Three unidentified men sit on a log on the shore of Redfish Lake with the Sawtooth Mountains in the background. Redfish Lake Lodge is located to the right, although not in photograph.
Two men (bottom right) survey the land beneath the peaks of the Sawtooth Mountains near the town of Stanley. A log worm fence, popular in the Sawtooth Mountains, zigzags across the landscape.
Authored by Robert Limbert, this sixteen page promotional brochure describes Redfish Lake Lodge as the ideal place for sportsmen, hunters, horseback riders, naturalists, and anyone who wants to partake in all the back country has to offer. Includes...
The Great Mogul (now known as Grand Mogul), a 9,733 foot peak at the south end of Redfish Lake. Named by Robert W. Limbert, he described the peak as "a great white granite dome which rears its head a few miles above the upper end of Big Redfish...
The Finger of Fate remains a landmark of the Sawtooth Mountains, with an altitude of 9,775 feet. Limbert's Redfish Lake Lodge brochure caption reads "Finger of Fate...9 miles from Lodge...one of the many freaks of nature found close to the lodge."
A view of glacial lakes looking down from the Sawtooth Mountains. Robert W. Limbert took hundreds of photographs during his explorations of the Sawtooth Mountains.
View of the Sawtooth Mountains that surround Stanley and the Redfish Lake Lodge. Robert W. Limbert took hundreds of photographs during his explorations of the Sawtooth Mountains.
Robert W. Limbert took hundreds of photographs during his explorations of the Sawtooth Mountains. This particular view is of an unidentified grassy valley.
View of the Sawtooth Mountains with small pile of boulders in the foreground. Robert W. Limbert took hundreds of photographs during his explorations of the Sawtooth Mountains.
View of the Sawtooth Mountains framed by thickly forested hills. Robert W. Limbert took hundreds of photographs during his explorations of the Sawtooth Mountains.