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Outdoor news

by Hungry Horse News
| February 12, 2013 8:54 AM

Comments sought

Fish, Wildlife and Parks is seeking public comment for its Flathead River Hybrid Trout Suppression Project. FWP proposes to continue removing hybrid and rainbow trout from the mouths and channels of Abbot, Sekokini, Rabe, Ivy and Third creeks in the main stem and the North Fork of the Flathead River. Trapping and electrofishing would be used to catch fish during their spawning season, from April to May, and move them to community fishing ponds. FWP would also electrofish between July and September to remove hybrid and rainbow trout offspring. The goal of the proposed suppression effort is to minimize the loss of westslope cutthroat trout populations in the Flathead River system. A draft report on the project is available for a 30-day public review through March 8. For more information, contact FWP fisheries biologist Amber Steed at 751-4541 or asteed@mt.gov.

Trout talks

Flathead Trout Unlimited will host a video presentation on the impacts of climate change in Montana by fisheries biologist Bill Geer at the Fish, Wildlife and Parks offices, 490 North Meridian Road, in Kalispell, on Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7 p.m. A program by outdoor writer Todd Tanner on fishing the world famous Railroad Ranch on the Henry’s Fork of the Snake River in Idaho will follow.

Avalanche talk

The Flathead Avalanche Center and its partners will host an avalanche safety awareness event at the Whitefish Moose Lodge, 230 West 10th Street, in Whitefish, on Tuesday, Feb. 19, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Presenters will include Mark Dundas with Big Mountain Ski Patrol Inc. on backcountry skiing around Whitefish Mountain Resort; Steve Burgland with Flathead Nordic Backcountry Patrol and U.S. Geological Survey snow scientist Erich Peitzsch on recent avalanche incidents; and Seth Carbonari with the Forest Service and the Flathead Avalanche Center about the center’s role as a resource for decision-making. For more information, visit online at www.flatheadavalanche.org/education or call 758-5204.

Native Plants

The Flathead Chapter of the Montana Native Plant Society will host a free program by Shannon Kimball on “Digital Plant Tools” at the Teakettle Community Hall, 235 Nucleus Avenue, in Columbia Falls, on Wednesday, Feb. 20, at 7 p.m. The society will hold its general meeting at 5:30 p.m. Kimball will discuss a new app for mobile devices, which provides photographs from a growing list of more than 250 wildflowers, grasses, shrubs and trees. In addition, Jen Asebrook, a botanist in Glacier National Park for more than 20 years, will talk about the best online native plant Web sites. For more information, call Kimball at 892-2446.

Bird count

The 2013 Great Backyard Bird Count will take place on Feb. 15-18. The annual event is for beginners to experts. Participants enter their observations on the GBBC Web site. For information on local counts, contact Bob Lee at 406-270-0371 or rml3@centurytel.net or Kathy Ross at 406-837-3837 or mtkat@montanaport.net.

Park talk

The Montana House and Glacier National Park Fund will co-host a “Look Listen and Learn” presentation by Chris Peterson, photographer for the Hungry Horse News at the Montana House in Apgar Village at Saturday, Feb. 16, at 4 p.m. His photographic presentation will be about taking long multi-day loop hikes in Glacier National Park and Bob Marshall Wilderness. His work has appeared in the New York Times and National Geographic’s Crown of the Continent Map. He is the creator of the quarterly Glacier Park Magazine, now available as an iPad app. For more information, call 892-3250 or visit online at www.glaciernationalparkfund.org.

Freezeout Lake

Flathead Audubon will lead their annual trip to the Freezeout Lake Wildlife Management Area south of Choteau to view the snow geese migration on Saturday and Sunday, March 23 and 24, led by Dan Casey. As many as 400,000 geese have been seen there at one time. Thousands of tundra swans, tens of thousands of northern pintails, American widgeons, and a wide variety of other waterfowl add to the excitement, and often the first white pelicans, shorebirds and Franklin’s gulls of the spring are also seen. Their daily comings and goings against the backdrop of the Rocky Mountain Front make for an incredible spectacle. For more information, contact Casey at 857-3143 or danielcasey55@gmail.com.

Wilderness talks

The Bob Marshall Wilderness Foundation’s 2013 Wilderness Speakers Series will present three talks about wilderness stewardship, conservation and recreation. Research biologist Kate Kendall will talk about grizzly bears on Feb. 21, local author Matt Holloway will talk about “The Wild and the Not-Wild: A Discussion of Wilderness in Today’s Mind” on March 14, and former Glacier National Park ranger Charlie Logan will talk about “Recollections of a Rocky Mountain Ranger” on April 11. The talks will be held in Flathead Valley Community College’s Arts and Technology Building from 6:30 to 8 p.m.