OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
#31
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
http://www.m4x4a.org/
Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
Pat
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"John Davies" <johnedavies@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:99f0pv4v31tq2v3nbruhrts7ggc7fio04r@4ax.com...
I am planning a vacation in SW Montana and wonder if anyone knows of
any books that include back-country info. I am interested in
relatively easy (but scenic) routes that my family can enjoy and I can
navigate with a small utility trailer. Primitive campground info would
also be welcome.
Anyone?
Thanks very much.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/
http://www.m4x4a.org/
Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
Pat
--
To reply, remove the "NOSPAM" in the reply address.
If you forward this message please remove the previous
senders address and use the BCC feature in your email
program to protect others from SPAM.
"John Davies" <johnedavies@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:99f0pv4v31tq2v3nbruhrts7ggc7fio04r@4ax.com...
I am planning a vacation in SW Montana and wonder if anyone knows of
any books that include back-country info. I am interested in
relatively easy (but scenic) routes that my family can enjoy and I can
navigate with a small utility trailer. Primitive campground info would
also be welcome.
Anyone?
Thanks very much.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/
#32
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 02:29:13 GMT, Lon Stowell
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#33
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 02:29:13 GMT, Lon Stowell
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#34
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 02:29:13 GMT, Lon Stowell
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
<LonDot.Stowell@ComcastPeriod.Net> wrote:
> Depends on whether your family wants to fish or hunt for
> gold and old gold mines [or sapphires] and whether you
> want dirt roads in the greener western Pioneer mountains
> or the drier eastern slopes of same.
Neither fishing or hunting - mainly short hikes, photography, and
sight seeing. We have never stopped in the area, though we have bombed
across on I-90 and once came up from Yellowstone through the Gallatin
Valley and found the country to be gorgeous. I have 8 and 11 year old
kids, and we usually take along mountain bikes, but because of the
(hopefully) rough roads I expect to encounter, I think we will leave
them home for this trip. (They get really shaken up on nasty roads.)
So activities need to be relatively stress-free and kid-oriented. We
will probably take no more that 10 days for the entire trip.
Forest roads, ruts and small washouts are fine, but my trailer isn't
set up yet for really severe off-roading: This is my rig:
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/Horses-01.jpg
From what I have read so far, the extreme southwest sounds great. I
don't think I want to get down too close to the Yellowstone crowds -
we will be there in high summer (July maybe?), though I would kind of
like to go on the Beartooth Highway... I was thinking of going
straight down to the extreme SW corner and exploring the Big Sheep
Creek area, then working back north toward I-90 and home. Any areas as
far north as I-90 and as far east as I-15 are on my wish list. Maybe a
little bit north of I-90.
Rockhounding would be great - my wife is getting really interested in
that. She has a tumbler, rock pick and other hand tools. If you can
give me some really remote locations with great rocks she will
tolerate _much_ more bouncing around to get there.... ;) Are there
any placer gold areas, or is this strictly deep mining country? We
might like to try a little gold panning.
>
> Staying in the foothill area has more old forest service
> and timber trails than in the mountains themselves due
> to terrain restricting the ability to run more than one
> route thru...
That was my idea - staying in primitive or State Park campgrounds and
maybe making a few runs through passes, but mostly staying in the
foothills and towns.
> If you come into Missoula on 12, you can drop south down
> thru Hamilton, then cruise down 93 until you see interesting
> turnoffs. If you go too far, you'll be in Lost Trail Pass
> which is georgeous but not exactly offroad material.
>
> There's a really nice loop eastward thru the bitterroot
> forest that takes off east just south of Hamilton a few
> miles, then meets another road that loops back to 93.
> Fairly easy to navigate in a 4x4 as long as it is late
> enough in the year to avoid the spring snows. Or cut
> east to Philipsburg and hunt your own cornflower sapphires.
How late do the passes stay snowed in? Is July safe?
> Or you can go further south on 93 and cut over toward
> Dillon, but drop off into Bannack, the old state capital
> and ghost town. From there, you could head for Polaris,
> Coolidge, Elkhorn old mines with good trails. Dillon
> itself might be a good base of travel...
Sounds good - I want to see Bannock and Garnet ghost towns, and maybe
Elkhorn if we decide to get up toward Helena.
> Check this and similar sites out:
> http://www.bitterroot.net/usdafs/camp.HTML
>
> PS. Presumably you would have 100% bear proof gear...and
> know the difference between a black and a grizzly.
Well, that's a big concern - we are tent campers. Are bears a problem
throughout the area, or just in primitive areas? We know about the
"tame" bears that stroll through the Yellowstone campgrounds - does
this happen throughout the MT mountains? Even in developed State Park
cg's? Maybe we will have to stay in motels..... It would leave more
room for rocks in the trailer.
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/LX450-02.jpg
Thanks very much for the informative post and any more info..
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#35
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 14:11:57 GMT, "MTJeepers" <mtjeepers@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#36
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 14:11:57 GMT, "MTJeepers" <mtjeepers@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#37
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 14:11:57 GMT, "MTJeepers" <mtjeepers@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
wrote:
>John you can check out the Montana 4x4 association site at:
>http://www.m4x4a.org/
>Post your questions there and you can hear from people that
>4 wheel, hunt and fish in the areas you are interested in.
>Pat
Thanks Pat, I will give that a shot.
John Davies
Spokane WA USA
#38
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
"John Davies" <johnedavies@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com
#39
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
"John Davies" <johnedavies@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com
#40
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: OT - 4x4 Guidebook for Montana?
"John Davies" <johnedavies@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com
news:02h2pvk7al9vp1j0tmt30q30m9en3rid2m@4ax.com...
> What was so cool about a rest stop? Did you post the correct pic?
youve obviously never seen north carolina rest stops along I95 where you
step over crack heads to get into the can only to have to work your way
through male prostitutes in drag that wanna blow you for $5.
so yeah.....i thought montana rest stops were GREAT. :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://7SlotGrille.com