
From the valley…

…to the mountain top.
The freezing fog, it usually comes with another phenomonon – an inversion. Warm air up high overruns cold air in the valleys. Under high pressure it creates an inversion – between the warm upper air and the cold valley air lies the stratus.
In the valley, under the status, we have had cold temperatures accompanied by high humidity and so the freezing fog.
Karl’s and my mission today was to see the inversion from the other side. We headed for Blacktail Mountain, home of Blacktail Mountain Ski Area – an “upside-down” mountain in that the day lodge and parking are at the top of the mountain. The ski runs go down into a hanging valley. But the important thing for my purposes was that the lodge and parking area were above the fog deck…in the sunshine! And the temperature at 8:00 a.m. was already 40 compared to 25 at my house.
The road to Blacktail Mountain takes off from MT Highway 93 in Lakeside, MT. The road is 12 miles from Hwy 93 to the top of the mountain. It is 35 mph max and much of it is 15-25 mph hairpin curves. The road has it’s excitement in the winter and that 12 miles takes at least 40 minutes.

As we ascended into the stratus…
Going up I had occasional glimpses of the stratus deck from above as we cleared that, but the driving demanded my full attention. The road is barely 2 lanes, narrowed by the plowing, and sometimes the wish for a much higher guardrail, or any guardrail at all was more prominent in my mind than the view.
But as we cleared the fog layer and came into the sun and the cloudless blue sky at the summit…



These photos do not begin to convey what it really looked and felt like. The high mountain peaks poked through the fog layer looking like islands in an ocean of soft cottony seas.
It was over 50 degrees. The sun was so bright and strong that I was too warm immediately. There were other people there – all of us smiling and laughing and enjoying the sunshine. The ski area is only open Wed-Sunday so I was able to walk out on the summit on this day.



I got Karl out of the Jeep and we walked around the parking area. His tongue was soon hanging out…too hot for a black dog with a heavy coat!
We started back down.
I have always said that this gloom that we sometimes get in winter does not bother me as I’m always out a lot. But, that sun, it was wonderful. And the indescribable beauty from the mountain top made me feel like I had been on a wonderful vacation.



The transition down was beautiful as well as a little sad – From the mountain top to the valley.
Incredible pictures and story! What a neat mini getaway!
You really know how to make us long to be with you on these excursions. My girls would soooo love to go too!!! Awesome pictures (know the real thing is so much more breath-taking)
My God! You’ve had spectacular photos before, but these…they’re over the top.
I so want to visit your neck of our American woods someday.
Absolutely beautiful, Ann! You did an outstanding job of showing what it’s like above the clouds in winter! Since I haven’t yet had a chance to get up there, I’m so glad you posted these! Thanks!
Just fantastic. They do well convey the sense of being there. You damn yourself with faint praise!
Such ABSOLUTE BEAUTY!! Thank you for these photos..
Amazing.
That was a mountain top experience if ever there was one. Very nice. Thanks for this post and also the commentary. That made it all so very enjoyable.
You do appreciate what you have don’t you?