The Lolo National Forest Map produced by the US Forest Service contains the most current information on roads, trails, recreation sites, travel restrictions and contact phone numbers for the Lolo National Forest.
The two-million-acre Lolo National Forest in west central Montana is influenced by both continental and maritime climates. These climates provide for a wide range of environmental gradients producing a forest of high diversity. Diverse ecosystems range from wet, western redcedar bottoms to high alpine peaks, and forests of alpine larch and whitebark pine.
Elevation ranges from less than 2,400 ft. on the Clark Fork River below Thompson Falls to many peaks over 7,000 ft. and topping out at over 9,000 ft. at Lolo Peak near the town of Lolo and Ptarmigan Point near Seeley Lake. The highest point is Scapegoat Mountain within the Scapegoat Wilderness. Water is plentiful within the Lolo NF producing over 100 named lakes and nearly 1,000 named streams including five major rivers.
| 9 in. by 4 in. shipped | 6 ounces | for just $12.95 |
| 36 in. by 48 in. open | 1:126,720 (1 in. = 2 mi.) | |
| Printed in 2001 |