People urged to prepare for flooding

More warnings about possible flooding when this year’s massive snowpack starts melting off . . .

Local emergency response officials are urging residents of flood-prone areas to plan and prepare for potential flooding.

“Basically, what we’re telling people the best thing they can do to help responders is to be able to take care of themselves for 72 hours, to have a plan about what they will do in the event there is flooding that impacts their home or business,” said Cindy Mullaney, deputy director of the Flathead County Office of Emergency Services.

Based on well-above-average snowpack alone, the National Weather Service predicts most rivers and streams in Northwest Montana will approach or exceed flood stage.

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Glacier snow keeps piling up

There are some pretty impressive numbers here. It’s looking more and more like flooding will be a significant issue this spring . . .

Snow keeps piling up in Glacier National Park and in mountain ranges across Northwest Montana at a time when the snowpack usually is diminishing.

Recent storms have delivered 8 inches of new snow at West Glacier and up to 18 inches at higher elevations in the park, causing trouble for park plowing crews that spent part of this week clearing previously plowed roads.

Automated snow measuring sites in the park usually record a decrease in snow water content by mid-April, but they are instead recording increases.

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SB 414, Montana Wolf Control Act, voted down

From a recent email sent out by Janet Barwick, NRDC Montana Wildlife Advocate . . .

Senate Bill 414, the Montana Wolf Control Act, has been voted down in the Montana House.  This bill would have made it legal to shoot wolves on private land, at any time, even without a hunting license, endangering the hard fought recovery of wolves in the Northern Rockies. It is highly unlikely that there will be a revision of this bill before the legislature recesses on April 30th, and unlikely that it will come up again in the special session slated for June.

Glacier National Park’s 2011 concessioner operating dates announced

Glacier Park just posted a schedule of the operating dates for their various concessioner-run services. With the exception of facilities like the backcountry chalets, most things kick off from late May to mid-June . . .

Glacier National Park officials announce the 2011 operating dates for park concessioners. These concessioners, who work under contract within Glacier National Park, provide visitor services including lodging, food service, retail shops, tours, transportation, horseback riding, guided day hikes and backpacking trips, and boat tours and small boat rentals.

Continue reading (temporary link, will update as needed) . . .

Larry Wilson: The times they are a-changin’

Larry Wilson’s column this week discusses the changes on the North Fork over the last century or so, especially those related to Forest Service activity . . .

I have written several times about how change has affected the North Fork, especially the changes brought about by the influx of the two periods of homesteading that opened up the area with roads and dwellings and, most of all, with people.

Of course, there were white men in the North Fork before the homesteaders. The earliest were no doubt trappers and hunters who left no written records to speak of and few marks on the land.

Without a doubt the U.S. Forest Service has had the longest presence on the North Fork closely followed by the U.S. Park Service.

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Montana sportsmen ask state for quick action on wolves

This article from yesterday’s Ravalli Republic is worth reading for context. It includes some indication of the likely quotas for this year’s wolf hunt, as well as information on the planning schedule . . .

Sportsmen’s groups from around Montana are asking wildlife officials to move as quickly as possible to implement the state’s wolf management plan once the animal is removed from federal protection.

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Idaho officials set meeting to plan wolf hunt

Idaho is already spooling up for a wolf hunt this year. No word from Montana yet . . .

Officials with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game plan to meet with Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter on Monday to discuss a public wolf hunting season.

“We will be ready to have another hunting season,” said Jim Unsworth, deputy director of Fish and Game.

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It’s official: wolves to come off endangered list within 60 days

It’s official: Gray wolves are off the endangered species list in this corner of the country . . .

Federal wildlife officials say they will take more than 1,300 gray wolves in the Northern Rockies off the endangered species list within 60 days.

An attachment to the budget bill signed into law Friday by President Barack Obama strips protections from wolves in five Western states.

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Recent mountain snow heightens concerns of flooding across western Montana

Here’s the latest write-up on the flooding danger this spring. Even without any additional precipitation, there’s potential for problems . . .

An already abundant winter snowpack has continued to accumulate in the mountains across western Montana this past month, creating an even greater potential for flooding than predicted.

“We’ve got a lot of snow, and with that snow comes the potential for flooding,” said Ray Nickless, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Missoula.

Nickless delivered his most recent flood forecasts during a conference call Thursday, predicting that nearly all the rivers and creeks in the Missoula, Flathead, Swan and Bitterroot valleys are likely to approach flood levels from this winter’s snowpack alone.

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Feds want to take Great Lakes wolves off endangered list

Seems like there’s also a move afoot to remove gray wolves from the Endangered Species List in the Great Lakes region . . .

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is making another attempt to remove gray wolves in the western Great Lakes region from the endangered species list.

The agency says Friday that wolves in Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin have recovered and no longer need federal protection. About 4,000 wolves roam the three states.

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