
In a large turnoff across from the beautiful Flathead River near Glacier National Park, a pipe sticking out of a mountainside provides cool, clear water for locals and tourists alike.
A nearby stone marker names it the Shepard Memorial Fountain, "Dedicated to the memory of Lion Don Shepard of Kalispell"; a second nearby historical sign notes that for decades, "[this] natural spring provided water to locals and, during the early days of automobiles, helped cool more than a few overheated radiators."
The pipe is there to make the local springwater more accessible, and water tumbles from it into a small pool full of colorful local argillite stones. And while a small, bullet-riddled sign warns "drink at your own risk," you'll often find the parking area full of locals carrying multi-gallon jugs to fill at the spring (perhaps the sign was shot up for questioning their water source). This author filled a few themself, and drank it continuously for a week with no ill effects.
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