Things to do in and around Missoula

This morning My Kid and The Cousins completed their two week course of swimming lessons at Splash Montana.  We’ve been here that long.

Right now The Best Aunt in the World and the Grandfather are with My Kid and Boy Cousin fishing at Frenchtown Pond.

Yesterday the Grandparents took the cousins to the Lee Metcalf Wildlife Refuge.  It was hot and there were bugs.  Recovery involved ice cream and Splash Montana.

While I was up at Bigfork, My Kid climbed to the M with her cousins and was taken to the Missoula Smokejumpers Visitor Center (It’s the nations largest training base for people who want to put on a parachute and jump out of an airplane into a forest fire.)  I don’t remember wether or not they stopped at the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (If not, we’ve been there before…)

Phew!

Ever since were at the fair and I looked down and saw a white dot on my daughters hair, which was probably pollen, I have been paranoid–to the point of waking up in the middle of each night– worried that we have lice (see April 11, 2009).

I finally drove to the drugstore for Pantene and a lice comb, (The plastic handled kind that my friends say break easily).  I combed through my hair and found nothing.  Hooray!  I was just being paranoid.

Remember always use Pantene brand creme rinse for combing out lice and Dawn brand dishwashing liquid to get the crude oil off of ducks.

Just reading the local paper’s top story…

This morning’s top story in the Missoulian, our local daily newspaper;

Grizzly, cub killed in Glacier Park“.

            By Michael Jamison of the Missoulian: WEST GLACIER – “The old grizzly sow was rumbling straight toward a campground full of hikers, chubby cubs laboring along behind, when two rangers simultaneously pulled their triggers.  It wasn’t the way they’d planned to kill the bear, but there she was heading for camp, a big wild bear as unpredictable as the campers she was about to surprise…”

…”When a grizzly bear begins approaching people on purpose, that bear must go.”

…”And although the Bronx Zoo finally agreed to take the cubs, no zoos wanted a 17-year-old adult.”

…”cubs”…”tranquilizer”…

“But the male cub didn’t look so good.  It’s tough to gauge a dosage when you don’t know an animal’s weight, temperature, vital signs, underlying health condition…”

“…First one ranger  tried CPR, then another, going mouth to snout while coaxing the 100-pound yearling back to life.  It did not work.”

“But what’s really sad is loosing three bears from this ecosystem.”–Jack Potter, chief of science and natural resources at Glacier National Park

“The outcome while arguably unavoidable, was tragic, Potter admitted, particularly for those wildlife lovers who had rallied around the three bears.”

“We need to make a positive out of a negative,”  Witulski (a retired forester from Idaho)  “We need to tell the story better, so the public pays more attention.”

“…perhaps all those who followed the story with such interest can donate to grizzly bear habitat protection, or to the parks bear management team…” which is currently trying to get two other grizzly groups away from the park’s backcountry chalets.

When we get back to New York I’m going to take My Kid to see the surviving grizzly bear cub at the Bronx Zoo.

 

 

Lee Metcalf National Wildlife Refuge

My dad really wanted to take the grandkids to the Lee Metcalf National Wildlife Refuge up the Bitterroot not far from Missoula.  It’s a beautiful spot but I’m afraid the kids weren’t impressed.  What visible wildlife there was were birds and ducks.  It was hot.  The grass was dry.

Splash Montana rounded out the afternoon and revived the children.

Tuesday

I had a lovely lunch with one of my oldest friends at Scotty’s Table today. 

Below the fire escape of the Wilma Theatre was not a quality destination when I lived in this town.  

 

Over my mother’s lasagne we had a family meetingabout potential destinations

for my parent’s 50th Anniversary next year.  We’ve narrowed it down to warm climates.

 

My Kid dragged me to her cousin’s basement to watch her favorite movie;  27 Dresses.

Think I should show the 10-year-old one of my favorites;  Thelma and Louise?

Montana Afternoon

After we left Bigfork we drove to Lake Mary Ronan because my dad wanted to eat at his favorite restaurant.  Then my dad and sister and kid fished for perch off the end of the dock.  

Fall is coming to this part of the country.  The playhouse is winding down it’s season and the rosehips are already orange. 

We drove back to Missoula through the Mission Valley and took a side trip to the National Bison Range.  We saw one far away on a hill.  We had better sightings of elk, deer and antelope at much closer range.

