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Option One

This Peak Is Having An Identity Crisis Of Mountainous Proportions!





Overview of the Range:

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Welcome…


Blacktail Mountain may just be the easiest mountain to “summit” in the Salish Range. A 14 mile Forest Service Road from U.S. Highway 93 in Lakeside, Montana leads all the way to just below the summit.

Caption Above Photo



Blacktail Mountain may just be the easiest mountain to “summit” in the Salish Range. A 14 mile Forest Service Road from U.S. Highway 93 in Lakeside, Montana leads all the way to just below the summit.

Getting there

Blacktail Mountain may just be the easiest mountain to “summit” in the Salish Range. A 14 mile Forest Service Road from U.S. Highway 93 in Lakeside, Montana leads all the way to just below the summit.

Red Tape:

Blacktail Mountain may just be the easiest mountain to “summit” in the Salish Range. A 14 mile Forest Service Road from U.S. Highway 93 in Lakeside, Montana leads all the way to just below the summit.

Numbers

A Look at the Numbers: #
Total Named Peaks 88
Total Peaks over 8,000 feet 25
Total Peaks between 7,000 and 8,000 feet 52
Total Peaks between 6,000 and 7,000 feet 10
Total Peaks between 5,000 and 6,000 feet 5
Total Peaks between 4,000 and 5,000 feet 2
Total Wilderness Areas 2
Total Peaks with trails to the summits 13
Total Peaks with Roads to the summits 3
Total Peaks featured on SummitPost 2
Total Named Peaks along the Continental Divide 7

practice table

Order Artiodactyla Even-Toed Ungulates Habitat
White-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus Coniferous forests, meadows, creek and river bottoms
Mule deer Odocoileus hemionus Open forests, meadows, often at high elevations
American elk Cervus elaphus Open forests, meadows
Moose Alces alces Coniferous forests, lakes, slow streams, marshy areas
Bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis Open mountainous areas
Mountain goat Oreamnos americanus High peaks and meadows