Montana
A Field Guide to Feeling Good in Northwest Montana – Flathead Beacon
When Allie Maloney moved to the Flathead three years ago, she experienced a feeling that many newcomers and outsiders recognize all too well: profound loneliness. Her closest community of family and friends – the ones who understand her deepest self – live out of state, and she strongly felt this distance.
“I came here right before the pandemic, and I was working remotely almost from the very beginning,” Maloney explained. “I don’t have very many friends here; I don’t have very many hiking partners here. It was kind of a lonely existence.”
These past few years, Maloney has branched out into the community, hosting a “Lord of the Rings” themed Halloween get-together, throwing Hanukkah parties, and knocking on neighbors’ doors to sell sourdough and ravioli. Still, in moments when feelings of isloation take root, she turns to the outdoors for a breath of fresh air.
“The more I can go outside, the better,” she said.
However, there’s a distinction between loneliness and solitude, and Maloney’s new book – the 94-page “Northwest Montana Field Journal” – encourages readers to overcome the former and embrace the latter. The book helps readers deepen their sense of place and self by being alone in nature, no matter their outdoor skill level.
“It gives you a way to be by yourself, be outdoors, and have a reason for doing it,” Maloney said. “Whether you’re visiting or you’re a local, you can speed up your connection to nature and develop your sense of place quicker through journaling and doing activities.”
At first sight, the book’s front cover – inky blue with fiery-orange hues of a Montana sunset behind the outline of a looming mountain range – appears mysterious, even unassuming. Inside, the journal features troves of colorful, whimsical depictions of hundreds of living things – from an iconic 400-pound black bear to the often-overlooked Camas wildflower. The drawings are all accompanied with thought-provoking do-it-yourself style reflection exercises.
Maloney has worked as an outdoor education instructor and wilderness guide for years in the Pacific Northwest, so this journal bridges her two biggest loves – art and the outdoors. However, she shared that she’s encountered unexpected challenges with recreating in the Flathead.
“The hard part is finding the motivation to do it alone, or when the weather isn’t great, or when you don’t know where you’re going,” Maloney said. “It’s always hard for me if I haven’t been to a trailhead before and I’m going alone.”
If Maloney feels intimidated to explore new spots on her own, she imagines that the feelings of hesitancy and unfamiliarity are tenfold for those without formal wilderness training. She hopes that the book’s outdoor exercises, along with delightful drawings like a playful yellow-bellied marmot wearing a wizard cape and whimsical rufous hummingbird delivering a letter in its beak, can help bridge that gap to make recreation feel more inviting.
Maloney’s journal also revolves around the assumption that for most people, a blank canvas is not the best vehicle for introspection. In fact, for those hoping to make sense of their thoughts or discover new parts of their inner selves, opening a book to meet the intimidating stare of an empty white page can be discouraging, even isolating.
“The Northwest Montana Field Journal” instead works towards the lofty goal of helping people reflect by giving them exercises to complete, prompts to contemplate, and quotes to consider. It’s intentionally designed so anyone can open the book anytime, to any page they choose and begin their unique journey without the help of a guide or instructor.
“My brain is really good at coming up with ideas, seeing things, asking questions, and then thinking about how to teach them or how to inspire people to ask questions and be creative,” Maloney said. “The journal helps people write in a way that isn’t intimidating, that isn’t the blank page.”
Maloney’s passion for her work and care with which she embarks on every little drawing and exercise shines through in the final product. Page 34 guides readers through the process of writing a letter to their future selves, with a maroon and yellow morning clock butterfly serving as the metaphorical pilot and a carefully chosen William Shakespeare quote becoming a source of inspiration. Page 26 encourages readers to reflect on challenges they’ve faced and how they overcame them; page 42 invites them to take a break from thinking by coloring; page 22 beckons them to memorialize an important moment in their lives while looking at Maloney’s drawing of Crater Lake’s mesmerizing shores. And for those simply looking to learn, pages 58 onwards contain troves of information about the iconic species of animals, plants, and fungi who call Northwest Montana home.
“If visitors buy this field journal, they will be better visitors because woven in is lots of messages about how to be a respectful visitor, understand the history and context of being here, and leave no trace,” Maloney said.
