Page Type Page Type: Area/Range
Location Lat/Lon: 47.38300°N / 113.918°W
Activities Activities: Hiking, Mountaineering, Trad Climbing, Ice Climbing, Scrambling, Skiing
Seasons Season: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter
Sign the Climber's Log

 

An Absolutely Marvelous Area!

 

Two views with which to begin, each giving reason-enough to climb...

 

The 2,000' west face of Gray Wolf Peak (L); Monarch of the range, McDonald Peak (R)
 

 

 

And then, while relaxing and preparing for the (long) final approach up McDonald Peak, Glacier Peak (9402') and Unnamed Peak 9328 (foreground) become the sort of thing getting into your mind...
 

 

And welcome to the Missions!

 

 

THE "LOWER-48 UNFORGETTABLES"

 

Enlarge photo until it fills the screen to see something special...
 


 

Lucifer Lake
Mountaineer Peak, Lucifer Lake
Mollman Lake (1st)
Mission green

Those of us fortunate enough to have driven the Intermountain West can bear witness to some remarkable sights, and exposure to views that readily become bits and pieces of a welcome and permanent memory. The sort of thing to be used at work as an inducement to office cabin fever, not to mention real torment! And at a later time, if some occurrence—say, a photograph, or a route retraced—brings with it a reminder of even a long ago encounter, reaction comes along the lines of...Ahhh yes!...I remember that...magnificent...!—as though the vision was last seen just yesterday. And identification (not to mention motivation) is quickly and wonderfully immediate.


Descending Togwatee Pass to the west, and the first sudden appearance of the Tetons slipping into view brings one of the most famous of the unforgettables. As does driving Owens Valley along the eastern upthrust of the Sierra Nevada. Or the view east from the summit of Molas Pass into the unforgettable San Juan Grenadiers and Needles (or a bit further south along the same route, the first stunning view of a solitary Engineer Mountain). And one must mention the one-of-a-kind Beartooth Highway and its magnificent perambulations just north of Yellowstone N.P., unerringly working its unforgettable way along the Wyoming-Montana border between Cooke City and Red Lodge, Montana. Or if you really wish memory to be done (really) right, the entire 55-mile length of Going-to-the-Sun Road as it somehow finds the way up and over Logan Pass, and through Glacier National Park. All of these—and there are OF COURSE many others—etch into our minds, and 

Mountaineer is the peak...
This is not an easy country....

we are the better for the pictures they bring.
 

Unnamed and Unknown.
No name, unknown, beautiful!

This page is about another member of these magical places, one not so well known yet just as memorable...

(more often than not buried somewhere in the continuous mountainous distance between Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks, or lost to the mind's eye because current conversation is of the Beartooths, and maybe climbing Granite Peak—the state's loftiest, and by any reckoning one of the most major of all the 50 state high points)

...and this is the most dramatic way to reach it: drive north on Hwy 93, leaving I-90 a few miles west of Missoula, as though heading to Glacier National Park. Pass through the tiny town of Ravalli, continue up 

Crystal Lake
Crystal Lake, Sugarloaf Mountain

what the locals call "Ravalli Hill;" after a mile-and-a half you reach the summit, and with no warning have a face to face confrontation with just under 7,000 feet of precipitous and huge upthrust: the (absolutely) unforgettable western flank of the Mission Range. There is a rest stop on top of Ravalli Hill, where it is okay to pull over and deal with the goose bumps because, simply put, slamming into your vision is the monumental side of what mountains are all about. The view is magnificent, and even after being over that crest dozens of times I still stop, engaging in a wonderfully losing battle to cram everything I see into my head. It cannot be done, but the trying is sublime.
 

Glacier Peak reflected in the...
Glacier Peak

Well, that is one way to do a visual number on memory retention, but there is another face to these mountains. The east side is a bit less dramatic because for one thing the valley floor is about a thousand feet higher than on the west (and the highway—Hwy 83—is not quite so close), and for another, the Seeley-Swan Valley is so heavily forested that there are miles when nothing can be seen of the Missions to the west (or the also greatly impressive Swans to the east); the trees are lovely and impenetrable, and the mountains are  

South from McDonald Peak
A landscape whirled and stirred, and not sorted...

tucked away and out of sight. An occasional meadow serves as a window, where the natural inclination is to stop, take in the lushness, and fill your camera and mind.