Leaving Bigfork

8/17/09

I stopped by the theatre to pick up my reunion t-shirt. Then I walked along Electric Avenue and looked at the shops, some that were there when I was a playhouse actor and most that were not.  In the gift shop next to the theatre I heard some people talking about JK Simmons and how he had been walking around town like anybody.
“Yeah, he’s one of us,” said one of the men. 
Then they started to talk about his older brother David, “that big guy with the big voice”. He was a friend of mine when we were both still in Missoula going to school and involved with the Missoula Children’s Theatre and for the record he is the younger brother.  During one pre-production build, I rode out to Lolo in a truck with David to pick up some lumber or piece of equipment for a show and as we drove past the McDonalds I read the sign announcing “Chicken McNuggets”.  It was the first time in my life I’d seen those words and I laughed all the way to Lolo.   Chicken McNuggets.  Who thought that would last.

Who knew that 50 years after some college kids showed up to put on plays in the sleepy town of Bigfork, Montana, that the theatre would be the centerpiece of the town’s vibrant summer tourist industry.  There was much praise for Don and Jude Thompson who have run the playhouse for most of it’s history, but also much praise and admiration for Bo Brown who started the theater company in 1960.  He gave a lovely speech at the gala.   I can imagine how inspirational and charismatic he must have been as a young man.  When he was done after 8 years, he turned the theatre over to DT who with his wife Jude grew it too what it is today.  For several years in the 1970’s when Jim Caron was in the company, actors who didn’t have anything better to do spend the winter with Jim and the Missoula Children’s Theatre Association.  I was one of the kids they worked with back then.  I talked my parents into taking me up to Bigfork to see the professional theater. We would camp and fish and in the evening my dad would row my mother and I and sometimes my sister to the dock at Bigfork and we would get out of the boat and go up the hill and attend the theater in the old building.  (We bought the orange drink Bo Brown mentioned in his speech.)  I would buy the program and ask everyone in the company for their autograph.  Even 5-year-old Gavin Thompson who played the youngest Snow child in Carousel printed his first name over his picture in my program.  He’s married now with children and a career in technical theatre.

The number of Bigfork Alumni still in the business is a testament to the quality of performers and technicians Don and Jude hired.  Others have equally impressive jobs in academics and health care.  At the party one actor was talking to a musician about a successful Broadway musical he had been in which had a group dynamic and creative smart caring people at the helm that had reminded him of the Bigfork Summer Playhouse.

I’m glad I came back to Bigfork

Sunday 8/16/09

We got lost on the way to the softball game because it wasn’t where I thought it would be.  It wasn’t where we played against the town when I was a company member. 

The game was fun to watch.  There was beer and clowning and the old guys who were in the playhouse company years ago (including JK Simmons) were serious about winning.  And they did; 25-5.  Of course the stakes were a lot higher for the guys who paid a lot of money and planed for a long time to travel to Montana to revisit their youth.  The townies just rolled out of bed and decided to show up at the softball field.

I spent the afternoon talking to an old friend I first met when we were both in the very first Missoula Community Theatre production, Oliver.  It was a big deal.  (The afore mentioned Mr. Simmons was the musical director.)  I remember Jim Caron telling us if it didn’t work the Missoula Children’s Theatre might cease to exist.  Just renting the score probably cost more than the Missoula Children’s Theatre Association had ever spent to produce a show.  I was in 8th grade at the time.  The friend I spent the afternoon with was in high school and a cheerleader.  We did not travel in the same social circles back then.

This weekend at Bigfork we had much common as mom’s out and about without our families, so we became each others date for the Gala.  We had lunch together and talked about our years at Sentinel High School and the University of Montana.  

We each did only one season at Bigfork.  As we talked about it we realized that was because we were not the right age or at the right time in our lives to come back season after season like some of the others did.  She was too young when she came, right out of high school, and I felt too old, just a couple of years out of college and eager to move away from Montana to Seattle.

I found myself singing and humming this weekend and I do regret not having taken the opportunity to put the music from at least 4 more shows into my body.  I miss singing.  And by singing I mean show tunes.

The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas

8/15/09

We got into town in time to see the special matinee performance of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.  At the same time as I was watching the current production I had a movie in my mind of the production of the same show that I was in when I was a company member here at The Bigfork Summer Playhouse.  I played “Shy, a role for a small young and innocent looking girl.  Hmmmmmm.