News

KALISPELL, Mont. — Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks received its first confirmed detection of northern pike in the Bull River in Sanders County. FWP is requesting anglers to report any northern ...
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission members will decide at its Thursday meeting in Helena on whether to implement changes involving motorized boats on the Bull River.
Bull trout were once abundant in the upper Clark Fork River but historic mining and smelting activities upstream affected ...
May 6—The typically tranquil Bull River has been a haven for area recreators to pilot their canoes, kayaks, john boats and tubes. Their pursuits range widely, from those seeking quiet, some ...
Some real big fish swim in western Montana rivers. Leave them alone. As they slowly return from near extinction, bull trout have become a good problem to have for fisheries ...
Tue., June 11, 2019 Outdoor educator Brian Baxter will lead a tour of Montana’s Bull River Valley on Saturday. Baxter will discuss the history of the scenic valley, its trees, plants, ...
The bull was taken on Sept. 10 by Steve Felix of Seeley Lake while bowhunting on public land in Powder River County, Montana. After 60-days of drying, it was scored a 430 by the Boone and Crockett ...
HELENA, Mont. — Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks fisheries staff have noticed a declining number of bull trout spawning nests in western Montana. Trends show the spawning nests, or redds, have ...
Montana's bull trout are found in the Clark Fork, Blackfoot, and Bitterroot River drainages. (Photo/IDFG) Montana Further Restricts Bull Trout Fishing, Hoping to Limit Species’ Decline.
Reconnecting Bull Trout Habitat. Conservation groups, state fish and game agencies, and federal land managers have been striving to restore bull trout populations in Montana and beyond for decades.
But Ryker was found Sunday afternoon near Pine Ridge Road and South Fork Bull River Road in Sanders County, about 2.4 miles from where he went missing, a sheriff's dispatcher said Monday.
Forest fire blackened two of the most popular backcountry campsites and boat accesses to the South Fork of the Flathead River in 2015, but that hasn't diminished the drainage's popularity.