Maloney also considers her journal an antidote to the intensity of Montana hiking culture among locals. To her, being in nature can, and should, mean different things to different audiences.
“The void for locals is understanding that you don’t just need to go to Glacier,” Maloney added. “It doesn’t have to be a big suffer-fest; it doesn’t have to be 100 miles. Even if you just go visit the free Forest Service campgrounds, rental or service cabins, try to find the lakes that are going to be the emptiest or visit the quietest bits of nature all around even if they’re not the most scenic – it helps give us reasons to go out.”
To this end, creating the book helped Maloney deepen her own sense of place and connection to her new home in Northwest Montana. Her process of artistic creation requires both holing up in her den drawing, outlining, and researching as well as getting outside and exploring. This taught her more than she ever expected to learn about the Flathead. She’s been able to take that knowledge to new artistic endeavors – like her most recent poster displaying the Flathead’s poisonous mushrooms.
“I haven’t drawn every species that exists here, but I’ve drawn maybe 50% – if we don’t count insects,” she laughs.
While Maloney’s book itself is full of information about the many species of plants, animals, and fungi in the Flathead, it presents the information in an easily digestible manner. For instance, along with an in-depth description of the bark of the ponderosa pine, also comes a way for someone with no wilderness experience to easily identify it.
“It’s very curated; it’s supposed to be very helpful; it’s supposed to be very unintimidating,” Maloney said. “It’s supposed to get you one level deeper into nature-nerd, without feeling like you have to be able to read a scientific dichotomous key and have a scientific vocabulary.”
Everybody loves and wants to learn more about bears and mountain goats; but Maloney also drew upon her own wilderness experience to educate about the “less exciting” plants and fungi. When writing about the Glacier Lily, rather than delving into the flower’s complicated taxonomy, Maloney chose to highlight its edibleness and the best way to prepare it.
“My specialty within the wilderness community is food and rations and teaching people how to feed themselves and keep themselves going beyond just ‘food for fuel’,” Maloney said. “I love plants, I love foraging, and teaching people what they can eat and what things are called. So that’s a weird thread that ties my outdoor experience with some of the art.”
While creating the art and drawing connections between organisms and people’s daily lives is the most nurturing and inviting part of the book, “Northwest Montana Field Journal” is also deeply rooted in science. The sort of “first rendition” of the book was Maloney’s graduate school thesis, the “Adirondack Field Journal.” The master’s-degree level exercises that Maloney developed years ago made their way into the new book.
“Every page of that journal had to have some scientific basis behind it to prove my thesis, which was that you can connect to nature through journaling,” Maloney said. “We know that sense of place is really good for your mental health and physical health. When you live in a place, your sense of place develops over time. This journal helps you feel more connected to the place you are in.”
“The Northwest Montana Field Journal” has become more than just an homage to Maloney’s new home – it’s been used by crew leaders in organizations like the Bob Marshall Wilderness Foundation as a reference guide for species identification.
While she’s excited that professionals are using her book, Maloney posits that the journal can also serve those who don’t have a relationship with nature at all, as people can use it to cultivate their fondness over time. Maloney herself is proof that being outdoors is not always love at first sight.
“When I was little, I was such a reluctant outdoor child,” Maloney said. “I really didn’t like bugs. And now I do it professionally and I like being outdoors and bugs don’t bother me at all.”
Ultimately, Maloney hopes that the journal can appeal even more broadly, beyond the borders of Montana, to make outdoor experiences more accessible worldwide.
“It’s incredibly universal,” Maloney said. “All of the drawings and information in the back is Northwest Montana, but the actual journaling activities could be done anywhere by anyone and serve the same purpose. My hope is that if you’re a visitor, you could start it while you’re here, but you could keep filling it out and documenting your adventures elsewhere.”
But creating the book was only the first step. Putting this journal (as well as Maloney’s many other products, such as her other book, “A Northwest Montana Alphabet,” and dozens of prints, postcards, stickers, posters, and clothing) out into the world requires tremendous vulnerability. Most of her high moments in this process have arrived when she’s working at craft markets, where she gets to connect with buyers and see the variety of people who feel a connection to her artwork. It’s a simultaneously rewarding and heartbreaking process.
