Monday, Apr. 1st, 2024

Downtown Bozeman Association Presents – The 4th Annual Downtown Bozeman Restaurant Week, April 22-28th


The Downtown Bozeman Association, Visit Bozeman and additional sponsors, and participating downtown restaurants, pubs, and cafes are excited to bring you the 4th Annual Downtown Bozeman Restaurant Week from April 22-28th! This 7-day event will be filled with good eats and drinks, off-menu specials, exclusive dining experiences, plus chances to win some fabulous prizes from our local sponsors!

Start planning your date night, birthday dinner, employee appreciation brunch, or whatever excuse you need to dine in Downtown Bozeman because our amazing businesses are ready to serve you! We will be raffling off incredible prizes via multiple-visit punch cards and social media contests; details to come.


A list of participating establishments for the 4th Annual Downtown Bozeman Restaurant Week as well as all the specials and fun to be found will be available online at https://downtownbozeman.org/restaurantweek soon - please stay tuned! Please note, event hours and specials will vary depending on the business.


Restaurant Week will be the week of April 24-30th, rain or shine, and is free and open to the public! Whether you're a breakfast fanatic or someone who never skips dessert, we're sure you'll find something to tickle your taste buds at Restaurant Week.

Thank you to our generous Sponsors!

Foodie: PRIME Incorporated, US Foods, Visit Bozeman, 94.7 The Moose, XL Country 100.7

Side-of-Fries: AC Hotel, Bozeman Spirits Distillery, Bozeman Magazine, Element Bozeman, KBZK, The LARK, Lewis & Clark Motel, Nicholas and Company, The Sapphire Motel

Cherry on Top: Allegra Marketing, Print, & Mail, Lockhorn Cider House

For more information, please visit https://downtownbozeman.org/restaurantweek and https://visitbozeman.com/2024-restaurant-week or contact the Downtown Bozeman Partnership office at 406-586-4008.

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April Fools’ Day Gotcha! Pranks

Occurring annually on April 1st, April Fools’ Day has been celebrated for several centuries by different cultures, though its exact origins are unknown. April Fools’ Day traditions include playing hoaxes or practical jokes on others, often yelling “April Fools!” at the end to clue in the subject of the prank. While its exact history is shrouded in mystery, the embrace of April Fools’ Day jokes by the media and other outlets has ensured the unofficial holiday’s long life. April Fools’ Day has provided lots of fun humor throughout various nations.

April Fools’ Day is all about getting someone to fall for a prank or made-up tale. In modern times people around the world, including we Montanans, have gone to great lengths to create elaborate hoaxes. Newspapers, radio, TV stations and websites have participated in the April 1st tradition of reporting outrageous fictional claims that have fooled their audiences.

A Sampling Of April Fools’ Day Hoaxes

  •   The Montana news media in past years reported the following: “A petition in Montana seeks return of the Yellowstone Jackalope (a jackrabbit sporting deer horns) to public lands around Parks. Parks wildlife managers say they are in the early phases of reviewing a petition that seeks to reinstate jackalopes to the greater Yellowstone area, but they have not set a deadline for acting on the filing… .”

]Today, the town of Douglas, WY is the Jackalope Capital of the world. You can buy everything from Jackalope souvenirs to postcards with Jackalope deer horns, and even a Jackalope hunting license, which allows hunting Jackalopes in Wyoming only from midnight to 2 a.m. one night a year. It does not mention bag limits.

