Ali Larter shares 50-year-old mountain photos with dogs

Ali Larter shares 50-year-old mountain photos with dogs

ali larter shared a spring Instagram carousel from the mountains, pairing selfies with hiking photos and videos of her dogs. The post put her 50-year-old Idaho lifestyle back in view, with a caption that left little ambiguity about the setting: "Spring has sprung in the mountains!"

Ali Larter in Idaho

The carousel showed Larter in a white button-down collared shirt and big black sunglasses, then in another frame without the shades, looking straight into the camera with her hand in her hair. She also wore a diamond necklace and bold lipstick, posed looking down at the camera with the sun behind her, and included a selfie smiling outdoors with her fluffy black dog behind her.

She also added hiking footage with her dogs, including a video of them relaxing in a small creek along the trail. For a celebrity who has already framed Idaho as a family move rather than a temporary stop, the images read like a continued public inventory of that choice, not a one-off getaway post.

Michelle Monaghan and Jessica Alba

Michelle Monaghan and Jessica Alba quickly turned the comments into a small public endorsement of the post. Monaghan wrote, "and look how gorgeous it is with u in it! ?," while Alba added, "and she's stunning."

The reaction stayed narrow and specific, but it reinforced the point of the post: Larter is still using social media to present the mountain-and-family version of her life she has talked about before. That matters because the Instagram dump is doing more than showing scenery; it extends a personal brand built around home, family, and a slower pace outside Los Angeles.

November 2025 and January

In November 2025, Larter said she and her family originally meant to stay in Idaho for two months during the pandemic. She said they expected schools to reopen in California, but they did not, while schools were open in Idaho, which let them place their 6-year-old daughter in kindergarten for the spring semester.

In January, she said on Jesse Tyler Ferguson's "Dinner’s on Me" podcast that the move to the northwest was about "kids first." She added, "We’re not in it just like doing adult dinners. We love when the house is packed with families and children are running around."

That leaves the spring carousel as a straightforward next step in the same story: Larter is still presenting Idaho as home, and she is doing it with the same mix of family life, outdoor routine, and mountain imagery that has defined her recent comments.

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