“I really like seeing the dads who get really excited about it,” Maloney said. “I’ve had young dudes and ladies, grandparents, parents, a lot of locals and tourists, and a lot of queer people come and buy it. I think that immediately they notice that it’s accepting and written in an inclusive way.”
Recently, the Salish Kootenai College bought 50 copies of her book for a course, providing a small but shining spark of encouragement. The lows have been trying to connect with bookstores and shops owners. She said that constantly selling and pitching herself takes an emotional toll.
“It has been pretty discouraging,” Maloney said. “Overall, it’s like you go into a store, you try to find out the buyer or the owner and give them an example of your book. They’re not there, so you come back 20 times, they’re still not there.”
With the many ups and down of selling her products, Maloney is especially appreciative of the stability that comes with the other branch of her work – collaborations with local businesses and nonprofits. Most recently, she completed a project with the Flathead Trails Association to create a comprehensive guide to the Flathead Valley’s recreational opportunities.
The map itself is beautiful and inviting, showcasing colorful depictions of people recreating in a dozen different ways – from biking to hiking to snowboarding. Major Flathead landmarks are clearly designated, and accompanied with simple, one-sentence-long descriptions of their history. Yes, it’s a functional guide, but it’s also so artistic that it could easily find its way framed up on a wall or pasted into a scrapbook.
“The goal was to inspire rather than tell people where all the trails are,” Maloney said. “It’s definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever done, but I love doing these collaborations; and I know immediately it has an end goal and I’m going to send it out into the world.”
Art and work have become increasingly synonymous in Maloney’s life, which for many creative people can be complicated and lead to burnout. However, Maloney has taken care to keep her spark for the outdoors and excitement to create artwork alive in her everyday life.
“I can’t help side questing and trying new things,” Maloney said. “For many years, I’ve tried to learn how to make something new every year. In the past, it’s been felting or mosaics or quilting. This year I’m making bandanas. I don’t have to get good at it, but I do try something new.”
Maloney’s approach to creating new art without the pressure to excel, or even be good at all, mirrors how she hopes readers interact with her journal.
“You don’t need to do anything epic in order to have a really meaningful moment outside. You deserve to be here, be part of this place and there’s always more you can learn.”
Montana
Rural Highway Stalker In White Pickup With Dark Windows Terrifying Montana Women
The Ole’ Mercantile is a busy place by Grass Range, Montana, standards.
The community of roughly 125 people sits along a long, lonely network of two-lane highways connecting Billings with points north along Montana’s Hi-Line.
For drivers pushing toward Lewistown, Malta or Glasgow, the store’s lights are often the first sign of anything for miles.
Of late, they may also offer a chance of identifying the person driving a truck local women say is stalking these roads.
Owner Krista Manley told Cowboy State Daily her store is outfitted with a top-of-the-line camera system that offers a 360-degree view with no blind spots. Four overlapping cameras capture her property, the Wrangler Bar and the full stretch of Highway 87 frontage running through town.
Fergus County investigators now hope that footage — and Manley’s willingness to comb through hours of it — can help identify the driver of a newer white Ford four-door pickup with dark tinted windows, no front license plate and a chrome grill guard.
The truck is at the center of the most recent reported highway stalking incident.
Lizette Lamb, a 48-year-old traveling health care worker, says she was nearly run off the road the evening of April 10.
Now a growing chorus of similar accounts from women across north-central Montana are popping up on social media.
At The Ole Merc
Travis Lamb, Lizette’s husband, took to Facebook to post about what happened to his wife on one of the loneliest stretches of highway in Montana.
Travis told Cowboy State Daily Lizette pulled into the Ole’ Merc Conoco in Grass Range between 7 and 8 p.m. to grab a drink. She later remembered a pickup was backed in alongside the cafe: a newer white Ford four-door.
“Kind of gave her the heebie-jeebies,” he said. “My wife has worked in a prison and stuff like that, so she’s used to kind of going with her gut.”
She bought a drink, got back in her Ford Bronco Sport and headed north on Highway 19 toward Glasgow.
About a mile and a half down the road, she realized the white pickup was behind her. Through the dark tint, she could make out the silhouettes of two men.
