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 Ramshorn Lake

Highlights: Gentle backcountry with good fishing.

Location: 45 miles south of Bozeman.

Type of hike: A long out-and-back day hike or easy backpacking trip.

Total distance: 12 miles.

Difficulty: Moderate.

Best months: June through September.

Maps: Sunshine Point, Lone Indian Peak, Ramshorn Peak USGS Quads; and Gallatin National Forest Map.
Finding the trailhead: From Big Sky, drive south on U.S. Highway 191 for 10 miles. Watch for a sign to 320 Guest Ranch on the left (east) side of the highway. You can see the guest ranch from the road. Follow this gravel road through the ranch to the trailhead at the end of the road.

Parking & trailhead facilities: Limited parking, do not block the road and respect private land.

The hike: This area isn't scenic in the same sense as the Mission Mountains or Glacier National Park. It offers more of a gentle, quiet beauty, not rugged peaks carved by glaciers.

From the trailhead, take Trail 1 and then Trail 160 for a gradual uphill climb for 6 miles to Ramshorn Lake, a fairly easy hike except, perhaps, the last mile where the trail gains elevation rapidly. The trail goes through heavy timber most of the way and crosses a few open parks. It follows Buffalo Horn Creek most of the way to the lake.
Ramshorn Lake has all sizes of cutthroat trout, including some over 3 pounds, which are hard to catch. Although the area doesn't seem to support many deer, elk are everywhere. Also watch for bighorn sheep, moose, and black bears. Since Ramshorn Lake lies just north of Yellowstone National Park, a few grizzly bears inhabit the area.
For rock climbers, 10,269-foot Ramshorn Peak (just east of the lake) offers an easy scramble. The trail brings hikers into the Porcupine-Buffalo Horn-Hyalite Wilderness Study Area.

-Originally contributed by Bill Cunningham

Excerpted from Hiking Montana by Bill Schneider
(Copyright 2000, Falcon Publishing, Inc.).






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