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1. Custer Country In Focus
- Custer Country
2009 Annual Meeting
2. Fossil Footsteps
Sample the wonders of
Custer Country.
Plan your dream vacation.
Please visit our
website at www.CusterCountry.com
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It’s time again for the Custer Country Annual
Meeting, Sept. 18, 2008,
at the Forsyth
Country Club in Forsyth. The meeting will
start at
10:30 a.m. The morning will consist
of reports of last year’s
Custer Country
activities and election of board members.
If you’re
interested in representing your
county as a board member, contact
Gloria
Wester at visitorsguide@laureloutlook.com
or
Jim at custer@rangeweb.net or 201-0332.
There are openings for board
members in
Carter, Custer, Dawson, Fallon, Golden
Valley,
Musselshell, Prairie, Rosebud,
Treasure and Wibaux counties,
as well as
the Northern Cheyenne and Crow
reservations.
Any paid up member of Custer
Country may run for a board
member
position.
Lunch for all Custer Country advertisers and members will be served
at noon. The Forsyth Country Club always does a great job of
preparing a delicious meal.
After lunch, we’ll hear from Dr. Dan Aadland, who will tell us about
Theodore Roosevelt’s adventures in Custer Country and how those
adventures led to TR’s life-long commitment to conservation and
preservation.
Throughout the meeting, we will be drawing for door prizes, including
Custer Country
t-shirts and caps and other fabulous door prizes
provided by members and donors.
If you or your organization would like to give
a door prize, you can
send it to the Custer Country office, PO. Box 904, 1401 Front Street,
Forsyth, MT 59327 or bring it to the meeting. Please make sure your
donation has a card or other identification attached so we’ll know
who provided it.
After Dr. Aadland’s presentation, there will be an election of officers.
Please remember that only board members may vote for officers.
The offices to be voted on are: President, Vice President, Treasurer
and Secretary, along with one At-large member of the Executive
Committee. Join us for a fun and informative day. Please RSVP to Luchelle or
Jim at the Custer Country office by Monday, Sept. 15, so we can
get an accurate count for lunch. The number at the Custer Country
office is: 346-1876, toll free 1-877-810-0027 or you can email us at custer@rangeweb.net.
See you there.
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When you travel along Highway 12 to Baker, you're likely to see wildlife such as fox, coyotes, white-tail and mule deer, turkeys, eagles, hawks and antelope. You might even see a zebra (yes, a zebra!) if you watch closely. The area around Baker is where you'll find some of America's most-productive oil and gas fields, producing much of the fossil-fuel energy we use today. Turn south on Highway 7 in Baker and you'll find Ekalaka, a town of 300 residents and home to the Carter County Museum, the first state-chartered museum in Montana and the location of one of only three complete Anototitan copei (a duck-billed dinosaur) skeletons in the world. Ekalaka is not only one of 15 designated stops on the Montana Dinosaur Trail, but it is also reminiscent of some of the early towns in Montana. Between Ekalaka and Baker, you can take a drive through Medicine Rocks State Park, so named because early native Americans considered the area "good medicine" and who often sent their young braves there to experience their "medicine dreams" which would often reveal the names they would give themselves as warriors. Don't forget to fill your glass, thermos or picnic jug with water from Medicine Rocks spring, some of the best and purest water you will ever taste. It's available at the hand pump at the park's entrance.
Head back North on Highway 7 and continue on to Wibaux (pronounced WE-bow), where Theodore Roosevelt spent much of his early life. It is the site of the "stone church" constructed of lava rock collected in the area.
From Wibaux, get on I-94 and proceed west to Glendive, another stop on the Montana Dinosaur Trail. You'll be amazed at the way the town has embraced the dinosaur theme, even naming many of the businesses after the dinosaur species they have "adopted." Be sure to visit the Makoshika Dinosaur Museum, and inquire about their "paleo-kids" program that can include an opportunity to dig for your own fossils. If you want to see the last place on earth dinosaurs roamed, take a short trip to montana's largest state park, Makoshika (pronounced ma-KO-she-koh). The visitor center there features some one-of-a-kind fossils as well. And, don't forget that Glendive is one of only a few places on earth where paddlefish can be found.
After you've explored Glendive, travel west on I-94 to Terry, home of the Evelyn Cameron Gallery and the 3-story Prairie County Museum. Evelyn Cameron was an early pioneer who came to Terry from an aristocratic background in England and who took up photography as a way to support herself and her husband. She left behind thousands of glass-plate negatives chronicling and recording the lives of the early wildlife, farmers, ranchers and businessmen of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. You'll be amazed at the story of how she took many of her wildlife photos, which often involved her risking her life to get just the right angle.
As you continue west to Miles City, you'll pass through the "Diamond Ring Ranch," one of the oldest and largest cattle ranches in Montana.
Click here for Loop Tour maps of Custer Country
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Contact Information
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Custer Country Tourism Region
Jim Schaefer, Executive Director
Box 904
Forsyth, MT 59327
Email : custer@rangeweb.net
Toll-Free : 1-800-346-1876
www.CusterCountry.com
Produced with Accommodations Tax Funds |
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