Majestic Montana: Flathead County

Kalispell

A year or so ago, I’d never heard of Kalispell, Montana, much less known how to spell it.  It’s in the northwestern part of the state and is the town in which Glacier Park International Airport is located.  Their code is FCA (totally unintuitive!)  

Look closely to find Bigfork

The airport is small, but recently expanded, rustic in feel, and bustling on a Thursday afternoon, not so much so Monday morning when we departed.  Kalispell is about 40 miles from Glacier National Park and hence, a lively place, especially in summertime.  In the winter, folks come here to ski.  We flew to Kalispell last week to visit friends in nearby Bigfork.

Cavernous Kalispell airport

With a population of more than 100,000, Flathead County is the fourth most populated county in Montana. With a varied topography from cherry and other fruit orchards to rolling hills and mountain vistas, it boasts attractive small towns like Kalispell, Bigfork, and Lakeside to name just a few.  There’s also Kootenai National Forest and an Indian Reservation.  

Field of rapeseed destined to become canola oil

On our first day we visited the Northwest Montana History Museum  in Kalispell followed by lunch nearby at DeSoto Grill.  The museum building, brick Richardsonian architecture, was originally a school, the first public building in town opening in 1895.  It’s now an impressive museum telling the story of the town and the region, the role of Native Americans and noted citizens, and the local industry.  Several exhibits were interactive, and the gift shop was loaded with fiction and nonfiction books about the region and Montana in general.  I was pleased to see that the museum also hosts a History Book Club which meets monthly except for July and August.

Museum and hanging flowers on light post

Named for the car, DeSoto Grill was packed and popular, but we nabbed a table.  

Our helpful waitress was all business, but in the nicest way.  Several of us ordered the house specialty, smoked brisket in a sandwich or as a salad topper, along with their touted mac and cheese.  The brisket was excellent!

A hearty lunch!

Bigfork

Bigfork is named for its location at the juncture where the Swan River flows into a bay of Flathead Lake. It has a short main street with shops, arts center, and summer playhouse theater.  It’s charming without being kitschy. Just outside town are comfortable duplexes and lovely homes overlooking a golf course and small lake.  Perched high on the granite rock ledges are some seriously stunning mansions.  Despite the development, it looks and feels tranquil.  And in the distance are the Rocky Mountains, generally visible even on a cloudy day. 

Big Bend area
We walked to the north shore of Flathead Lake

The air was dry and sometimes clear, there were expanses of open space, and we knew we were out West.  Unfortunately, Mother Nature wasn’t fully cooperative, and we had some rainy days.  The weather cancelled our plans to drive the Road-to-the Sun to the Continental Divide.  Instead, we went on a jaunt from Bigfork down the east side of Flathead Lake, then around the bottom and along the west side and up to Lakeside.  

Flathead Lake

Flathead Lake is the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi.  It has 185 miles of shoreline, and the southern half of the lake is within the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Flathead Reservation.  With many access points along the lake, there are opportunities for camping, swimming, picnicking, and boat launching.  We enjoyed the views and the changing topography, but rain kept us inside the car.

Bar at Tamarack Grill

We had lunch at Tamarack Alehouse and Grill situated at the base of Blacktail Mountain.  With lots of glass and a brick fireplace, this casual open space was welcoming with great views outside toward the lake and in the courtyard of the brew works.   Pub food choices ranged from chicken quesadillas and enchiladas to pizza, burgers, and fish and chips to the meatball sandwich of the day.  Of course, the guys sampled a pint of Tamarack’s Rye Sally Rye IPA.  

Just Relaxing

Despite the weather, we managed to take a brisk walk every day but one, had delicious dinners prepared by our hosts (grilled salmon, chicken marbella, romaine and shrimp salad) and enjoyed several afternoons just chatting, reading, and sometimes napping.  Evening entertainment was usually reading or a TV movie. The Chief Penguin and I rectified a serious omission in our cultural life by seeing a performance of Grease at the summer playhouse, thanks to our friends!

A Man at A Bar, Montana

On our last day, after an especially vigorous walk up and down in the neighborhood, we had lunch at A Bar, Montana, another favorite of our friends.  Sandwiches, salads, burgers, and nachos are the fare on this Bigfork menu.  One of us had chicken wings, and I had the best tuna melt ever!  Another friendly place with very good comfort food.

Friends at lunch & the real fork!

Note: All photos ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved.). Header photo taken at north shore of Flathead Lake.

Tiny Tidy Tidbits

BOOK OF THE WEEK

Trespasses by Louise Kennedy

Author Kennedy (TheTimes.co.uk)

Set in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, this first novel portrays gritty daily life in Belfast and its environs.  The tension between neighboring Catholics and Protestants is often escalated by seemingly random acts of violence.  Cushla, a young elementary school teacher, lives with her alcoholic mother and helps occasionally at the bar owned by her older brother Eammon.  The bar has its regulars, Catholics, but sometimes a Protestant wanders in.  

One evening, barrister Michael Agnew, notices Cushla and strikes up a conversation which leads to involvement and then an affair.  Michael is not only Protestant, but also married and considerably older.  Theirs is a tender love story marked by absence, evasion, and affection.  

Kennedy straightforwardly captures the small details in the setting.  I found the first part a bit slow, but then the book gained momentum as one tragic event led to another.  Kennedy grew up near Belfast and was a chef for almost 30 years before becoming a writer.  Trespasses was the A Post Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year 2022 and also shortlisted for several other awards. It’s the first read from my summer list.

