quiet, inexpensive accommodation since 1979

Located in the North Fork Valley just west of Glacier National Park, the North Fork Hostel offers guests a choice of accommodations in an old-fashioned, old world atmosphere. It’s a place to get away, relax, meet new friends and enjoy the beauty of Glacier National Park and the Flathead National Forest.

Propane lights brighten your nights (there’s no electricity in Polebridge). Although the area is off the power grid, the hostel has a small solar system and allows recharging of  your devices during the power hour. A propane cooking range and refrigerators are available to make your food preparation easier after you have spent an exciting day exploring the area.

Visitors from all around the world enjoy our facilities. It is not uncommon to begin your day by having a fascinating conversation with travelers from other countries while enjoying your morning coffee.

All guests may use the amenities of the hostel. These include a living room, shower, and kitchen and refrigerator facilities. Bedding and Towels are normally not provided but can be rented for a fee.

Your friendly hostelmeister is Oliver. He has traveled the world extensively and understands hosteller’s needs. He is fluent in English, German. You can make reservations online, by email or give Oliver a call at the hostel.

All guests may use the amenities of the hostel. These include a living room, shower, and kitchen and refrigerator facilities.

Your friendly hostelmeister is Oliver. He has traveled the world extensively and understands hosteller’s needs. He is fluent in English, German and sometimes Italian and Spanish. you can make reservations online, by email or give Oliver a call at the hostel.

the Goat Chalet

It is called the goat chalet because, as the story goes, John used to house a couple of goats in there at one point, but today it is my most favored rental cabin at the hostel.

inside the goat

It has a queen size bed, a potbelly stove for heat and a small table with two chairs.

Square Peg Ranch North Cabin

(27′ x 21′) completed in 1955

The North Cabin offers full kitchen facilities and a fireplace. The master bedroom downstairs has a queen size bed and there are two full size beds in the loft upstairs. Only available May trough September.
Occupancy up to 6 people, $100 + 7% tax ( for 4 people) a weeknight, add $20 for Friday and Saturday nights, $20 for each additional person and 3 nights minimum rental required! Pets are allowed for an additional fee.

one master bedroom (9’x 10′) with a queen bed and loft (11′ x 20′) with two double beds

“stuffed” easy chairs, couch and cocktail table

rock fireplace, screen and utensils

small tables, freestanding coat rack

propane lights and propane refrigerator

one Montgomery Ward wood cooking range and propane range for cooking and baking

kitchen table and two 4′ rustic, homestead benches

silverware, sharp knives, steel skillets, cast iron skillet, dishpans, coffee cups, large plates, drinking cups, small pots, coffee pot, cooking pots, cookie sheets, pie pans, shallow baking pans, hot pads

cold running water in summer (not potable – boil 5 minutes) Persons using the cabins do not have a safe drinking water supply available on premises; drinking water is available at the North Fork Hostel – ¾ mile (1.2 km) away. Containers must be brought with you to obtain safe drinking water at the North Fork Hostel.

solar shower during sunny days next to the Charlie Wise Homestead

stocked woodshed

log outhouse


For Your Information (North Cabin)

Water is not potable, please boil for five minutes- you also can get drinking water at the hostel. Dish washing:
wash (warm soapy water)
Rinse (cold water)
Sanitize (cold water + ½ cap bleach)
Please wash and put away all dishes.

Please do not leave water in pots during freezing weather. They will freeze and break. It is best to tell us if the propane refrigerator is acting up. They are tricky to deal with.

Regarding the damper in the fireplace: towards you is open; to back is closed.

Please replace firewood and kindling in the cabin for the next person.

How to light propane lights: please first light match or lighter and hold it near (touch with the flame and not the match) the mantle inside the glass bowl and than turn gas on. Mantels are fragile to touch. Do not turn gas on first. To extinguish, turn gas off.

Solar shower is located south of the South cabin. Use during warmth of day for best results.

If you need supplies for the outhouse or find any problems, please let us at the hostel know.

