
Noxon is on the Clark Fork River and the Montana Highway
200. This highway is a popular route for Spokane, WA to Great Falls, MT.
Noxon is a heavily forested area famous for trapping and the harvesting of
huckleberries. It boomed during the construction of the railroad with
railroading, mining, and logging.(from Cheney's Names on the Face of Montana,
Mountain Press Publishing Company)

The Kootenai
National Forest is located in the northwest corner of Montana and the
northeast corner of Idaho on the Canadian border. Providing abundant year-round
recreation and a wealth of natural resources, the Kootenai is a perfect place
to relax and enjoy your National Forests! Located within the heart of the
Kootenai National Forest, the Cabinet
Mountains Wilderness contains over 93,000 acres of beautiful, rugged,
glacier-carved mountains.

Fished primarily by boat, Noxon
Reservoir has a great largemouth and smallmouth bass fishery and a popular
northern pike fishery.
Troy is in a mountainous area in the northwest corner of the
state, less than ten miles from Idaho and about fifty from the Canadian line.
It is also just a few miles east of the line where Mountain Standard becomes
Pacific Standard Time for westbound travelers. Troy was a freight division on
the Great Northern and headquarters for silver mining outfits working in the
Cabinet Mountains. Railroad construction crews and miners set up a camp at the
mouth of Lake Creek east of the present town and called it Lake City. By 1891
the crews had moved on and remnants of the town moved over to the site chosen
by the railroad for a freight division. The origin of the town's name is
disputed; some say it was named for a civil engineer who worked for the GN when
the railroad was locating track through this part of Montana. (from Cheney's Names
on the Face of Montana, Mountain Press Publishing Company)

At an elevation of 1,892 feet, Troy is the lowest point in
Montana. This town of about 1,100 is on the west bank of the Kootenai
River, which flows northwest from Troy into Idaho. The Cabinet
Mountains Wilderness are to the south and the Purcell Mountains are to the
north. Visitors can walk among cedars that are more than 500 years old and 250
feet high at the Ross
Creek Cedar Grove Scenic Area, south of town. The western red cedar forest
is a Pacific rainforest, a little unusual for Montana, with more than 50 inches
of rain annually.

The Ross Creek Scenic Area is located on the Kootenai
National Forest in northwest Montana. This 100-acre scenic area is home to
a grove of giant, ancient western red cedars. Some of these trees grow up to 12
feet in diameter and 175 feet in height. Consisting of 500-year-old giant red
cedars in a rain forest atmosphere, this area is a favorite with visitors to
the Forest. There is a paved nature trail with informational signs and benches
along the route, and it is a very easy walk over mostly flat terrain.

Bad
Medicine Campground is located on 7-mile-long Bull
Lake, this site is situated among various types of flora and dense
conifers. It offers a boat ramp, fishing access, picnic area, and nice views of
the immediate vicinity. Fish species include eastern brook and rainbow trout,
kokanee salmon, and large mouth bass. Dorr
Skeels Campground is located in Kootenai National Forest adjacent to Bull
Lake in a beautiful mountain setting approximately 2 miles from the Cabinet
Mountains Wilderness boundary. The Ross Creek Scenic Area, a grove of giant
cedars nestled in a rain forest-type setting, is located approximately 7 miles
from Dorr Skeels.

This is Kootenai River country! We're everything you ever
dreamt about northwestern Montana. Bighorn sheep and cougars roam the mountain
slopes. Elk and moose browse the valley floors. Prize rainbow trout swim the
wild and beautiful Kootenai River, while bald eagles and osprey soar overhead.
Courtesy of www.VisitMT.com