A Little Music, A Little Volleyball

Previously lost in the windmills of my mind . . .

August 28

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[Finestra – Wally, Arlen, and Jay – at the winery.]

Later that day . . .

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[The Pistol Whippin’ Party Penguins at the Maritime Gardens.]

September 15

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[Our Cards hosted the St. Cloud Apollo Eagles. I had my first tuitioned edition of senior college that afternoon, so just decided to go on to the high school.  The JV was playing when I got there, so a chance to feature the up and coming.  Numbers 7 and 10 are 8th-graders, Erika Roderick and Mya Lesnar, respectively.  Ms. Lesnar is Brock’s daughter, for you Gopher and wrestling fans.  And then Tori Jeseritz (2), sophomore, swooped in for the kill.]

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[A block by Mya, and the JV departs with a nice win.]

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[The varsity brain trusts meet at center court for pre-game instructions . . . and what to do in case of a Kim Kardashian sighting.]

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[Head coach Becky Schlichting, photo stolen from I believe the Voice of Alexandria.]

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[Assistant coach Jackie Peters directs warm-up drills.]

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[I always try to catch some good kill shots during warm-ups.  I failed miserably.]

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[The Cardinal Crazies momentarily interrupted by player introductions.]

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[Wensia Johnson mentors her younger sister, Tricia (1), sophomore on the JV team.]

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[Libero Maddi Moore (6), senior, readies to serve.  The team was flawless in that department in Game One.]

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[Junior Jordyn Lamb (12) hits over the Eagle blockade.]

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[Senior Kenna Goracke (2) servin’ ’em up.]

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[Junior Abby Pohlen (5) and senior Alexis Stern (8) wait for the fallout.  The best I could do with the cheerleaders all night was through the “butterfly net”?]

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[If we win, remember it’s Taco Tuesday Night!]

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[Soft shell or hard shell tacos?]

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[Yup, an NCer!]

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[First-year Activities Director Bob Brakke “shoots” the Crazies.]

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[If the first game is too easy, the second is tight.]

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[You know, I couldn’t pick Kim Kardashian out of a line-up of five guys.  Dinner after the game?]

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[Let’s close it out.  The Cub Reporter has had a long day and is anxious to get home.]

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[Is it in?]

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[Maybe Junior Syri Williams (3) looking to put one away.]

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[I just got a text from Taco John’s that they’re out of guacamole?]

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[Senior Gracie Schroeder (1) and Ms. Stern man the middle, the position last year manned by “The Twins.”]

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[The Crazies just said no guac!!]

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[The soccer team, fresh off a victory hosting Sartell, come in to see how things are going in the gym – McKenzie Abrahamson (7), Little Rev (20), Kendall Kohler (3), and Emma Ziegler (0).]

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[Game three, a little more routine, and a sweep.]

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[Tacos and a tub of Potato Oles for all!!]

Women aren’t embarrassed when they buy men’s pajamas, but a man buying a nightgown acts as though he were dealing with a dope peddler.  ~  Jimmy Cannon

Up next:  Grape Stomp?

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Back To School

Labor Day is a glorious holiday because your child will be going back to school the next day.  It would have been called Independence Day, but that name was already taken.  ~Bill Dodds

6-30-11-2You will no doubt be delighted to hear that the school year has begun, and I have moved back into my cub sports reporting mode. “Our” school year actually began on Labor Day with our first Community Ed movie at Grand Arbor (in the background beyond the football field). The next night there was a triple header at the school – boys’ soccer, girls’ soccer, and volleyball. I was able to cover a little of each. Now that the season has begun, the Super and I generally spend 3 – 4 night a week at the school or Grand Arbor – that’s a SIX mile trip one-way, but it’s the price one pays for living in the big city!

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[Delicatessen was our first “class” this year.  The delightfully bizarre French black comedy held its audience spellbound as we tried to figure out . . . well, the origin of the word (among other things).  I believe it must be Cro-Magnon, the inventors of the dill pickle.  Community Ed hosts a foreign film at Grand Arbor on the first Monday of every month during the school year – if you can read subtitles, you will have fun.]

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[The very next day I was at my post at the high school, the first day of school at AAHS, and I was determined to cover all events.  It’s not like games haven’t been played yet – for Pete’s sake, the football team has already played three times and the volleyball team’s overall record would be 4 – 4 by the end of the evening – but I don’t feel like “playing” until school starts.  When I arrived in the parking lot the scoreboard for the boys’ soccer game showed 6 – 0 – oops!  We were undefeated going into the game but were hosting defending state champs, St. Cloud Apollo.  By the time I walked to the stadium, bought my ticket, and reached the stands, we had scored twice.  That was it, a 6 – 2 final.  They were very good but we held them even in the second half.]

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[Cheer-oh-cheer for Alex!]

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[The Amazing Mr. Ripley is back for another year.]

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[(Hmmmm, I wonder if my press credentials could get me down on the field with Mr. Ripley?)]

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[A quick review of the program indicates this is sophomore Michael Kuhn (17) giving it the ole high school try.]

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[Junior goalie Zach Harstad (2) gives the ball the boot.  He made several nice stops as the Eagles applied a lot of pressure.  BTW, have you tried the pastrami at the Pike & Pint yet?]

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[I’m guessing this is either Number 11 or 12?]

