Check-in at seasonally open Lake McDonald Lodge, its massive timbers held up by historic integrity. In classic 1913 style, rooms are cozy except for the luxurious Cobb Suites. No matter—you’ll want to spend the evening in the Great Room beneath glowing Indian-motif chandeliers and a menagerie of trophy animal heads. Even in summer, flames flicker in the tea-party-size rock fireplace. Daylight hours will draw you to the veranda, where Lake McDonald’s 10-mile-long expanse spreads toward the horizon. Rent a kayak at the dock or take a sunset cruise on the historic wooden vessel DeSmet, which has plied these waters since 1930.
In the morning, grab a 7 a.m. espresso for a head start on the soul-shaking splendor of the Going-to-the-Sun Road. The 50-mile route begins in an ancient cedar forest, then gradually climbs out of the conifers to deliver some of the West’s most magnificent asphalt driving. Going-to-the-Sun’s narrow ribbon—an engineering marvel dedicated in 1933—passes a string of vistas as it carves along the Garden Wall’s escarpment. Snake up The Loop’s sole curlicue switchback and slip underneath the Weeping Wall’s showering cataract (free car wash) on the way up to Logan Pass, a climactic 6,646-foot summit on the Continental Divide’s crest. It’s easy to see why the Blackfeet Indians, whose Blackfeet Indian Reservation sits just east of Glacier, called this The Backbone of the World.
Park the car and visit the Logan Pass Visitor Center, then walk to Hidden Lake Overlook amid a banquet of snaggletooth peaks and fragile alpine wildflowers. Furry white mountain goats nibble tundra grasses alongside the trail, unfazed by your presence.
From the summit, Going-to-the-Sun Road descends through pine and aspen groves. Stop at Jackson Glacier Overlook to view one of the park’s 26 remaining glaciers, reduced from 150 nearly a century ago. The road swoops down to St. Mary Lake, passing one trailhead after another, each an intriguing question mark—what lies down that path? Glacier’s 700-plus miles of trails lead to waterfalls, lakes, meadows and vistas—plus blue-ribbon angling, boating and camping.