I'm trying to make a point here, that the Mission Range is visually absolutely stupendous (at one time there was serious discussion of proposing the area for a national park!). It is also very wild, with comparatively little in the way of maintained trails. These are big mountains, and the climbing of them is a lot of work—mountains entered because you love the wildness and solitude at the heart of the matter. They are entirely within the Flathead National Forest, and contain two wildly diverse wilderness areas, one of which is quite "normal" in its management and usage outlook...

...the other is anything but.

Gray Wolf slides into view...enters your mind...
 

The difference lies easily between innocent and simple-looking lines on a map (in this land of amazing mountains), an area where during the summer no human may go (there will be neither grisly human nor human/grizzly interaction), and trails are steep and without switchbacks (animals don't zigzag up mountains)—and are, anyway, only sometimes cleared of deadfall and rubble (this is not managed wilderness travel: you are on your own)—if you choose this wild and uncivilized place (of very few posted signs) it is because you want to.

Enter this area? Oh yes, of course I want to!
 

 

MISSION MOUNTAINS WILDERNESS COMPLEX

 

Mission morning fills the Riddell Lakes Basin
 

 


 

Glacier Scrapings
Glacier scrapings

Our songs come from those mountains. Our dreams, our hopes are taken there in the hope that we will get guidance and support from wilderness.
—Tony Incashola, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes

These mountains belong to our children, and when our children grow old they will belong to their children. In this way and for this reason these mountains are sacred.
—Mission Mountains Committee, during the establishment of the Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness in 1979
 

Informational Turnout
Information along Hwy 93 (enlarge to read)

 

 


A NICE PLACE TO LOOK AT. AND THINK ABOUT.


 

Lost Lake. Foreground shows...
Lost Lake

Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness – 89,500 Acres

Mission Mountains Wilderness – 73,877 Acres


Looking east from the crest of this range the view shows the Mission Mountains Wilderness, managed by the Flathead National Forest. Turn to the west, and the Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness—situated on the Flathead Indian Reservation, and managed by the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes—lies at your feet, the first, and so far only, tribal-managed wilderness in the U.S. The two run side by side (not far south of Glacier National Park) approximately 40 miles north and south over some of the  

Mission Falls
Down the Mission Falls

roughest, wildest terrain imaginable, have approximately a paltry 45 miles of trails (mostly not much suited to pack animals, and sometimes not much better for two legs) between them, contain—in McDonald Peak—a member of the Ultra-prominence Club, also are home to two magnificent waterfalls—Elizabeth and Mission Falls—which drop over a thousand feet each, still have several small (but respectable) glaciers holding on to the status of being glaciers, and lastly, the Tribal Wilderness has a most unusual management feature: a substantial chunk of land completely closed to humans during what would normally be the height of summer activity. The southern half of the range is the more rugged because the Continental Ice Sheets rode up and over the northern mountains, grinding those summits into some semblance of submission, while the peaks further south were just encircled, hacked and carved at the sides, and threatened.

 


A good sense of the seemingly never-ending Western Montana mountains and valleys

(Looking north—Southern Missions in the distance.)
 

 

A beautiful, slate gray pair!
 

The Mission Mountains Wilderness was officially designated as such in 1975, the boundaries for the Tribal Wilderness were set in 1979, and made official in 1982. Prior to the official designation of the Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness, the tribes had fought the designation of the area as a national park, and after much discussion voted against timber harvesting in the lushly forested area. Both circumstances would have led to increased tribal profits, but it was decided such was not to be the priority.

In 1982... No legal definition for tribal wilderness existed then, but much of the language for the tribes’ definition of wilderness matches the language found in the 1964 Wilderness Act, with one significant difference: the primary purpose of the Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness is the preservation of tribal culture. In contrast, in the federal wilderness on the other side of the Mission Divide, visitor use and private interests play leading roles in management objectives.
(—PJ DelHomme, Forest Magazine, Fall 2006 – link at the end of this section will take you to the entire article)
 

Garden Wall peak?
An unknown Mission Mountain (anyone recognize?)

