Primary Navigation

Interest Guides > United States > Montana > Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest
About Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest
Park Overview 
Highlights 
Search
Y! Travel The web
Local Maps
Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest Map

Driving Directions

Related Information
  Destination Guide
•  Montana
  Hotels
•  Local Hotels
•  Montana Hotels
  Interest Guides
•  Montana Ski Resorts

Tools
Yahoo! Weather  Yahoo! Weather
Yahoo! Maps  Yahoo! Maps

Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest Content provided by   Gorp
Contact Information
420 Barrett Street, Dillon
Dillon, MT 59725
406-683-3900
Broken up into nine separate areas, Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest in southwestern Montana resembles a puzzle struggling to assemble itself. In fact, it's been struggling since 1908, when Teddy Roosevelt proclaimed the two forests that make up its current name (the Park Service combined them in 1996).

But there's nothing disparate about the natural beauty here: The forest blends typically stunning 11,000-foot Rockies peaks and Missouri River feeder streams that have cut deep valleys into the lush landscape.

The result is more than 3 million acres of playground that begin in the semi-arid grassland foothills, build up to coniferous forests of lodgepole pine and Douglas fir, and climb toward a culmination in the peaks of the Bitterroot and Centennial ranges. This richness of environment supports more than 180 species of animals; everything from the lonely moose to mountain goats and black bears call the forest home.

This natural beauty is intricately woven into the forest's history. Of all the areas traversed by Lewis and Clark on their journey west, perhaps none were so essential to their party's survival than this one. Tired, low on supplies, and pulling dying horses, it was here in 1805 that they met Sacajawea and the Shoshone near a huge rock, which the explorers' journals called Beaver's Head. The Deer Lodge name also comes from a natural formation this one geothermal that resembled a medicine lodge and attracted many deer.

An extensive system of roads and trails makes it easy for visitors to make their own discoveries in this beautiful forest. So what are you waiting for?

Next: Highlights
E
mail this page  Email this page
 More Resources at Gorp 
 •  Beaverhead - Deerlodge NF Index
 •  GORP Montana Resources
 •  Gear Guy, Adventure Advisor, Bodywork - The World Outside, Online

 
Copyright © 2009 GORP. All rights reserved.