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Campsites are nestled in a healthy, mature forest of lodgepole pine with inclusions of Douglas-fir and Engelmann Spruce. Small stands of aspen and willow add visual diversity and provide a touch of fall color. The campground is adjacent to the North Fork of Flint Creek, with a section running through campground. Nearby Echo Lake and Georgetown Lake provide excellent habitat for year-round and seasonal populations of waterfowl and birds of prey. The Pintler Ranger District is known for its high, rugged, and beautiful mountain scenery, as well as the variety of wildlife that makes its home there, including elk, moose, deer, mountain lions, and bears (grizzly and black bears) (learn more about bear safety and the forest-wide Food Storage Order).
Recreation: Georgetown Lake is one of Montana's premier fisheries offering nearly year-round angling for trophy brook and rainbow trout and kokanee salmon. Canoeing and boating are also popular activities on Georgetown. Visitors must have Montana licenses to hunt or fish. Echo Lake Picnic area is located 2.5 miles from the campground. This lakeside day-use picnic area provides opportunities for picnicking, fishing, swimming, and non-motorized boating. Please note that this is a car-top only boat launch area and there are no garbage services at Echo Lake. The Red Lion Trailhead is just a short walk from the campground, follow this trail out-and-back to the Discovery Ski Area or take a detour to connect with the Echo Lake trail system. Direct access to the Echo Lake Trails system begins at the Midway Trailhead, located 1.5 miles north of the campground on Discovery Basin Road. These well-marked trails are suitable for hiking and mountain biking, and double as Nordic ski trails in the Winter. Day hikers, backpackers, horseback riders, mountain bikers, hunters, anglers will find no shortage of trails within the Pintler Ranger District. Numerous trails lead into the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness, which covers almost 250 square miles and straddles the Continental Divide along the crest of the Anaconda Range.