coworkers and talk about who got beat up and/or lucky over the weekend.
So when there’s no coffee, there’s no life. There’s no light. There’s no liftoff. I’ve run out of coffee before, but there’s always been some backup plan, some forgotten stash, some workable alternative. Run out of filters? Use a paper towel. Sugar’s gone? Honey will do in a pinch. Last time I ran out of coffee beans, I rooted through the camping box until I found a packet of instant. The kids were asking their mother why daddy was swearing at the camping box.
News Analysis
Moonlight Bankruptcy: is it Yellowstone Club, or is it Tamarack?
For U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Ralph B. Kirscher, the opening hearing in the Moonlight Basin bankruptcy case, scheduled for this Tuesday in Butte, promises more than a little bit of deja vu: it was just a year ago that some of the same lawyers appeared in the same courtroom to begin arguments in the Yellowstone Club bankruptcy case, and there are certainly plenty of parallels in the two situations.
Like the Yellowstone Club, Moonlight is a new ski-and-golf resort in Big Sky that got caught out with an unsustainable debt load when the mountain real estate market crashed. Like the Yellowstone Club, Moonlight is an important economic engine for Big Sky and greater Bozeman, and the outcome of the bankruptcy will have a big impact on the community. And as in the Yellowstone Club case, the opening chapter of the bankruptcy will likely feature a battle between management and a Wall Street lender over who controls the property while a broader solution is found.
Unfortunately for Big Sky, though, the closer analogy is the case of Tamarack Resort in Idaho. Like Moonlight, Tamarack was conceived by a charismatic businessman as a public four-season resort with high-end real estate sales at the heart of the business model. Like Moonlight, Tamarack found itself in the position of relying on an angry lender to continue funding the operation after the meltdown hit. Like Moonlight, Tamarack has been unable to find a new owner to save the day, with many questioning whether the resort is fundamentally viable. Tamarack is now closed, with a foreclosure trial scheduled for February.
New West Book Review
Young Men and Fire: Timothy Egan’s “The Big Burn”
The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt & The Fire That Saved America
by Timothy Egan
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 324 pages, $27
In August of 1910, the largest fire ever to sweep across forests in the United States claimed trees, buildings, and lives across a stretch of three million acres in the Rocky Mountains. Timothy Egan writes in his follow-up to The Worst Hard Time, his National Book Award-winning exploration of the Dustbowl, that this blaze was known as “The Big Burn,” and it stretched “from central Idaho, east into Montana, west into Washington, north into British Columbia.” The smoke drifted as far away as Chicago. “It was as if a volcanic blast had disgorged the airborne remains of the forested northern Rockies into disparate parts of the United States.” Besides destroying several towns in the region, this fire had a lasting effect on the course of the country’s conservation movement, initiated by Theodore Roosevelt and his close confidant Gifford Pinchot, first head of the United States Forest Service.
Egan shows that many of the lessons derived from the Great Fire of 1910 were still followed by foresters a century later. People on both sides of the conservation movement tried to use it to achieve their political ends. To demonstrate the larger set of circumstances in which this fire played out, after a vivid opening chapter set in the midst of the fire, Egan steps back to February of 1899, when the 34-year-old Gifford Pinchot visits the Governor of New York, Teddy Roosevelt, who invited him to engage in a wrestling match and a boxing bout. This afternoon of roughhousing cemented their friendship.
New Conflicts arise
Grizzlies On the Move, Back to the Wide-Open Prairie
Montanans living along the winding Teton River, well east of the Rocky Mountain Front were quick to notice their new neighbor this summer. As early as the beginning of July, ranchers and other landowners along the prairie began intermittently spotting a solitary grizzly bear journeying east away from the mountains.
Residents of the rural grasslands, including Mike Madel, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Park’s Region 4 Grizzly Bear Management Specialist based in Choteau, were even more surprised in mid-July when members of a local ranching family captured photographs of the lone bear on their land along the Teton north of Fort Benton, ambling through open prairie nearly 100 miles from the mountains, where Ursus arctos horribilis is expected these days.
For Madel and other bear managers in the state, the bear’s arrival so far beyond the range of today’s grizzlies and into historic habitat was a revelation – and one that would be the first of many throughout the summer and fall. Madel, a 23-year veteran of working with grizzlies along the Front, called 2009 an “unprecedented” year for bears wandering back on to the prairie, and says the bears’ presence there is only likely to increase in coming years.
That means an entire population of humans will now have to learn how to cohabitate with grizzlies. While the plains are historically grizzly country, for many living there now, the return of the grizzly is – to put it lightly – a surprise.
Flu News and Blues
Flu Update: H1N1 Cases Down, But is Uptick Ahead?
As flu pandemics go, H1N1 sometimes seems hard to compute, given all the information flooding our way. Is it a panic? An impending storm? A party theme?
Yes, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reports that some people are hosting “swine flu parties” where people who know someone with H1N1 purposely hang out and try to get infected. Their goal is to get a mild case and gain natural immunity, so they won’t catch a more dangerous version later on. Health officials, not surprisingly, say this doesn’t work and isn’t smart. “While the disease ... has been mild for many people, it has been severe and even fatal for others,” the federal health agency says. “There is no way to predict with certainty what the outcome will be for an individual or, equally important, for others to whom the intentionally infected person may spread the virus.”
Meanwhile, as news about the flu continues to spread at viral speed, a Montana health official offers a few facts to help put things in perspective. Elton Mosher is the influenza surveillance coordinator and an infectious disease expert with the Department of Public Health and Human Services. Here’s his view of the flu, plus statistics from the World Health Organization and CDC:
Resort Bankruptcies
Moonlight Basin Files for Bankruptcy Protection
Moonlight Basin, the troubled Big Sky, Montana ski resort, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday, just a day before a foreclosure hearing that could have put the property in the hands of its primary lender, Lehman Bros. Moonlight took a loan of $100 million from Lehman Bros. in the fall of 2007 with the intention of quickly selling the resort, but the real estate meltdown scotched that plan, and the bankruptcy of Lehman Bros. itself in the fall of 2008 has left the six-year-old resort in limbo.
In the bankruptcy filing, Moonlight seeks permission to obtain $21 million in interim financing from Trilogy Capital, a Connecticut based hedge fund, which would enable Moonlight to remain open and have a ski season as planned. Lehman Bros. indicated in the foreclosure case that it also intended to keep the resort open, but the investment bank wanted to gain full control and appoint a receiver in the place of current management before it provided the funds needed to continue operations. The foreclosure proceeding, which is a state court action, is automatically put on hold by the bankruptcy filing.





Ray said: "I don't know about "taking on the railroad" , and I think Bill mis-worded the following "For years, people in central Montana have been encouraging,…
Anna Daley said: "Solid story, Jason. It's so important to have journalists, like you, who can research such an important issue and deliver an unbiased report."
hellokitty said: "Listen to yourselves try to justify one location, one owner, one opperator, one bank, when the circumstances are strangly similar to the YC debacle. Local…
Barb Wire said: "As Rusty's mother, my first impulse was to say, "that's too risky!" but I have been completely impressed with the Missoula Parkour Group. They are…