Your Own Private Idaho
The mountain town of McCall offers natural beauty and outdoor adventure without crowds.
By Kathryn Jessup
Courtesy of Whitetail Club and Resort
In the winter, visitors can ski at Tamarack and Brundage, the area’s two resorts. In the summer, the lake is a paradise for sailing, speedboating, waterskiing, and swimming. Fly-fishing, hiking, white-water rafting, kayaking, rock climbing, and mountain biking are also big draws.
The landscape surrounding McCall, about two hours north of Boise, is a place for pure quiet. The population is small, leaving the roads clear and the wildlife unfettered. This is the place to sink into natural hot springs; hike amid birds, butterflies, and wildflowers; or just sit by the lake.
What to do
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| Boats docked in front of Whitetail Club and Resort |
| Courtesy of Whitetail Club and Resort |
As you’ll learn when you take a fly-fishing class from Angela Withers, it’s not all in the wrist. This and other myths will be debunked by the Katie Couric look-alike who works at McCall Angler, a fishing supply shop. Withers points out that fishing doesn’t get much easier than in McCall. “The fish aren’t pressured, and they’re more likely to bite on your fly,” she says. McCall Angler, 305 E. Park St., McCall, (208) 634-4004, www.mccallanglers.com, classes range from two hours ($59) to day-long guided trips ($395–$450).
Idaho’s long, snowy winters and rainy springs have a silver lining—the woods are a luscious green in the summer, and the mountains gush with streams, creeks, and springs, including natural hot springs. Gold Fork Hot Springs is the most developed of the hot springs in the area, with six paved pools ranging in temperature from cool to hot. The alkaline, mineral-rich waters that fill the pools come straight out of the mountainside, and each week the baths are completely drained and cleaned.
Gold Fork isn’t the only option. Burgdorf Hot Springs, a local favorite, is rustic but offers night soaks. Elk have been known to settle peacefully in the big meadow directly across from the springs after dark—it’s a sight of great beauty. Gold Fork Hot Springs, 1026 Gold Fork Rd., Donnelly, (208) 890-8730, $8 per person, towel and bathing suit rentals available; Burgdorf Hot Springs, off Warren Wagon Rd., (208) 636-3036, $5.30 per person.
The other advantage to the snowy winters in these parts is the skiing. Both Tamarack Resort and Brundage Mountain Resort offer a wide variety of winter sports. Tamarack is a full-service resort with its own lodging options, spa, and high-end restaurant, Morels. Tamarack Resort, 311 Village Dr., Tamarack, (208) 325-1000, www.tamarackidaho.com; Brundage Mountain Resort, 3890 Goose Lake Rd., McCall, (800) 888-7544, www.brundage.com.
Where to Stay
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| Mountain biking at Brundage Moutain Resort. |
| Courtesy of Brundage Mountain Resort |
Three treatment rooms at the Whitetail Resort’s Waterblue Spa are available for facials, body treatments, and massages. Rebecca Endter and her husband, Darin Bolyard, administer the treatments, which range from hot-stone and deep-tissue massages to cucumber-mint body wraps. Both are experienced massage therapists and use Eminence Organic products in their treatments. Waterblue Spa, 501 West Lake St., McCall, (208) 630-3129, 60-minute spa treatments from $85.
Where to Eat
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| Panseared scallops with pickled onions and crisp potato pancakes at Morels. |
| Courtesy of Sherri Harkin/ Tamarack Resort |
Rupert’s, a casual restaurant in the downtown Hotel McCall, opened in summer 2007. The owners are dedicated to using local ingredients and simple, tasty recipes. Come here for upscale comfort food such as grilled chicken sandwiches with sun-dried tomato mayonnaise, taco salad spiked with fresh cilantro and fried tortilla strips, and house-made peach pie in the summer. The decor is kitsch free, and the restaurant has great lake views from both its dining room and its deck. Rupert’s, 1101 N. Third St., McCall, (208) 634-8105, entrées $15–$20.
Narrows, the fine-dining restaurant at Whitetail, has a new executive chef, Ian Fulton, who arrived just this spring. His menu makes use of the local bounty: Idaho potatoes, wild trout and salmon, and knockout beef from Northwest ranches. Narrows, 501 West Lake St., McCall, (208) 634-2244, entrées $20–$30.
The Pancake and Christmas House is a local favorite for lumberjack-style breakfasts. On the menu you’ll find enormous cinnamon rolls, Those Potatoes—hash browns topped with cheese—and eggs any way you like them. The Pancake and Christmas House, 209 N. Third St., McCall, (208) 634-5849, entrées under $10.
Getting There
Southwest flies daily between Oakland and Boise (fares are roughly $290, round-trip). From the airport, rent a four-wheel drive car, or hire a driver through Whitetail ($200 each way for a seven-passenger Suburban). McCall is two and a half hours north of Boise on Highway 55.
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| Courtesy of Hotel McCall |

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Reader Comments:
Kathryn, Thanks alot. We (those of us in Idaho) really do not want the whole world to know about our secret. The more people that go to Idaho the more quickly our pristine natural beauty will disappear. We have seen our small town burst at the seams on summer wk-ends to over 10 thousand people. Our real estate prices are still extremely over inflated and the 2 lane canyon road from Boise is usually bumper to bumper on the wk-ends. So please help us keep our little corner of the universe "OUR own private Idaho" and not "yours."
Diane