She slowed down and edged toward the shoulder to let them pass. They slowed with her. She sped up. They sped up.
By the time she reached Bohemian Corner 23 miles up the road, Travis Lamb said, his wife knew something was wrong.
There were no other vehicles in the lot, so she didn’t bother pulling in. She tried to call Travis. No service.
She tried 911. The phone beeped, displayed a red message and disconnected.
Truck Gets Aggressive
The white truck continued to shadow Lizette along Highway 191. About two miles from where the road crosses the Missouri River, coming into a construction zone, the pickup got aggressive.
Travis said the truck rode so close to the Bronco’s bumper that his wife could no longer see its windshield, only the grille.
Then it pulled out as if to pass and swerved into her, he said, in what he described as an attempted PIT maneuver — the law-enforcement technique of clipping a fleeing vehicle’s rear quarter to spin it out.
PIT stands for Precision Immobilization Technique, and this tactic is used to stop a fleeing vehicle by forcing it to turn sideways, causing the driver to lose control and stop.
“She was fortunate, kind of timed it to when they went to turn into her and hit her, she sped up,” Travis Lamb said. “And they missed.”
That’s when Lizette Lamb pulled her Springfield XDM 9mm pistol out of the center console. She didn’t point it, but she made sure they could see it.
The white pickup hit its brakes, threw a U-turn in a spray of dust and gravel, and headed back toward Grass Range.
The Video
“I thank God that it did happen to her and not somebody else, because I know my wife is more than capable of defending herself,” said Travis Lamb, an Iraq War combat veteran, who eventually reached out to Manley at the Ole Merc.
Then, when Manley reviewed the surveillance video from the Merc’s camera system, she found no sign of a white Ford truck.
“We have not found evidence of them at our store or at the three businesses that come along the highway right there,” Manley said. “That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
“My default is to absolutely believe women, and she (Lizette) was, she was rattled.”
Manley holds a Ph.D. in cognitive psychology and ran the research team at Procore Technologies before going into business for herself.
When reviewing the video, Manley logged the times Lizette arrived and left, and then watched the highway for an hour after.
“We’re absolutely not arguing the authenticity of the report in any way, shape or form,” said Manley. “In my previous life before I had the store, I actually was a memory and cognition researcher. I understand how stress impacts memory.”
The Echoes
Travis Lamb’s Facebook post went off like a flare.
He tallied 36 accounts of similar experiences in roughly the same swath of country stretching across prairie and badlands in one of the least populated parts of Montana.
The pattern in many of the comments was consistent enough to be unsettling: a white pickup, often a Ford, sometimes with out-of-state plates, tailgating women on isolated stretches of two-lane after dark.
One commenter described being followed by a white truck north of Grass Range three years ago around 10 p.m., tailgated with brights on at more than 80 mph until the truck peeled off in a different direction.
Another described a white Ford pickup near Harlowton trying to force her to stop, then waiting for her at a gas station. Another recalled a white pickup with North Dakota plates in the same area.
In Wyoming, one poster described two men in a white truck with Washington plates on Highway 120 between Cody and Meeteetse who tailgated her, tried to push her off the road, then cut in front and slammed on the brakes.
Other women described different vehicles — a dark Escalade, a small white car, a black double-cab — but the same script: tailgating, refusing to pass, brake-checking, dead zones with no cell service.
Easter Night
One name in that Facebook thread was Joni Hartford of Lewistown, who told Cowboy State Daily she had her own near-identical encounter on Easter evening just days before Lizette Lamb’s.
Hartford, who works in insurance, had dropped off some belongings to her son, a football player at Rocky Mountain College in Billings.
She stopped at a gas station on her way out of town “for a pop,” climbed back into her red 2014 Ford F-150 and headed north on Highway 87 around 7:30 or 8 p.m.
“I noticed it right after I left Billings,” Hartford said of the pickup behind her. “It was right behind me and I kept thinking, ‘God, this vehicle is super close.’”
About 15 miles out of town, past the racetracks, she pulled toward the white line and slowed to 60 mph on a long straightaway, hoping the truck would go around. It wouldn’t.
