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11 minute read
Guide to arts
from Newcomers Guide 2022
by Missoulian
Photo by Tom Bauer, MIssoulIAn
neWCoMers’ guiDe To arts
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CORY WALSH cory.walsh@missoulian.com
Ringed by mountains, with three big rivers and numerous creeks defining its nickname Five Valleys, Missoula has fun activity spreading in all directions.
If you wanted, you could start a Saturday by grabbing some locally roasted coffee, head up into a national forest or wilderness area, cool off in the water and then hit a brewery, concert or art show without leaving a radius of five miles or so. Granted you don’t have to do all that in one day, but you 48 Missoula NewcoMers’ Guide 2022
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Photo by Ben Allan s mith, MI ssoul IA n
could if you wanted.
Part of the reason there are so many options is that Missoula hosts the University of Montana, the state’s liberal arts flagship campus For decades the community has cultivated a culture of local makers, whether that means art, crafts, vegetables, beer or baguettes. And Missoulians love to get together to share their wares — the city has a prolific number of festivals for a city its size. They’re fun in and of themselves, but they’re an easy way to key yourself into the character and local issues.
For documentary fans, there are two big calendar items: the International Wildlife Film Festival, the first and oldest of its kind, which screens movies about the natural world every spring (typically at its home base, the Roxy Theater) in April. The Big Sky Documentary Film Festival likewise attracts premieres of veteran and upcoming nonfiction directors each February.
The River City Roots Festival brings rootsy (in a broad sense of the word) bands from around the country to two stages in downtown each August. For jazz fans, there are two: The Buddy DeFranco Jazz Festival at UM and the community-based Jazzoula festival. For readers, there’s the Montana Book Festival and the Norman Maclean Festival.
Caras Park in downtown is usually home to myriad events like the Garden City BrewFest and weekly food-and-music offerings Out to Lunch and Downtown ToNight, during the warm months. All feature pods of food trucks as well as local artisans displaying their talents.
FOOD AND DRINK
Missoula’s restaurant scene has grown in the past years, with newer waves of restaurants
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Photo by Tommy Martino, MIssoulIAn
HOME • AUTO • BUSINESS • LIFE • ANNUITIES • FARM • RANCH
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Shawn Friedeman
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1802 Dearborn Ave, Suite 102 Missoula, MT 59801 office: (406) 728-3276 cell: (406) 493-4165 fax: (406) 926-1065 sfriedeman@mwfbi.com
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alongside staples, such as the Montana Club, Charlie B’s Dinosaur Cafe, and Depot.
For a fresh pizza, locally owned spots include Bridge, Front Street Pizza and Biga. For a creative brunch or lunch, check out Burns St. Bistro or Golden Yolk Griddle, or snag a breakfast burrito to go at Market on Front.
Some newer places have diversified the lunch and dinner palate. Michi Ramen Bar finally brought noodles to downtown. Gild Brewing and The Camino have their own take on Mexican food, joining classic burrito joints like Taco Del Sol, Taco Sano and El Diablo, and veteran restaurant El Cazador.
Food trucks in general have grown in number in recent years, often as a way for aspiring restaurant owners to cultivate a fan base before they try a permanent location. (See Wally & Buck, a downtown burger joint with hand-cut fries, or Ragheef and Kamoon, two truckers who teamed up to serve their Arabic cuisine in a brick-and-mortar location on Broadway.
Locally roasted coffee is available through Black Coffee Roasting and Drum Coffee at their shops, plus newcomer Big Creek Coffee on Russell Street.
Dessert, too, is here for you. Ducrey Chocolate specializes in hot chocolate and coffee drinks, with classic French snacks on the side. Big Dipper, the city’s original ice cream shop, serves up custom flavors year-round that are so popular people wait in line, outside, in winter at its original Higgins location. Sweet Peaks on North Higgins has its own spin. Local chocolatier Posh Chocolat never fails to provide tasty truffles and bars.
There are so many breweries in western Montana that you might need a map (more on that later). Missoula County alone is home to more than a dozen, not counting cideries, distilleries and taprooms. Some of the oldest brewers are going strong, such as Bayern Brewing — popular for its European style that sets it apart from American ones — and well-known outfits like Big Sky Brewing and KettleHouse Brewing Co.
For those who make a sport out of trying new breweries, check the Montana Brewers Association trail map at montanabrewers. org/trail-map. Or head to a tap room, such as the Dram Shop, which brings in a variety of Montana and outside beers, or shops like Worden’s Market or Big Head’s Bottle Shop that offer a fine selection of classics and new entries. For something sweeter, Western Cider produces a variety of tasty drinks at its space near the California Street Footbridge.
The cocktail menu is growing, too. Montgomery Distillery has an eclectic drinks offering, and Plonk mixes creative drinks and stocks a large wine menu. The deck at Finn has a good selection, too, and as a bonus, you can look out on the banks of the Clark Fork River.
ART AND ATTRACTIONS
The first Friday of each month is when crowds descend on the downtown district to see art openings in galleries and museums.
The longest-running gallery, the Dana, hosts impressionistic takes on landscape painting. The Radius Gallery features contemporary art and ceramics with an emphasis on a community
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Photo by Tom Bauer, MI ssoul IA n
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feel and local and regional makers, in a brandnew two-story building. The Zootown Arts Community Center, a nonprofit, moved into a new two-story facility that boasts galleries, paint-your-own pottery studio, an event space, recording studios and more.
The Missoula Art Museum’s home is a historic Carnegie Library, expanded in the 2000s, that now has four levels of space all dedicated to contemporary art from Montana and the region (occasionally beyond). One gallery upstairs is dedicated exclusively for modern Indigenous work. It, too, is open yearround and doesn’t have an admission charge. During the warmer months, the Missoula Art Park just outside the door exhibits sculptures.
