It's beginning a little early this year, I was kinda looking forward to enjoying the rest of my vacation. Oh well, Gold Creek here I come.
Montana's 
 second largest city, sits at the confluence of three rivers—the  
Bitterroot, Clark Fork, and Blackfoot—and enjoys views of five distinct 
 mountain ranges. Combined, these spaces make for some incomparable  
opportunities to immerse your kids “in a sea of wilderness even if you  
don’t have a car,” says writer Teresa Ponikvar, who went to college in  
the town. The downtown area is bike-friendly, and the Clark Fork  
Riverfront Trail is an ideal spot to introduce your young one to a bike;
  most of the trail is flat and wide. Rattlesnake National Recreation  
Area in the Lolo National Forest is so close to downtown that the city bus will drop you and your little one off at the park’s entrance.
Many  sports and activities in Missoula are pegged to the 
seasons, with river  rafting and fishing on one of more than 200 rivers 
and streams in the  summer and cross-country skiing and other snow 
sports in the winter. For  smaller kids or busier days, there are also 
plenty of park and rec  spaces in the city proper, including McCormick Park,  which offers free bike rentals in the summer and ice skating in the  winter, as well as a skate park and ropes course.
With  critters from mink to mule deer roaming the nearby 
woods, Missoula  gives parents plenty of opportunities to teach kids 
respect for  wildlife. “You  know how in most places if you see the 
neighbors all gathered on the  corner, it's usually because there's been
 a fire or a robbery or a heart  attack?” she says. “In Missoula, it's 
usually because there's a wild  animal doing something cool.”
The average home price in Missoula is about $200,000; rentals can be had for under $700.

 