What this has meant over the past twenty-five years or so, and what it means today, is simply that these two wilderness areas are managed quite differently. The Mission Mountains Wilderness is oriented more towards recreational use, the Tribal Wilderness is oriented towards the animals 

White Pine & the East Face
White Pine and Gray Wolf

and land having priority, with the end result being what most think of as a true wilderness experience—trails (game trails, which are completely different from man-made paths) are not often maintained (signage, if existing at all, is minimal), and in fact, over the years many have been allowed to fade away. A permit is required to hike or camp in the Tribal Wilderness; these permits are easily-enough obtained, and the view is that anyone is welcome to use this land—in other words, it is okay if you do, and equally okay if you don't. But if you do, the land managed by the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes is far more like it has always been in its natural state. It is, to make up a word, more "wildernessy." Due to the nature of access into the mountains, trekking and climbing in the wilderness on the Mission's western flank is often considerably more difficult than it is on the east, which has the desired effect of keeping usage down. (So does the grizzly closure area in the McDonald Peak area—see the "Red Tape" section for further information.)

 

It's not always fierceness and drama—there is a gentle, relaxing beauty, as well
 

 

Kakashe Mountain, Peak 8893
Mountains and valleys and mountains and...

For most of us who climb mountains, one of the reasons we do so is to experience an environment completely different than that of our normal day to day existence. We like the feeling, the depths, of wilderness. But wilderness as managed by the Forest Service is not at all the same as what existed a hundred or two-hundred years ago. The Mission Mountains Tribal Wilderness, an expression of the tribal values and beliefs of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, may well be the closest thing left in the Continental U.S. to that quality. Even those habitually and often entering wilderness areas sometimes complain about the physical difficulties—not to mention the restrictions in place—encountered here. As much as is possible this is land left to take care of itself. Entering the Mission Mountains from the west is well worth the effort to enter, but that effort is great.

 

Two of Mount Calowahcan: the view north from McDonald Peak (L); looking south at the north face (R)
 

 

Glacier Peaks, Sunset Glacier
Glacier Peaks, from Point St. Charles

As should the following section on permits, restrictions, and cautions.

And the individual mountain and routes pages which provide relevant and specific information about particular areas—because that is what this page is all about.

 

Sunset Peak (L), High Park Lake, Gray Wolf Peak (Right-center)
 

 

RED TAPE, CAUTIONS, & WILDLIFE


PERMITS
 

Nice light on the ridge....
Afternoon light on a nice ridge

Most of the western half of the Mission Range is on the Flathead Indian Reservation (also known as the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes—"Flathead" and "Salish" are one and the same), and a Reservation Hiking Permit is required. If camping, a permit is needed for that, as well—same cost as the yearly license. These are easily obtained at sporting goods stores throughout Western Montana—or you can call the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribal  

Snow, rocks, and light...
Grace...

Recreation Department in Pablo, at (406) 675-2700. The licenses are $15 each, per season, and expire every year on the last day of February—whether you purchase yours in March, May, or December, they expire the end of February. Three-day hiking permits are available for $8.00.

To the best of my knowledge there are no unusual restrictions or regulations in the Mission Mountains Wilderness beyond that which exist in all federally designated wilderness areas. Trails and access are generally a bit "better" than in the neighboring Tribal Wilderness (some of these trails actually have switchbacks!), and permits are not required to camp alongside lakes, or in the backcountry.

 

Symmetry...
 

 


McDONALD PEAK GRIZZLY CLOSURE AREA
 

McDonald Peak from the Mission Valley
"Classic" McDonald view

"Very early on a July morning as dawn warms this ancient peak and the snowfields take on a pink glow, grizzly bears begin to frolic in the freedom of summer. Damn big and nonchalant they stand, sniffing the air. They then lumber up the slopes to snack on ladybugs and army cutworm moths. After leisurely grubbing through rocks for these seasonal delicacies, the bears begin to overheat as the sun beats down on their thick fur. Since every summer day in the mountains is like a day off from work, the larger bears round up the cubs, and together amble up to the summit snowfields to cool off and have fun, lolling about in the drowsy afternoon hours, from time to time taking a whimsical glance at a good-size chunk of the Western Hemisphere. As the pleasures of the day envelope them, these bears take on a sporting attitude, romping about on slush and loose shale until finally, overwhelmed by exuberance, they take off for the lower elevations, hurtling down steep snowfields at a full gallop, paws slashing out avalanches of slush while long claws serve as crampons. Once off the snow they disappear into lengthening shadows of evening at timberline. These patrols are repeated until September when insect food is no longer found, and the beasts head into the valleys."
 