On campus, the Montana Museum of Art and Culture, a statewide museum with thousands of artifacts, hosts year-round exhibitions in its two galleries in the PAR/TV Center.
If science and history are your niche, there are museums for you. The Historical Museum at Fort Missoula has indoors exhibits delving into the area’s past, and outdoor features such as a historic fire watch tower. It also preserves the memories of dark periods in the area’s history, such as the Alien Detention Center, where Italian-Americans and Japanese-Americans were incarcerated during World War II. To familiarize yourself with all the plants and animals of your new environment, go to the Montana Natural History Center, which has exhibits on the particulars of the landscape.
The new Missoula Public Library reflects the re-imagining of a city library into a community center, with activities such as a climbing wall and MakerSpace. Its architecturally adventurous space also presents one of the finest fourth-floor views of the Missoula Valley.
The city’s nonprofit independent cinema, the Roxy Theater, has returned its programs indoors but still hosts occasional outdoor screenings behind its building on Higgins Avenue during the warmer months.
Sports fans have their year-round attractions, too. On campus, there’s Montana Griz football and its home at Washington-Grizzly Stadium, plus Lady Griz and Griz basketball and other collegiate athletics. During the summer, the Missoula Paddleheads baseball team hosts at the Ogren-Allegiance Field, located along the Clark Fork River.
MUSIC, THEATER AND MOVIES
The city has as many musicians, actors and dancers as you’d expect. When you are looking to go see something live, keep in mind that there’s less of a scene tied to a specific genre than an assortment of talented people doing very different things who all choose to live here. You can hear accomplished jazz artists, singer-songwriters, country bands or indie rock, psych, metal, or whatever UM students are into.
There are some handsome venues to see music in, too. The historic Wilma Theatre, located on the north end of Higgins Avenue, is an opera house turned movie theater turned modern venue with high-end sound and acts that span interests — singer-songwriters, indierock, EDM, jam. The venue’s owner, Logjam Presents, also operates the Top Hat, a relatively smaller historic music mainstay that also draws national acts along with presenting locals. Out in Bonner, they built the KettleHouse Amphitheater, situated along the banks of the Blackfoot River, that presents roots, metal, you name it, and can fit upward of 5,000 people in
normal times.
The ZACC also has a space for live performances — music, theater, readings, comedy, you name it — in its Show Room venue.
For drama, there are many outlets that span from family fare and musicals (Missoula Children’s and Community Theatre) to contemporary adult productions (the Montana Repertory Theatre) to somewhere between, depending on the show (the University of Montana School of Theatre and Dance). They all typically provide programming through the year.
Classical fans will appreciate the Missoula Symphony and Chorale, which produces a season of masterworks concerts, interspersed with specialty shows for the holidays and the families. The String Orchestra of the Rockies, a professional ensemble, produces a full season of performances on campus.
GETTING OUTSIDE
Missoula’s a desirable place to live not just because there’s access to the outdoors, but because it’s so readily accessible in all four seasons. You can get off work and hit a hiking or mountain bike trail, a frisbee golf (folf) course, traditional golf course, or get on the water to float and swim. In wintertime, get out your skis.
Those interested in getting into hiking have some great starting points for all skill levels. Mount Sentinel (the one with the “M”), has multiple trails of relative difficulty, as does Mount Jumbo (the one with the “L”). Across Pattee Canyon stands the city’s newest trail network in the trees crowning Mount Dean Stone.
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Or head to Waterworks (the one with the peace sign) or Blue Mountain on the valley’s southern rim, where there are moderate looping trails with fantastic views — perfect for a weekend afternoon or a quick hike after work.
The surrounding area, meanwhile, has more than you could hope to explore in a lifetime. Once you’ve whetted your appetite, go find a guidebook at a shop like the Trailhead, Bob Ward’s or REI — a few of the many shops that sell gear for all four seasons.
To find new places to hike, apps like AllTrails and REI’s Hiking Project are a good quick resource, but if you use them, be sure to check the comments sections on a particular trail — they’ll cue you in on the relative accuracy of distances, difficulty or current conditions. Paid apps like Missoula-based OnX Maps and Gaia have detailed, offline maps with GPS capability. Also check out apps like PeakFinder, which can pinpoint specific mountains with your phone’s camera.
Skiers and snowboarders can hit dedicated ski areas like SnowBowl or Discovery. If you’re into cross-country, the Rattlesnake and Pattee Canyon offer plenty of exploration without a long drive.
If you’re looking for a place to relax or play, the city has a network of parks and rec services that serve all needs. Currents Aquatics Center and Splash Montana let folks get their fix without going on the river. At more than 150 acres, Fort Missoula Regional Park has space for softball, tennis, pickleball and more.
BUYING LOCAL
People here talk about “buying local” a lot, and they mean it. Depending on what you’re looking for, there’s likely a local purveyor, whether it’s clothes (Betty’s Divine), music (Ear Candy, Rockin’ Rudy’s), bread (Le Petit), or whatever you have in mind.
Montana has a prodigious number of writers working in most any genre you like with local flavor: literary crime, fiction, nonfiction, poetry. There are three local bookstores to help you get started: Fact & Fiction Downtown, Shakespeare & Co., and the Book Exchange all keep Montana writers in stock. Tea fans have multiple options (Butterfly Herbs, Montana Tea & Spice, Lake Missoula Tea Co.), as do coffee aficionados (the Break, Le Petit, Butterfly, Drum, Black Coffee and Clyde).
Missoula’s a hub for outlying communities, so national retailers are on tap: Target, Walmart, Cabella’s, Costco, Lowe’s, Scheels, Best Buy, plus the many stores in the Southgate Mall, located in the reviving Brooks Street corridor.
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