  • In 1997, the BBC aired a story on how Swiss farmers were experiencing a record spaghetti crop, and showed video footage of people harvesting noodles from trees.
  • In 1998, Burger King took out a full-page ad in USA Today announcing its development of the Left Handed Whopper. The burger had the usual toppings, but they were turned 180 degrees so they wouldn’t drip on left-handed customers.
  • In 1985, Sports Illustrated published a fictitious story by George Plimpton about a never-before-heard-of pitching prospect by the name of Sid Finch, who could throw a baseball 168 miles per hour. Wow!
  • On April 1, 1996, Taco Bell announced it had purchased the Liberty Bell and would rename it the Taco Liberty Bell.
  • In 1962, a TV station in Sweden announced that viewers could convert their existing black and white sets to display color by pulling a nylon stocking over the screen.
  • In 2002, the British supermarket chain Tesco published an ad stating that a genetically modified ‘whistling carrot’ had been developed. The carrots were said to be grown with tapered air holes, and, when fully cooked, would produce a whistling sound.
  • In the spring of 1908, Missoulians woke up to some exciting news. The report stated that during the construction of the St. Paul Railroad bed in Hell Creek Canyon, rock blasting had opened a cavern in a rocky bluff, revealing encrusted stalagmites and stalactites with swarming pools of blind fish. A second chamber revealed gigantic fossils of dinosaurs of the late Jurassic period. As reported by the news media, a couple of blind fish were caught and taken to the Shapard Hotel for display. Visitors who showed up to see the live specimens were shown a mackerel fish instead. A classic GOTCHA! Visitors, undoubtedly, left the hotel with lobster-red faces. Ah, to be so suckered on April Fools’ Day.

April Fools’ Day can include some humorous household pranks which you may have experienced including:

  • Emptying the salt from the kitchen shaker and replacing it with sugar.
  • Placing a whoopie cushion under the couch cushions.
  • Changing the time on every clock in the house by one hour.
  • Placing bubble wrap under an area rug for an instant reaction.
  • Removing the batteries from the TV remote, driving a TV watcher crazy.
  • Calling a tobacco store and asking if they sold Sir Walter Raleigh tobacco in a can? If they said, “Yes, we do,” you would say: “Well, Sir Walter really would like to be let out of the can!” Their salty reply was usually a little ear warming, but a gotcha win for the caller.
  • April Fools’ Day is the one date on the calendar when jokes and mischief are expected. Keep in mind that there are some ingenuous trick artists out there waiting to say, gotcha! It was Stephen King who wrote, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.” If the same person deceives you again? Well, you might as well have a big sign pinned on your back that says gullible. It’s your fault for letting it happen a second time.
  • If you do get pranked, take in good stride. People who get hoaxed are chosen for their good humor, and the likelihood they’ll be a good sport.

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Friday, Mar. 29th, 2024

Stabbing Occurs at Walmart

BOZEMAN, Montana (March 29, 2024) – Today, at approximately 11 a.m., the Bozeman Police Department responded to Walmart (1500 N. 7th Ave.) after Gallatin County 911 received an emergency phone call for a fight in progress. As officers were responding to the location, the caller told dispatch one of the people involved in the fight had been stabbed.

Patrol officers, along with detectives, arrived within minutes and located both persons who were involved. An investigation revealed just prior to the fight the suspect had been huffing canned-air outside one of the store entrances. Shortly thereafter, the suspect began acting irate, and without provocation, physically assaulted a person who had been standing nearby. During the assault, the victim feared for their safety, and in self-defense, stabbed the suspect in the abdomen with a small pocketknife. The victim was able to separate from the suspect just prior to officers arriving on scene.

The suspect was transported for medical care and is being treated for non-life-threatening injuries. The victim sustained minor, non-life-threatening injuries.

Detectives concluded the victim’s actions were made in self-defense as they were lawfully protecting themselves from an unprovoked, physical assault. Detectives are continuing their investigation into this incident and anticipate forwarding their findings to local prosecutors for the suspect's actions.

“The staff at Walmart were instrumental during this investigation and provided an invaluable amount of support as they partnered with our investigation team,” Captain Joseph Swanson of the Bozeman Police Department stated.

Those who witnessed the assault are encouraged to contact Detective A. Kappler at 406-582-2028.

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Student dance marathon at Montana State benefits Shodair Children’s Hospital

BOZEMAN – An annual dance marathon put on by a Montana State University student club on March 24 raised $9,129 for Shodair Children’s Hospital.

Montanathon Dance Marathon said about 100 students participated in the six-hour event, which included dance lessons, active fundraising, prize giveaways and a speaker from Shodair, according to Rachel Hould, an MSU student and executive director of the club.

“Montanathon Dance Marathon is a student-led organization that was created to raise money for our local Children’s Miracle Network hospital, which is Shodair,” Hould said. “Our mission is to raise as much funds as possible and spread education about Shodair and the work being done there.”