Pack in and Pack out!
Please take out all your garbage and trash! Do not leave any of it outside! This is grizzly country!

Note: Please leave the place like you found it, so we can maintain our low rates.
If the cabin requires cleaning after use or any trash needs to be removed we will charge you for the service.

Thank you for your cooperation!

Charlie Wise Homestead

The original Charlie Wise Homestead from circa 1918. Has it’s own kitchen facilities and fireplace, one master bedroom with a queen size bed and a full size bed and a hide-a-bed couch in the living room. The log outhouse was featured in a book of outhouses, as well as a magazine for Montana State University. Newspaper article about Charlie Wise are in picture frames on the wall of the homestead also called the South Cabin.
Occupancy up to 4 people, $100 + 7% tax ( for 2 people) a weeknight, add $20 for Friday and Saturday nights, $20 for each additional person and 3 nights minimum rental required! Pets are allowed for an additional fee.

one master bedroom with double bed and living room with antique, oak double bed from the 1800’s

and a hide-a-bed, that can be used in front of the fireplace
“stuffed” easy chairs, couch and cocktail table
wood heater dated 1898, rock fireplace


screen and utensils
small tables, freestanding coat rack
propane lights and propane refrigerator
one Irish, wood cooking range and propane range for cooking and baking

wooden kitchen table and chairs
silverware, sharp knives, steel skillets, cast iron skillets, dishpans, coffee cups, large plates, drinking cups, small pots, coffee pot, cooking pots, cookie sheets, pie pans, shallow baking pans, hot pads

cold running water in summer (not potable – boil 5 minutes) Persons using the cabins do not have a safe drinking water supply available on premises; drinking water is available at the North Fork Hostel – ¾ mile (1.2 km) away. Containers must be brought with you to obtain safe drinking water at the North Fork Hostel

solar shower during sunny days next to the log home

stocked woodshed

unique log outhouse


For Your Information (Charlie Wise Homestead)

Water is not potable, please boil for five minutes- you also can get drinking water at the hostel. Dish washing:
wash (warm soapy water)
Rinse (cold water)
Sanitize (cold water + ½ cap bleach)
Please wash and put away all dishes.

Please do not leave water in pots during freezing weather. They will freeze and break.

It is best to tell us if the propane refrigerator is acting up. They are tricky to deal with.

To light Kitchen Wood stove: After laying paper and kindling in cooking range, put lit piece of paper in little door at base of stovepipe, you will smoke yourself out.

To start fire in Wood stove open flap at air vent briefly, but after fire is going well, turn open draft about one turn at most. Never close air vent completely.

To set fire for the night or when it becomes too warm, open back draft on floor. It acts like a damper and slows down fire. Use clothes pins at bottom to keep back draft open.

Please replace firewood and kindling in the cabin for the next person.

How to light propane lights: please first light match or lighter and hold it near (touch with the flame and not the match) the mantle inside the glass bowl and than turn gas on, mantles are fragile. Do not turn gas on first. To extinguish, turn gas off.

Solar shower is located south of the South cabin. Use during warmth of day for best results.

If you need supplies for the outhouse or find any problems, please let us at the hostel know.

Pack in and Pack out!
Please take out all your garbage and trash! Do not leave any of it outside! This is grizzly country!

Note: Please leave the place like you found it, so we can maintain our low rates.
If the cabin requires cleaning after use or any trash needs to be removed we will share you for the service.

Thank you for your cooperation!

 

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Tipis

For a little more plush camping we have a tipi available that sports a double bed but still has a dirt floor and lets you experience all the night sounds. A small fire is possible if we’re not in the middle of a forest fire season. Only available in July and August.

Klondike Kate’s Koffee House

Then, there is Klondike Kate’s Koffe House, not named for the building but for a business that John used to have up in Alaska in the old days. We used to call it the “mod” for modern since it is a frame structure that used to be towed around logging sites.

Klondike Kate’s has a queen bed and a full size futon couch that functions as a second bed to make you comfortable and a table with two chairs.