Glacier & Mountaineer Peaks
The High Missions, South and East from McDonald's summit

That marvelous paragraph comes from the now out-of-print Climbers Guide to Montana, by Pat Caffrey, and while in the book it serves as a lead-in to McDonald Peak and the summer grizzly closure restrictions in that particular area (see below), it also is quite relevant as an overall cautionary introduction to the wildlife inhabiting the entirety of this wild mountain range.

McDonald Peak is on the Flathead Reservation side (that is, the west side) of the Mission Mountains, and is closed annually from July 15th through September 30th, so as to minimize potential confrontations between humans and bear. The closure area is shown on Topozone, as well as in the Montana NGS Topo set, but neither source gives definite delineation of boundaries (there are, however, signs posted). I strongly recommend calling (406) 675-2700 in Pablo before finalizing summer plans in the McDonald Peak area, or if you are uncertain as to whether or not the area you are considering entering is affected by the closure.


WILDLIFE

You ll find this sign about...
Interesting and unusual sign!

Probably anyone prone to climbing in this part of the country already knows this, but the Northern Rockies are full of wildlife, and considerations should be the same as for Glacier National Park. Always be aware, and don't do anything stupid, like—for example—leave food where bears can get at it, think that a mountain lion is even remotely related to your pet cat, or run up to a moose (moose are quite unpredictable, irritable, and very dangerous). And never, ever, EVER forget you’re in grizzly country (this is an excellent, informative link!); they insist on being left alone—disagreement on that point is not an argument you’ll win! Bear spray and noise should be part of every foray you make into the back country. Black bears will be found in the forests, grizzlies commonly venture onto the above-timberline tundra, sometimes, when in pursuit of such delicacies as ladybugs or cutworm moth larva, even to the summits (see McDonald Peak Grizzly Closure information above)!

In addition to the wildlife already mentioned, the Missions are home to elk, Canadian lynx, bobcat, deer, wolves, the occasional grumpy wolverine (all wolverines are grumpy—it's a rule with them), badgers, martens, innumerable rodents large and small, both bald and golden eagles, osprey, and loons (over 50 different species of birds!), and flowers. And to top it all off, in the spring of 2005, a pair of trumpeter swans took up residence on the Mission's eastern flank, nesting on one of the Seeley-Swan Valley's many lakes. The female was killed when she flew into power lines, but the male raised the cygnets, and the fervent hope is that the family will return each summer—trumpeter swans are wonderful!

 

In case you need it: A couple reminders that this Northern Rockies area has a LOT of wildlife.
 

 

WHEN TO CLIMB


July, August, September. Late June (take your ice axe and crampons!) and early October may well be okay, but are iffy, and vary from year to year. The Missions get a lot of snow; don’t be mislead by the comparatively quick melt-off on the precipitous western front—the snow doesn't stick to the steep slopes, and those western faces get a lot of sunlight.

Personally, I've never had any luck avoiding inclement conditions after October 1st, although I'm willing to admit it may be just a run of bad-luck timing. Also, areas such as the East Saint Marys and Gray Wolf Peaks area are known for winter sports activities, and Mission Falls is a popular ice climbing destination.

 

In Tribute

On March 1, 2011, Vernon Garner, Saintgrizzly, left us after losing a bold, inspiring fight against pancreatic cancer. Or maybe he won, for he is at last free of his pain and has "shuffle[d] off this mortal coil."

Vernon was an important contributor on SummitPost, but beyond merely making good, informative pages, he actually inspired many who read his work. No one put more work into his or her pages than Vernon did, and many of those pages, especially those related to Glacier National Park, the place he loved above all others, are works of art in both the writing and layout. More than one person has wanted to visit Glacier or go back to Glacier largely due to what he shared about that magnificent place.

Many people on SP counted Vernon among their friends, and many more saw him as one of the best, one of those who exemplified the spirit of this site. He was one of the best of us, he will be missed, and he will not be forgotten.

As a tribute to him, Vernon's pages will remain in his name. Any member who sees a need for an addition or correction should please contact site management via the "Send PM to the Elves" feature.

Rest well and climb on, Vernon.




Children

Children

Children refers to the set of objects that logically fall under a given object. For example, the Aconcagua mountain page is a child of the 'Aconcagua Group' and the 'Seven Summits.' The Aconcagua mountain itself has many routes, photos, and trip reports as children.