Miracle Network Dance Marathon is a fundraising program of the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, which raises funds for local member hospitals to provide vital treatments to pediatric patients, according to the organization’s website. Over the years, Montanathon Dance Marathon has raised more than $87,000 for the Helena-based hospital.

Hould said Montanathon Dance Marathon also hosted dodgeball, swing dancing and tie-dye fundraisers during this academic year, and the organization continually collects donations online.

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FWP schedules virtual meeting to discuss proposed fishing regulations changes

HELENA – Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will host a virtual meeting to gather input for the 2025-26 fishing regulations. The virtual meeting is scheduled for April 9, at 6 p.m. 

Fishing regulations are now under a process like hunting regulations, going through a comprehensive public review every two years. Fishing regulations are printed during odd numbered years.  

To review FWP’s proposed regulation changes, go to fwp.mt.gov/aboutfwp/public-comment-opportunities/fishing-regulations. FWP will also accept and review fishing regulations changes proposed by the public during the initial review time period.  

Staff will use this public input to refine regulation proposals to the Fish and Wildlife Commission. The final fishing regulations proposals will be available for public comment in August, and the commission will adopt, modify or reject the proposals at its October meeting. 

For information on how to participate in the virtual meeting, click here.

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Journal publishes Montana State scientists' paper on pollinators in roadside habitats

Montana State University ecology graduate Thomas Meinzen is pictured in Idaho conducting research on insects in roadside habitats. His review paper on the risks and benefits of such habitats to insect populaitons  was published recently by the journal BioScience. Photo by Diane Debinski

BOZEMAN
– Spring is here, and soon the insects we notice all around us during Montana’s temperate seasons will reappear in yards, fields, outdoor recreation areas and along roadsides. With them will be the pollinators, such as bees and butterflies, that are frequently found living, nesting and foraging amid roadside flora.

But are such habitats helpful or harmful to the species that use them? The question has been the subject of study for years, and a review article by a Montana State University graduate detailing the research of hundreds of scientists was published recently in the journal BioScience.

“The BioScience paper was essentially an introduction to my thesis,” said lead author Thomas Meinzen, who in 2023 earned his master’s degree in biological sciences in MSU’s Department of Ecology in the College of Letters and Science. “I felt like this was the most important part because it’s really addressing questions about the overall impact of roadsides on (insect) population levels.”

Building on his lifelong enthusiasm for biology and natural history, Meinzen’s interest in these questions grew when he took an applied population ecology class during his MSU coursework.

“I learned that vital rates—birth, death and emigration—are so important in understanding how habitats can benefit or harm species,” he said.

Numerous studies highlight the floral resources and connectivity pathways provided by road verges, while others explore the attendant risks, including traffic collisions, pollutants, herbicides and mowing activities. Yet scientists don’t know how these benefits and risks balance out, and whether roadside habitats are more harmful or helpful to insect populations.

“A lot of these questions are unanswered – not because no one’s thinking about them, but because there’s so much we still don’t know about insects,” Meinzen said.

While at MSU, Meinzen set out to fill a portion of that knowledge gap by conducting a study on enhancing roadside habitat for pollinator conservation funded by the Idaho Transportation Department. The study became the bulk of his master’s thesis, for which he spent two summers conducting fieldwork at 63 different road verges in southeastern Idaho, including along state, U.S. and interstate highways.

Meinzen surveyed plants, bees and butterflies at each of the 63 sites twice each summer, as well as at a subset of the verges each August. He said the data provided a sense of how plant and flower communities relate to butterfly and bee diversity and how the highway type influenced diversity at each site.

“We found the overall result was that smaller, state highways had greater bee diversity. Bee diversity was also higher in less green areas, which was not what we anticipated,” he said. “We found, at least in southern Idaho, that the bright green areas tend to be dominated by non-native, invasive plants, while the drier, browner areas had native plants like sagebrush and tended to be better for bees.”