The North Fork of the Flathead: Paradise for a Late Bloomer

by Kelly Edwards

Eight or ten years ago, when I was around the fiftyish mark in my life, a small dream of mine became a reality, when complementary longings arose (no not that kind!), between me and a friend. He needed a little cash to buy a piece of his dream in Costa Rica, and I longed for an affordable foot hold anywhere near to the North Fork of the Flathead River. What resulted was my acquisition of his little cabin, which sat on an acre of land in the township of Polebridge, Montana . This is an area to which I have returned time after time over the years. Come June, as soon as I was finished teaching and loosed for the summer, I happily traipsed over thousands of miles, driving from California, or Texas, or Illinois to reach this beautiful river valley in far northwest Montana. What seemed at first remote, the end of the road, the furthest northern reach of the US border, came to feel more like the Canadian Riviera, and I was dying to get (a piece)(the peace) of it.

Then, as if on cue, when everything seemed to be falling into place nicely, a series of tanglesome and unexpected financial obstacles leapt up just as we were set to sign the deal. The financial shenanigans of the fraudulent rat bastards in charge of the institution in which I kept my own and my children’s pittance of cash savings caused the implosion of the whole investment company. Instant bankruptcy and so, zee money, she disappear! This was actually the beginning of a nationwide meltdown that I had somehow neglected to notice, but at the moment what bothered me was that it threatened to undermine my little deal. Those funds were to have been a substantial down payment for the cabin, which would have kept the mortgage payments nice and low. We held a family conference, considering pros and cons, trying to strategize and to form an alternative plan. There weren’t a whole lot of alternatives available however. No money, no cabin. But, so, yeah, in the midst of the chorus of wounded screams of real estate and financial tycoons nationwide, and with the last flickering glimmer of hope for rising real estate prices, and the promise of rapid appreciation in an agony of death throes, I floated a loan.

You know when I say dream cabin? You need to understand what I am talking about. After all, we all have dreams, and each of them is unaccountably unique. This little jewel that I acquired was by all measures, a modest one. How shall I describe it? Built about seventy years ago, by rough and self sufficient types, it had not a single true 90 degree angle. The lumber used was strong, but on the scrappy side, sort of whatever came to hand over a period of time, while funds were accumulated for the project. Passed from hand to hand through a series of owners, this somewhat impromptu structure became increasingly eccentric. At the time that I became the proud owner, it had become known as the `Bat Chalet’, for reasons that are too clear to mention, and it sported a tall, stone, irregular, and sharply tapering chimney, which gave it the look of something out of a child’s fairy tale. Attached to the chimney, inside the cabin, was a stove created from a 55 gallon barrel, outfitted with a smoke stack that swayed in a state of imperfectly jointed instability, threatening to disassemble at the slightest insult. The floors were of ancient, smoothed plywood, the ceiling of the downstairs living room presented an elegant convex curve, sort of like a Turkish pillow and fabric ceiling, only made of wood; very old wood. Inside (Thank heavens, as lots of folks up there have them outside!), was a manually powered water pump drawing from a well dug right under the kitchen floor and a real cast iron sink, and next to it a propane gas stove, greasy but fully functional on both back burners. The upstairs attic was mercifully dark, no beam of light entering to reveal the accumulated rubble of fifty years of use by creatures human and otherwise, and anyway, I didn’t have the urge (or the courage) to look very deeply. Outside, was a humble one-seat outhouse, with an awning in front which gave a little shelter in rain or snow conditions, and a crescent moon cut out of the back wall for freshness, a pretty rare commodity in that well used and tightly closed space. So as the song goes, “…no phone, no pool, no pets…” Well, there were some pets, and at night they were busy searching for anything they could find to eat, scurrying, buzzing, and flapping around, long after I was in bed, working my way towards sleep, by way of a prolonged battle between elation and horror.