“He was so close behind me, I couldn’t see his taillights, but I could see his marker lamps on his mirrors, his tow mirrors,” Hartford said. “So I knew it was a Ford pickup, and I knew it was like a three-quarter or a 1-ton. It was a big pickup.”
She couldn’t make out the color in the dark. She called her husband.
“I said, ‘This pickup is tailgating me,’ and said, ‘It’s really kind of making me nervous, because if I had to stop for a deer, it would run me over. It would run me off the road,’” Hartford said.
“And he goes, ‘Well, just stop.’ And I said, ‘I am not stopping. I’m in the middle of freaking nowhere,’” she added.
She made it through Roundup with the truck still on her bumper.
North of town, climbing toward Grass Range, Hartford caught a lucky break with an Amish buggy sluggishly clapping up a blind hill and slowing traffic.
“I darted around the Amish buggy, right before the blind hill, and he couldn’t get around them, and I just gunned it, and I was going probably 90 mph just to put space between us,” Hartford said. “I never seen him again.”
Hartford carries a .380 pistol. She had it out and on the seat. She didn’t show it — between the dark and her tinted windows, she wasn’t sure the driver behind her would have seen it anyway.
When Lamb’s post crossed her Facebook feed, Hartford said the parallels stopped her cold.
“It’s the same exact situation,” she said. “I can’t say for certain it was the same person, but it sure seems like it was the same person.”
Hartford said she believes the driver is hunting for circumstance: single women, after dark, on a corridor he knows is desolate and short on cell coverage.
“They’re targeting them at gas stations,” she said. “That’s the only place they could have found me, because it’s the only place I’ve stopped.”
The Candidate
Penny Ronning, cofounder and president of the Yellowstone Human Trafficking Task Force, had a similar drive in 2022.
She remembers it as the only time in nearly a year of solo campaign travel across 41 Montana counties that she felt afraid.
Ronning, then a Democratic candidate for U.S. Congress, was driving from Billings to Havre for a campaign event.
Instead of taking the interstate, she chose the back roads — north out of Winifred on Highway 236, a route that runs about 30 miles of gravel through some of the most remote country in the state before dropping into the Missouri River Breaks, which Ronning compared to a Montana version of the Grand Canyon.
As she entered the gravel, a four-door white pickup with blacked-out windows pulled in behind her.
“That was what made it frightening,” Ronning said. “It was that I was followed.”
Ronning, who has spent years working on human trafficking policy and prevention, was careful to push back on the framing that has circulated on Facebook around the Lamb case — that the white-pickup encounters are likely abduction attempts tied to trafficking networks.
“Human trafficking is the use of force, fraud or coercion to compel a person into commercial sex acts or labor against their will,” Ronning said. “Just because someone is being followed, that doesn’t rise to the level of human trafficking.”
The most prevalent form of human trafficking in the United States, she said, is familial trafficking, one family member trafficking another.
In Montana, she said, labor trafficking is also common in construction, nail salons, illicit massage businesses, hospitality and domestic servitude in pockets of high-end real estate.
Sex trafficking almost always begins with someone the victim knows.
The Watch
Back in Grass Range, every white pickup that rolls past the four-corner blinking light is now turning heads.
Manley said her store has worked closely with the Fergus County Sheriff’s Office on past incidents, and her cameras are essentially a standing resource for investigators.
She also said the response on social media has dismayed her, commenters questioning whether these highway stalking incidents happened at all, or suggesting Grass Range itself isn’t safe.
She believes her store, and others like it in remote pockets of Montana, are informal refuges.
“We’ve all been there, whether it’s in a snowstorm or where we’re just uncomfortable driving like this where we’re just like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ you see the big lights and you’re like, there’s a beacon of safety, essentially,” Manley said.
She said that her eyes are open to potential threats along the isolated highways connecting Grass Range to the rest of the world.
“We know that it is a highway that has a reputation for, you know, trafficking, drug moving, all of those different things, and that’s why we are as diligent as we are,” said Manley. “We really care about the safety of our community, our employees, and our customers.”
Manley remains in contact with the Lambs.
“She told me, ‘I’m not going to quit looking,’” said Travis, explaining how Manley is arranging for the Lambs to review the footage themselves.