Results of the butterfly surveys were less conclusive, he said, probably because butterflies are more likely than bees to be generalists with wider habitats and less specific floral preferences. The survey results helped the MSU team formulate recommendations for Idaho’s roadside managers to prioritize plantings for pollinators along smaller highways and to protect sagebrush ecosystems.

“Sagebrush habitats might not look as showy, but they seemed to provide what bees needed – open ground for nesting and a variety of different blooms throughout the growing season, which is better than a lot of flowers one time of year,” Meinzen said.

Because his work in Idaho answered only some of the myriad questions ecologists have about roadside habitats, Meinzen said, he wrote the review of many additional studies to synthesize the wealth of information available for those creating roadside management plans.

The article was selected as the Editor’s Choice for the January edition of BioScience. And Meinzen – along with co-authors Diane Debinski, head of MSU’s ecology department, and MSU ecology professor Laura Burkle – were interviewed about roadside habitats and pollinators for the BioScience Talks podcast last month.

“It’s exciting as a young scientist to have a paper selected for that award and podcast, so I could share these ideas in a way that’s hopefully more accessible to people,” said Meinzen, who now works as an urban forester in Portland, Oregon.

His advice to anyone wishing to help native pollinators is to avoid using herbicides and pesticides when possible and to prioritize native flowers and ground cover when choosing plants.

“It’s important for people to know pollinators are declining really rapidly, and that it’s a big concern,” he said. “Trying to promote a diverse, native ecosystem without pesticides is the best way we can help native pollinators.”

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Thursday, Mar. 28th, 2024

Montana State Sustainability Summit speaker stresses power of acting locally

Montana State University Plant Growth Center manager David Baumbauer hosts a tour of the facility, pictured in the background, during the third annual Sustainability Summit on Tuesday, March 26, 2024, in Bozeman, Montana. The event highlights elements of sustainable campus infrastructure, such as new energy-efficient lighting in the Plant Growth Center. MSU photo by Colter Peterson

BOZEMAN
– The keynote speaker at Montana State University’s 2024 Sustainability Summit on Tuesday urged students to make choices with the knowledge that, while their individual power may be limited, their collective actions over time can affect everything on Earth.

Hunkpapa Lakota backcountry freestyle skier and activist Connor Ryan delivered that message during the annual summit hosted by MSU’s Office of Sustainability. The summit showcases campus-wide research, highlights efforts to make the university’s operations more sustainable, and updates the campus community on progress toward MSU’s long-term carbon-neutrality and zero-waste goals.

During his lunchtime speech, Ryan stressed that the actions of individuals in their own communities will contribute to significant, wide-reaching change in the long run, even if those actions don’t seem tremendously powerful in the short-term.

“The power of a wave isn’t in the mist that precedes it but in the power of the big wave that comes behind it,” he said.

The keynote address drew a crowd to MSU’s Strand Union Building, where posters displayed informational charts and architectural renderings of current and planned campus buildings and their energy-efficient design elements. Other highlights from the summit included sustainability-focused tours of MSU’s utility, research and landscape infrastructure; workshops on teaching sustainability; and presentations on related research being conducted by MSU students.

In his keynote address, Ryan offered his perspective as an athlete who views backcountry skiing in the Rockies as more than just a sport. For him, he said, it’s a dance, a prayer and a way to ceremonially reconnect with his Indigenous heritage and the places he came from. That connection is a major theme of the award-winning documentary film he co-directed, “Spirit of the Peaks,” which features his work and athleticism and which was shown on campus Monday evening to kick off the summit.

Ryan said that though he grew up on Colorado’s Rocky Mountain Front, it wasn’t until his adulthood, when he began exploring his heritage, that he began to understand his connection to the natural world. That understanding dawned during a sweat lodge ceremony, he said. After collecting creek water for the ceremony within view of the mountains where he skis, he was told that the water, in the form of steam, would become part of his body when he inhaled it, just as water from snow would become his blood after melting in the spring.

“I had the realization that this water I was carrying into the lodge was the water I’d been skiing on,” he said. “It was the first time I realized I was connected to this snowpack.”

Ryan told his audience that an Indigenous understanding of the interconnectedness of all things in nature is useful in informing environmental choices.

