Our Location

View from Our Mountaintop

View from Our Mountaintop

We selected this location and property as a result of a careful search. Here, we are able to provide a semi-rural home-like environment within 15 minutes drive and 35 minutes biking to downtown Missoula and the University of Montana.

Our program is operated from our home and provides comfortable shared (single sex) bedroom and bathroom facilities for all students. The property includes over an acre of organic garden space, as well as capabilities to house various farm animals (horses, goats, and chickens).

Fifteen acres is available for hiking and personal retreats. A meditation and art structure in these woods is part of the future vision.

Our location provides the best of both rural and urban experiences for our students. Transportation (billed as an extra cost) is available, or students can earn the privilege of using their own vehicle, public transportation is two miles away, or bicycles may be used weather permitting.

Traveler‘s Rest State Park is two miles from Ventures in Peace and is one example of the rich history surrounding us.

History of Lolo

On September 9, 1805, Meriwether Lewis, William Clark and the Corps of Discovery followed their Shoshone guide, who they called Old Toby, along the course of today's Bitterroot River to near the confluence of a stream that tumbled down from the snowy western mountains. At this place, a crossroads of travel routes that had been a center of commerce and culture for centuries.

Old Toby instructed them to rest themselves and their horses and to make preparations for the difficult mountain crossing ahead. Their campsite was well-used by the different Native American tribes that crossed the mountains and traveled up and down the Bitterroot Valley, and for good reason. There was plenty of grasses for the horses, plenty of firewood, and a cool mountain stream. The Corps of Discovery stopped along the stream, which they named Travelers' Rest Creek, and set up camp. For two days, they hunted and rested before departing this haven on September 11, 1805. They followed the creek along an ancient trail the Salish people call Naptnisa (the road through the Nez Perce).

Nearly a year later, the party returned to Travelers' Rest and camped at the same spot. From June 30 to July 3, 1806, the group rested and celebrated after their final crossing of the tremendous Bitterroot Mountains. It was also at this camp that Lewis and Clark finalized their bold separation plans, splitting the group into two to allow expanded explorations along the Marias and Yellowstone Rivers.

(Copyright © 2007 Travelers' Rest Preservation and Heritage Association)