Travis figures that perhaps, “Instead of a white Ford, maybe it’s a tan Dodge.”
He added, “I’m hoping somebody’s like, ‘I know that pickup.’ That’s what I’m praying for.”
So is Lizette, who told Cowboy State Daily, she’s thankful for the response to her story. She’s also thankful she was traveling with her sidearm.
“Unfortunately, that’s the world we live in now. You know, Montana, in the middle of nowhere,” said Lizette, who encouraged anyone else with similar encounters to come forward.
“This is just a reminder that it is happening,” she said. “It is real.”
David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.
Montana
Montana Lottery Powerball, Lotto America results for April 18, 2026
The Montana Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at April 18, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from April 18 drawing
24-25-39-46-61, Powerball: 01, Power Play: 5
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Lotto America numbers from April 18 drawing
18-21-22-32-42, Star Ball: 10, ASB: 03
Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Big Sky Bonus numbers from April 18 drawing
10-16-29-31, Bonus: 13
Check Big Sky Bonus payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Montana Cash numbers from April 18 drawing
06-08-09-20-22
Check Montana Cash payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the Montana Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 9 p.m. MT on Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky For Life: 8:38 p.m. MT daily.
- Lotto America: 9 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Big Sky Bonus: 7:30 p.m. MT daily.
- Powerball Double Play: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Montana Cash: 8 p.m. MT on Wednesday and Saturday.
- Millionaire for Life: 9:15 p.m. MT daily.
Missed a draw? Peek at the past week’s winning numbers.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Great Falls Tribune editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Montana
Between Bozeman And Billings Is Montana’s One-Of-A-Kind Historic Mill Filled With Cheese – Islands
Montana may be well known as a top destination for nature enthusiasts and adventure seekers thanks to its outdoor activities like hiking and paddling, but there are some unique foodie gems to be found here, too. One of the best ways to experience Montana’s local food scene is with a visit to Greycliff Mill, between Bozeman and Billings. Here, you can discover a one-of-a-kind cheese attraction along with a number of other things to see on site during your visit to Big Sky Country.
Greycliff Mill is housed in a restored 1760s barn, which features a water-powered gristmill and pretty scenery like ponds framed by rock formations. You may see bison wandering the site — there are five that live here. You may also catch a glimpse of a 10-foot-tall bear, but no need to panic as it’s only a statue, carved by a chainsaw. The pretty cafe, a mix of modern and rustic decor, serves from a menu that includes coffee, milkshakes, and pastries, plus paninis like “The Cattleman” and breakfast sandwiches like the “Sheepherders Sandwich.” Book in advance for a special farm-to-table dinner in the evening — these are only offered on select dates throughout the year, and may sell out. But one thing you shouldn’t miss here is the cheese cave.
Discover Greycliff Mill’s cheese cave
Greycliff Mill has an underground cheese cave, which is a must-see on any visit. It’s possible to see experts making artisan cheeses while you learn about the cheesemaking process and sample a few products. The cheese is aged in the cave at a temperature of 50 degrees with 85% humidity to create the perfect environment for a tasty product. It’s possible to buy some cheese at their market — which also sells seasonal produce, bread, and lots of other Montana-made products.
Besides the food-based spots, Greycliff Mill is also home to a small wool-weaving studio, and there are accommodations if you want to spend the night in restored log cabins or reclaimed farm silos. Greycliff Creek Ranch offers horseback rides and a chuckwagon dinner for more authentic Montana experiences. Whether you’re visiting especially to see the cheese cave, or road tripping and need a break, Greycliff Mill is a quirky and special spot. One Google reviewer summed up the experience well, praising the “amazing rustic atmosphere,” and saying, “I stopped for a coffee and ended up staying just to enjoy the view. Great coffee, peaceful place, and such a unique spot. Definitely worth the stop if you’re driving through Montana.”
Greycliff Mill is between Bozeman and Billings, the largest city in Montana and surrounded by natural beauty. It’s almost equidistant between the two cities — 1 hour to Bozeman and 1 hour to Billings. The closest major airport is Billings-Logan International Airport, although Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport, Montana’s mountain gem of an airport, is also a convenient option.
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