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Long before rafters spent
lazy days floating the North
Fork, Native Americans from
local tribes used the great
river for hunting, gathering,
and fishing grounds. A crucial
mineral used in tool-making
for the tribes is found near the
river–Bowman chert is a rock
used to make arrowheads and
other essential tools for sur-
vival. If you look hard enough
in bordering forests of ponderosa pines, you can find scarred
trees from where natives harvested the bark to extract its
sweet cambium layer to eat. It's safe to say the North Fork
has and will continue to be
a place of peace and abun-
dance for all to enjoy.
Carving out Glacier
Park's southern border
is the Middle Fork of the
Flathead. Starting in the
Bob Marshall Wilderness,
the river is revered as a lo-
cal favorite, and for good
reason! Faster water with
sections of interesting
class II-IV rapids makes the river perfect for a day, or even a
week-long trip. To start at the beginning of the Middle, one
has to either fly or pack into the Bob Marshall Wilderness
GLACIER
NATIONAL PARK