Glacier NP is almost due north of Missoula, and it was an easy drive on wide open Montana roads. We’d had a pizza dinner with Lisa and Stash the night before, and Stash had warned us that Glacier was requiring vehicle reservations to enter the park. We looked on line about getting a reservation, but it seemed too complicated so we decided to deal with it after we got to the park. We pulled up at the west entrance near Apgar, and saw the giant signs saying vehicle reservations were required between 6am and 3pm, and to expect lines to enter the park after 3pm. It was already close to 2pm, so we drove about 7 miles from the entrance to a disbursed campsite we found on iOverlander to have lunch and make a plan. The plan we made was to eat lunch, leave the scooter at the campsite to make sure it would still be open, and go into the park after 3pm to talk to somebody about our options.
The line to get into the park wasn’t as bad as we anticipated from the dire warning on the sign, and a ranger was standing near the end of the line and letting anyone who has an America the Beautiful National Parks Access Pass bypass the line, so we didn’t wait at all. We tucked ourselves into the last available RV parking space and went to the visitor center, where there was a long line at the manned information kiosk. As we were deciding what to do, a shuttle pulled up and the driver got out, and since it was late in the day nobody was waiting there to get on the shuttle, Tom approached the driver to ask if we would be allowed to ride our bikes into the park the next day without a vehicle reservation, and she said yes. Then she told us that a better plan would be to just get to the park before 6am, and because we have the access pass, we could just come in and park and be in the park for the day. We wanted to see the Going to the Sun Road, and our camper is too big anyway, so we had planned to park and ride on the free shuttle. She told us the shuttles start at 7am, and it’s better to get on an early shuttle because the lines get longer later in the day, so we’d only have to wait an hour anyway if we entered the park before 6am.
This was a brilliant plan. We went back to the campsite which was also a trailhead for a trail running into the National Forest, and took a very scenic walk. We had an early dinner and went to bed with the alarm set for 4:45am. We packed up the camper and left the campsite and drove into the park around 5:15. We were among the first vehicles in the park, so we parked in an RV spot and had breakfast. By the time we cleaned up and walked the dogs it was getting close to 6:30, so we got in the shuttle line. The driver was absolutely correct about the lines, and even that early we were on the second shuttle, although each shuttle carries only 15 passengers since big vehicles don’t fit on the road.