Distinctly Montana Magazine

Distinctly Montana Spring 2019

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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D I S T I N C T L Y M O N T A N A M A G A Z I N E • S P R I N G 2 0 1 9 12 Double Tree Hotel pool M ANY OF US HAVE PASTS THAT WE WANT TO SOME EXTENT LEAVE BEHIND. I le the pedestrian-flooded sidewalks and the sun-blocking skyscrapers of New York City for the famous trout streams of Missoula, Montana. I hoped that my future would eclipse the past. It's not just people who need a new beginning; sometimes it's rivers, like Montana's Clark Fork. Many will argue that, with an adult, wild trout population of 300 to 500 per river mile—about one quarter the population of the Madison River—the Clark Fork is not a blue-ribbon trout stream. They say it is scarred by its past. But when I stare into the river's glass-clear water, although I know its history of pollution and fish kills, I also hear the river's soothing voice telling about a journey of hope and renewal. article & photos by RANDY KADISH An Urban River's Journey Mioula's Clark Fork

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