Let me also clarify that when I say `township’, I’m talking about the place you pull into after a 24 mile drive on a gravel, dirt, stone road guaranteed to shred tires under six ply. The maximum posted speed limit is 35 mph. but the actual survivable velocity is more like 20 mph. (in summer dust), and 10 mph. (on winter ice). The trip up this final leg of the journey gives you plenty of time to detach from the stresses of city life and work. Actual retinal detachment is also possible. When, and if, you arrive at the Polebridge turn off, you enter into a place that feels as if someone has turned back the clock, to say, the 1900’s (except perhaps for the sound of a young rocker, practicing his licks on a drum set, in back of the stage built for the ‘Aurora Music Festival’ the annual gathering of all things alternative). This is a town that boasts one general store, The Polebridge Mercantile where an effort is made to meet all basic needs and to cater as well, to the good coffee and great fresh baked pastry maven in all of us. The Northern Lights is the saloon-cum-restaurant-cum-local -live-music venue-cum-community volleyball court where adventurers meet and eat and compare feats. The third piece of the commercial trilogy of Polebridge is the not to be missed, verging on famous, North Fork Hostel. It’s the multicultural center of the town, where you may meet anyone, from anywhere, at any time, doing anything…..and highly encouraged in this behavior (as long as it doesn’t adversely affect the environment), by the Hostel-Meister, Oliver. He hails from Germany originally, but has gone entirely native, in every sense of the word. Captivated twenty years ago by the beauty he found in and around the area and the lifestyle of relative freedom, he simply never left. Oliver created a niche for himself by becoming an indispensable assistant in and around the hostel, which was owned and run at the time by John Frederick, an earlier wanderer, stopped dead in his tracks by his love for the area, who with characteristic adventursomeness established the guest hostel, organized the force of the community on a variety of issues, and over the last 30 years in residence, has come to be known as the honorary mayor of the community. He is a wild and wily original, an indomitable, fearless, force behind the many activities in defense of wilderness protections and preservation of North Fork watershed from extractive industries (logging, mining), over development and speculative subdivision.

Year round residents are relatively few, due to the harsh winters and far remove of the North Fork area. In fact people in general are fairly few in number, and the overall demographics of this community are somewhat difficult to convey. Actually, I’d bet that they defy categorization in any collective or useful fashion, and that a statistician might just go right out of his/her mind trying to crunch any numbers based on this group of individuals. The citizens of the North Fork are variously, descendents of original homesteaders, environmental activists, painters, potters, outfitters, photographers, wealthy magnates and owners of log cabin castles complete with hot-tubs and orchid green houses, drifters, wolf biologists, snow birds from Texas and Florida, Oxford scholars taking a break from their doctoral studies, counter culture and alternative life style types, vegans, hunters, peak baggers, lotharios, musicians, and itinerant souls searching for themselves, some of whom are well off the track.

In a very short time I, like others, have come to love this place and the living river that runs through it, like nowhere else on earth. The North Fork Valley, in which Polebridge is located, extends for many miles from north of Columbia Falls, up to and across the Canadian Border. The North Fork Road, which runs the full length of the valley, roughly following the course of the river, used to give access to southwest British Columbia. It is no longer an open border crossing point, and the road at the old check point sports a six foot high bull dozer sculpted berm , a `severe penalities’ warning sign, several remote controlled cameras, and the occasional white Border Patrol pick-up with agents checking to see if some misbegotten terrorists or smugglers might try and breach the divide. Truth is that they’re far more likely to end up discovering a patch of huckleberries or with a little luck, maybe catch a glimpse of a big chocolate colored bull-moose, a pair of wolves crossing their territory, or a lone grizzly bear on the prowl. People who venture up this far are there to back pack into Glacier Park’s more remote areas, or else to `put in’ to the river in kayaks, canoes, rafts and even the occasional adventurous inner-tube rider set to spend the day floating the river, watching for wildlife, nesting eagles and kingfishers, pulling into a quiet beach for lunch or a quick nap in the sun, and arriving in the late afternoon at a `pull out’ point, ready to join friends at the Northern Lights Saloon for drinks or dinner and to share the stories of their day on the river and consider the latest community controversy.