“Nothing in nature lives for itself,” said Ryan. “It’s up to us not to always do what’s profitable or what will bring us pride or glory or success, but instead for us to reapply those rules to everything that grew beside us on this planet.”

Ryan said actions taken at the grassroots level are more powerful than people realize, and he urged students to find ways they can work for sustainability while maintaining faith that those efforts matter.

“We as human beings can never leave nature – we are nature,” he said. “Everywhere we are is because of a decision made before us. If we want things to be different, we have to make different decisions.”

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Wednesday, Mar. 27th, 2024

Montana State University Extension Mobile Memory Café Program delivers dementia awareness

BOZEMANMontana State University Extension will offer a program that brings social engagement and dementia awareness to communities across Montana in April, May and June.

The Mobile Memory Café offers free, research-informed resources to caregivers and individuals with early-onset Alzheimer's disease or dementia. Registration is not required to participate in the Mobile Memory Café. The program was developed by Dan Koltz, MSU assistant professor and Extension gerontology specialist.

“Living well with dementia is a challenge,” Koltz said. “The Mobile Memory Café seeks to provide social engagement for caregivers and individuals in communities across Montana.”

Topics covered by the Mobile Memory Café include prevention, brain health, nutrition, sleep, social activity and physical health. The program is supported by the Montana Geriatric Education Center, County and Statewide Area Agencies on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association Montana Chapter.

“We are fortunate to have several partners working alongside us to provide critical healthy aging resources,” Koltz said. “We invite anyone interested in learning more about living well with dementia to visit the Mobile Memory Café this spring.”

Stops are scheduled in April, May and June in Anaconda, Butte, Darby, Drummond, Hamilton, Helena, Kalispell, Libby, Polson, Ronan and Roundup. A full list of dates, locations and additional details can be found at montana.edu/extension/health/healthy_aging/index.html.

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Bozeman City Commissioner Christopher Coburn Announces Resignation

BOZEMAN – Christopher Coburn announced his resignation from the Bozeman City Commission during last night’s Commission meeting. Citing personal reasons as the driving factor behind his decision, Coburn described the decision as being bittersweet, and expressed a desire to stay engaged with city happenings even after he transitions out of his role and moves out of Bozeman.

“I have not stopped and will not stop caring about the future of Bozeman – the people who live here now and the people who might live here in the years to come,” Coburn stated during his announcement. “I’m fully committed to spending my remaining time in community with you, continuing to work just as hard as I have for the past three years I have been in this role. It has been and continues to be such an honor.”

Coburn was appointed to the Commission in April 2021. By November of that year, he won his race for the open Commission seat and started his elected four-year term.

Coburn’s resignation goes into effect May 7. From there, the City Commission is required by state law to appoint someone to fill the seat within 30 days. The appointed Commission member will serve until the next municipal election, which is to be held in November 2025.

More information on the Commission Vacancy and how it will be filled will become available in the coming weeks at www.bozeman.net.

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3-26-24: Death Investigation Follow-Up

The Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office continues to investigate the death of 26-year-old Jakob Michael Page, whose body was found at the Knife River gravel pit near Belgrade on the morning of Monday, March 25. An autopsy is scheduled to take place this week and toxicology results will be available in six to eight weeks.

We reiterate that foul play is not suspected at this time. Upon a thorough initial investigation, our investigators found that the body showed clear indications of exposure, but no trauma. Mr. Page’s clothing was found nearby, which also indicated to us that the death was related to hypothermia. This well-known phenomenon, called “paradoxical undressing,” is frequently seen in hypothermia cases where disoriented patients strip their clothing when they are near death. It occurs in over 25% of hypothermia cases.

The Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office has excellent investigators who do exceptional work, day in and day out, to ensure they come to the correct conclusions in all of our investigations. Our experienced and well-trained professionals base their decisions on evidence and not conjecture. We will continue to further investigate this tragedy.

We send our deepest sympathies to Mr. Page’s family and friends during this difficult time.

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News Comments

This is so typical of a sign in, which we should not have to do to check if we or some one in our party got a permit. I have been working or "creating an account" for 30 minutes and just get the same ...

Smith River permit drawing results available

Sunday, Mar. 10, 2024