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-By Jim Auger, 2006 Easement Donor
I first experienced the beauty of Montana when I was 8 or 9 years old. Born and raised on a wonderful lake in Minnesota, I thought there was no place that could top the grandeur of my home state. That was until my family spent the first of many summers at Flathead Lake Lodge in Bigfork. For two weeks every summer I was able to revel in the beauty and magic of Montana.
It still takes my breath away as it did the very first time that we crested the top of the hill on Highway 93 near the National Bison Range. I knew at that moment this was a special place, an unspoiled part of the wilderness Montana had to offer. My passion for this area compelled me to return here to attend college at The University of Montana. After graduation, I followed a job out of Montana and was successful at climbing the corporate ladder, but I knew there was something missing. More>>
—By Kasja McGeorge, Upper Willow Creek Landowner
In late September of 2006, Gene and Kasja McGeorge and their sons, Gavin and Nils, signed a conservation easement to protect their beautiful property on Upper Willow Creek. Here, Kasja McGeorge writes about the land and why the family made this generous decision.
I’m the one elected to write something about our new conservation easement with Five Valleys Land Trust because my husband Gene is busy weather-proofing the windows for winter. No matter, we agree on what I have to tell you. |
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- Louise Dean, Lincoln Valley Landowner
We sat with Louise Dean on the deck outside her home a few miles north of Lincoln. It was a fine May morning. Snow sparkled on the shoulders and summit of Stonewall Mountain. Sandhill cranes warbled from the wetlands around Liverpool Creek where it empties into the broad Lincoln valley on her 160-acre acre ranch. Widowed during WWII, Louise came to the upper Blackfoot with an infant son to start a new life. Now in her nineties, she has been living on, and making a living from this ranch for the last sixty years. In September 29, 2000 Louise decided to protect the many natural values of the ranch by donating a conservation easement to FVLT. More >>
— By The Jill Perelman Family, Blackfoot Valley Landowners
The Perelman family completed the donation of a 680-acre conservation easement on their Blackfoot Valley property in late 2000. They placed an easement on an additional 77 acres in 2003. FVLT and other partners have been actively working on a stream restoration project on the property.
The land our family recently acquired is a mix of forested slope, wetland meadow, creekside riparian zones, native range and hay field. It lies in the shadow of peaks along the southern edge of the Scapegoat Wilderness with national forest, private timber, and ranch land as neighbors. More >>
— By Barbara Clark
Barbara and her husband Larry are fifth and sixth generation ranchers who have lived in Rock Creek for over 40 years. They have two grown children who help on the ranch.
Ranching is steeped into our souls. You cannot plow a field, pick rock by hand, plant that field, irrigate it, watch the hay grow, hay it, get ready to defend it from wildfire, watch the calves you calved graze it and not feel it is a part of you. A part of you just as real as your arm and leg. More >>
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— By Brandon Bert, Rattlesnake Valley Landowner
I currently live in California, but grew up in Missoula. I knew I always wanted to come back someday, own land and a place of my own. However, I didn’t think the opportunity would come so quickly. About eight months ago, my father Steve, found an incredible piece of property in the Upper Rattlesnake. After a tour of the redwood cabin and long walk around the property, we both knew this was home. More >>
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— By Celestine Duncan, Upper Willow Creek Landowner
My husband Cary and I are both private pilots who have for many years taken great pleasure in experiencing our magnificent Montana landscape from the air. When the time came to find a place that could serve as a getaway from our busy lives in Helena, it was logical to start our search from the air. A little valley, tucked in between Rock Creek and Flint Creek had caught our attention many times as we flew over it, headed for the Big Hole or the Bitterroot country, so we decided to look into it. More >> |