Throughout this pristine valley where elk, and deer, and wolves, and bear, and mountain lions, are all still present, loops the magnificent North Fork of the Flathead River, finding its way southward, through the untrammeled natural beauty that surrounds it on all sides. To the east, where the sun rises, are the craggy mountains, the `crown of the continent’ which form Glacier National Park, and still shelter small patches of snow well into July. Below the peaks a dramatic skirted expanse of dark green forest. At the base of the forest a wide spreading meadowland divided with grace and whimsy by the powerfully flowing pristine river that gives life to everything around it, as its waters flow southward to meet the Middle and South Forks, joining together to form the enormous body of water which feeds the immense Flathead Lake.

The North Fork River runs along its ancient ever changing course with an equally changeable temper and mien, according to the season and the dictates of nature. In summer it runs alternately clear, deep and calm or thrashing and boiling its way through rock gardens, giddily swooping around sharp turns carved into the surrounding terrain during raging snow melt floods. In winter it is a ribbon of ice covered pewter, its power hidden, a quiet whisper, buried under a blanket of deep snow. In fall, with the water at low ebb, in the early mornings, pockets of chilly mist linger low on the water and later in the day its quiet pools reflect the brilliant gold of the tree leaves basking in the sharp sunlight of autumn. In the spring swollen, milky, glacier-melt torrents plunge and roar, pulling and shoving with such force that trees and boulders are loosed from their moorings, and rolled around haphazardly as the river rises in tumult, and breaks free of the last year’s boundaries.

It is this great River that gives life to the valley and all the creatures in it. It is the key to the existence of everything around it. It is a river that we in the community of Polebridge fight to protect from all potential sources of damage and degradation, working together to create long term protective and sustainable conditions for these waters that travel through the land we love. Seeking a permanent ban on extractive industries upstream across the Canadian border in the headwaters area, limiting the subdivision of properties and development throughout the valley and along the banks of the river, developing the means to regulate and avoid recreational overuse or abuse of the river, and creating binding zoning and growth plans. As a community up against some very strong odds, we are holding the line in defense of the North Fork of the Flathead.

I discovered this river and the great joy that it brings to all who know and love it, pretty well along in the arc of my lifetime, and what I know is that I and many others who came before me and the many that will be here long after me, will spend years of their lives working to protect and preserve this river we love.

That’s my `river story’.

activities

No matter what your activity, bring your camera and binoculars. Wildlife is plentiful here. You might see deer, moose, elk, mountain lions, wolves, eagles or bears from the hostel windows. Only wolverines have not been seen from the hostel windows yet.
Hike or backpack along Glacier’s Continental Divide or the forested trails of the Whitefish Range.
Ski Logan Pass in late June when Going-To-The-Sun Road opens. (Cross-country skis and boots may be rented at the hostel.
Bicycle up from West Glacier on the inside park road to the hostel, then explore Polebridge and the surrounding area.
Fish or swim the federally designated wild and scenic North Fork of the Flathead River or beautiful Kintla and Bowman Lakes.
Help with trail maintenance, go on a hike or attend one of the other activities sponsored by the North Fork Preservation Association.

private rooms upstairs

Upstairs we have a private room, formerly known as the family room. It combines the convenience of being inside the main lodge and having your private space. The only challenge you have to face are the very steep stairs, especially on a nightly trip to the outhouse.

This room has two full size beds, which means plenty of room for a couple or a two individuals!
$80 + tax a weeknight for two, occupancy 2-4 people (add $30 for each additional person). Add $10 a night for Friday and Saturday nights.

The outhouses

¡Outhouses!:
No plastic or hygiene products in pit please, they belong in trash. Human waste only
Keep lid closed!
And: It is OK to pee in the woods! Birds do it, bears do it, moose do it, why not you?
Also: Remember: Changing toilet paper rolls does not cause brain damage!

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