LIVE THEATER

Man of La Mancha (Asolo Repertory Theatre)

Don Quixote & Sancho (SarasotaHeraldTribune.com)

This run of Man of La Mancha has ended, but it was the all-time best production the Chief Penguin and I have enjoyed at the Asolo.  This is not faint praise as the overall caliber of Asolo productions is always extremely high.  The staging, the setting in a contemporary prison, the intricate choreography of fight scenes, the voices and sounds of actors and musicians, and the music itself combined for an engrossing performance.  We were entranced!  And hearing The Impossible Dream sung and then sung again two more times, we were uplifted.  This play was a gift for our complex, polarized times.  

Tidy Tidbits: Watching and Eating

VIEWING

Still (Apple TV+)

Michael J. Fox (The Hollywood Reporter)

This documentary about Michael J. Fox is ultimately a testament to one man’s steadfastness in the face of illness.  Michael J. Fox was a hot young TV star in the 1970’s who then branched out to movies.  He was funny, brash, and always in motion.  It seemed the world was his oyster, until.  As many know, he got a diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease at 29, but kept it a secret from all but a few for a few years.  

The film traces his growing up years, his striving to achieve despite his short stature, his marriage to Tracy, and the births of his children.  Interspersed with his history are interview segments with him today at 61.  He speaks frankly about himself, his condition, and his career.  It’s a thoughtfully made film with occasional flashes of wit.  Highly recommended!

Walter Presents

I have recently become acquainted with several series offered by Walter Presents.  PBS Masterpiece is showing a few of them; I got curious about who and what Walter Presents is.  It is a curated collection of international TV programs from different countries and in a variety of languages with English subtitles.  Launched on the UK’s Channel 4 in 2016, it subsequently was offered in the U.S. and other countries.  The man behind the selections is Walter Iuzzolino.  Examples I’ve watched thus far include Astrid (French 2 seasons) and Murder in Sweden.

Murder in Sweden (PBS Masterpiece)

Sebastian & Maria (PBS)

Detective Maria Wern works alongside Sebastian, another detective, on a small crime squad on the island of Gotland.  Maria, a widow, is a complex person, hardworking, driven, and mother to two older boys.  She’s also reserved with her feelings.

The murder cases are difficult ones requiring teamwork, but occasionally Maria goes rogue in her zeal to solve them.  Her relationship with Sebastian is initially one of joking and bantering, but he would like more.  How their interactions evolve over the series adds depth and tenderness.

Each episode is in 2 parts and I just have access to one season. It’s in Swedish with subtitles.  Recommended!

SUPER SAVOR SARASOTA—DUVAL’S

Savor Sarasota is this city’s annual June dining out festival.  Participating restaurants offer special menus usually at a discounted price.  We dined at Duval’s downtown and had the best meal there ever and one that was superb in general.  With four courses at forty dollars, the menu offered two choices for each course.  

Interior of Duval’s (TripAdvisor.com)

The Chief Penguin and I started with the salmon spread on crostini for me, the excellent gazpacho for him; then a green salad for me and tuna poke for him.  We both selected the mahi piccata and the key lime pie as our entrée and dessert.  The mahi was a lovely presentation, a tasty piece of fish served over julienned carrots and other veggies.  And what’s not to like about key lime pie!  The Chief Penguin was delighted that it came topped with a layer of whipped cream and more on the side.  A glass of Chardonnay added to this wonderful meal!

Note: Header photo is the key lime pie at Duval’s from Facebook.

Summer Reading: A Book List

I always have ambitious goals for my summer reading and this year is no exception.  I create a list and aim to read as many of the titles as possible.  I usually fall short.  I get sidetracked by other appealing works or find a particular book not engaging (I allow at least 50 pages before I retreat).  Or somehow the premise of a novel or nonfiction work no longer resonates with my summer state of mind.  And, of course, some summer reading should be just for fun—whether it’s a mystery, a romance, or an adventure tale!

Here’s my baker’s dozen to read before Labor Day. Maybe.

FICTION

Careless Love: A DCI Banks Novel by Peter Robinson

I’ve read many, but not all of Robinson’s suspense novels.  This definitely falls into the fun category.  It’s #25 out of 28 in the series.  Several earlier books were adapted for a very good TV series.

Hang the Moon by Jeannette Walls

Walls is the author of the memoir, The Glass Castle, about her nomadic upbringing.

Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano 

A contemporary take on Little Women

Horse by Geraldine Brooks

One of my all-time favorite writers.  I started this in hardback earlier this year, now I will finish it.

This Other Eden by Paul Harding

Historical novel about a community on a Maine island.  Harding’s first novel, Tinkers, published in 2009 won a Pulitzer Prize.

The Shooting at Chateau Rock by Martin Walker

Having seen Walker give a serious talk, I’m curious to read one of his Chief Bruno mysteries, this one set in the Dordogne.  

Trespasses by Louise Kennedy

Journalist, author and former chef, this novel by Kennedy is set in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.

Three by Valerie Perrin

I loved Perrin’s previous novel, Fresh Water for Flowers.  This one is also translated from the French.

Trust by Hernan Diaz

A family saga, a Best Book of the Year (NY Times) and a Pulitzer Prize winner.

The White Lady by Jacqueline Winspear

Another mystery by the Maisie Dobbs author, this one with a new character.

NONFICTION

The Best Minds:  A Story of Friendship, Madness, and the Tragedy of Good Intentions by Jonathan Rosen

Memoir about two best friends since childhood.

The Grimkes:  The Legacy of Slavery in an American Family by Kerri K. Greenidge

Anti-slavery sister activists in the 19th century.

The Lobster Coast by Colin Woodard

I spend much of the summer in Maine. This is a chance to learn more about its history.

Note: Header image of woman reading is from readersdigest.co.uk