On Nov. 17, The National Weather Service issued its December through February prediction for Montana: “The outlook is for 50-55 percent chance for temperatures to average above normal for the 3-month period; with no dominating signals for precipitation forecasts, no forecast was made. In essence, for precipitation there are equal chances of below, above or near normal conditions.” So what does this mean temperature wise? Chances are good with that type of a forecast, we probably will not match or exceed our record of 70 below zero. And we might not see as many 40 and 50 below readings as a “normal” year might produce.
We’ve seen a lifetime of Montana winters and have decided to go out on a limb and make our own prophecy.
It seems to us, when winter weather comes on early as it has so far this year — many snow measurement sites are showing substantial depths for this stage of autumn — it tapers off after Christmas and the storms become less intense.
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With that in mind, we suggest that the state will be drier (have less snow) than “normal” this winter. As for the mercury, while it may have seemed cold since September, it hasn’t been anything unusual, in fact some places have had a warmer than usual October.
Our forecast for the December to February frame temperature-wise is in concurrence with the National Weather Service in that it will be warmer than what might loosely be called average. So make a note and see where we stand when March shows up, which of course in these parts is still winter.
Have you ever wondered how certain places, rivers and towns got their unusual or just plain unfathomable names?
Thanks to the incoming railroad across the top of the state, towns along the Hi-Line were named by the ingenious method of having a blindfolded railway worker stop a spinning a globe with his finger and whatever it pointed to became the town’s name. Hence the cosmopolitan flair given to communities like Malta, Glasgow, etc.
How about the Yaak… well, it’s an Indian word, most likely from the Kootenai people, and it means “arrow.” Legend has it the Yaak River is as straight as an arrow cutting across the bow-like bend of the Kootenai River. Now when you look at a map, indeed the Kootenai is a bow, albeit quite a bent one, and although the Yaak isn’t exactly a direct line, utilizing a bit of imagination you can see where the idea came from.
Holes… such as the Big Hole and Ross’s Hole? In the early 1800s, mountain men or fur trappers called many of the high valleys of the Northern Rockies holes. In some of them, especially Jackson Hole down in Wyoming, they held a rendezvous each summer to socialize, drink and get rid of all their money before heading back into the mountains to accumulate furs for the next season.
Captain William Clark, who in 1806 stopped at present-day Jackson Hot Springs in the Big Hole Valley of southwest Montana, noting that meat could be cooked in the steaming water in less than six minutes, named the area Hot Springs Valley. Early ranchers renamed the valley, which most likely never experienced a rendezvous.
And the captains of the Corps of Discovery named the Big Hole River “Wisdom River” for the astuteness of “the author of our enterprise, President Thomas Jefferson.” The town of Wisdom in the Big Hole Valley has kept the name alive, but the river lost that moniker and took on the name of the valley where it headwaters.
Wolf Point reportedly received its name because two trappers had piled up a large number of wolf carcasses on a point along the Missouri River. Before they could skin them, the owners of the real estate, namely a band of Plains Indians, most likely Sioux or Assiniboine, showed up causing the trespassers to leave a rotting pile of wolf remains behind. For quite some time, the pile served as a landmark to steamboats plying the Missouri.
Plentywood. In Roberta Cheney’s book, Names On The Face of Montana, a high school student, Gary Sunsted of Antelope, a small town south of Plentywood, wrote the following: “In the early days, a cattle outfit driving across the treeless prairie met a couple of riders coming from the other direction. They asked if there was any place around where they could find water and firewood for a campsite. The cattlemen were told to keep going ahead for a mile or two and they would find “plenty wood.” The cattle outfit went on and made their camp where the town is now located.” — Rick & Susie Graetz are from Helena and are authors, photographers and publishers.
Another version involves the outlaw Dutch Henry becoming frustrated with efforts to build a fire and told his cowhands to go up the creek where they would find plenty of wood.
Rick. The founder of Montana Magazine teaches the Montana course and Mountains & Society at The University of Montana in Missoula during the fall semester. Their latest book is Montana High, Wide & Handsome n A Montana Anthology. Their email is Thisismontana@aol.com