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[The loneliness of the soccer coach.  But Cahil Collins was looking pretty spiffy in his blazer and bow tie.]

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[I’d like to report a collision at the 40-yard line!]

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[Dance choreography?]

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[A good rush by the Cards. Our goals were by senior Devon Crowe (6) assisted by senior Kagan Foster (11), and later Foster scored on an assist from Crowe.]

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[But we won the second half 2 – 1.  🙂  ]

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[And then the girls took the field.  First up is junior goalie Emma Ziegler (0), also known as the softball shortstop and a basketball wing guard.]

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[Freshman midfielder Kaye Pashka (2) – she can really scoot!]

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[OK, who’s next?  And two of our star hockey players there at the end of the line, junior defense McKenzie Revering (20) and senior forward Hanah Hansen (20).]

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[Another “scooter,” senior midfielder Karsen Granning (9).]

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[Senior defense Calsey Rieland (12).]

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[Ms. Hansen]

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[Still Hanah.]

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[Ms. Revering]

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[And I thought I already had enough competition from the Amazing Mr. Ripley?]

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[The lonely life of a goalie, unless one has a nice selection of tunes on the ole iPod.]

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[Senior midfielder Katie Desautels (14)]

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[Ms. Pashka and I believe that would be senior forward Hayley Burns (13).]

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[Desautels and Pashka move in on goal.]

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[Emma airs one out.]

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[Several good offensive forays here by our stalwarts.]

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[OK, I have to let the cat out of the bag here.  I had no idea at the time of this shot that she would be the star of the game. I left when we were behind 2 – 1 to cover volleyball, and I didn’t see our goal, as I was leaving.  Ms. Burns scored all three goals in a 3 – 2 win, the last with 39 seconds left in the game.  It was fitting – I thought we had the better of the play before I left, and obviously throughout the game as we had a 22 – 8 shot advantage.]

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[Pashka and Granning on the move . . . ]

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[And Ms. Burns joins the final assault.]

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[And looking into the sun at the JV games I couldn’t see well enough to realize that of course the shot would focus on my hand?]

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[Another attack, and Oooooohhh!]

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[I got it, you take it!  Junior defense Anna Jensen (4) with Ms. Granning.]

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[I’m guessing this is senior forward Kelsea Navratil (1) – she seemed to be the designated corner kicker.]

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[More goal front flurries.]

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[Granning in for junior midfielder McKenna Smith (16).  I do not know enough about high school soccer to understand substitutions – there seem to be no restrictions?]

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[But Granning immediately gets involved in the play.]

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[Senior midfielder Liza Knoblauch (6)]

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[Hanah in on goal.  Hope to say a lot of that during the hockey season.  🙂  ]

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[Ms. Granning again?  She must have had a good game!]

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[Apparently the Eagles thought she was having too good a game – oy!]

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[Hanah triple-teamed, and I begin my exit to . . . ]

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[Game three of the evening – volleyball v. the Fergus Falls Otters.  You may recognize the fire marshal and Corliss sitting to the right on the other side of the railing – they too were at halves of both soccer games.]

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[Cardinal Super Fans Ruth & Bud told me the Cards easily won game one 25-15.  When I arrived for Game 2, the Otters were on such a roll they eventually led 17 – 4.  I’m thinking, “I’m the black cloud, again!” But the Cards made a great come back and actually were serving to win the game.]

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[Otters serving here while the “Cardinal Crazies” plot their next cheer.]

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[Really, ref, we were distracted by a Kim Kardashian sighting!]

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[And this is senior Alexis Stern serving for the game.  We lost the point, and eventually Game 2.  I don’t recall any team ever making game point the first time they serve for it?]

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[Ass’t Coach Jackie, far right, is thinking, “How did we ever lose that game?”]

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[Junior Kayla Feldhake (16) serving – she will have to replace all our bigs on the basketball team this year.]

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[Allamande right!  Led by the aforementioned Ms. Stern.]

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[We are the Cardinals, mighty, might, Cardinals!  (Or words to that effect.)]

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[The Forever Super Fans Leslies in the background.]

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[Junior Abby Pohlen (5)]

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[Ms. Feldhake goes airborne to swat one down.]

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[And again.]

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[Junior Jordyn Lamb (12) goes over the top of the Otter blockade.]

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[Ms. Lamb and Ms. Stern book end freshman McKenzie Duwenhoegger (11), the principal’s daughter and from whom we’re expecting good things on the basketball court.]

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[Thanksgiving comes a little early this year as the Cards provide the stuffing.]

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[Ms. Pohlen pulls out her trick serve as the ball appears to travel through other dimensions.]

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[Game 3 was a total blow out for the Cards.]

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[I told you not to call me when I’m on the court!  (Senior Maddy Moore (6).)]

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[Security, please escort Ms. Kardashian from the arena!  (Serving is senior Kenna Goracke (2), who was player-of-the-game.)]

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[Ready . . . ]

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[Jump!!!]

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[Game 4, and the winner.  Pretty ugly for the Otters, but the Cards should gain a lot of confidence.]

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[And we bid you all adieu.]

If there were no schools to take the children away from home part of the time, the insane asylums would be filled with mothers.  ~Edgar W. Howe

Up next:  Football?

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Explore Minnesota (Part II), Day Three

August 27

Upon waking, the Super declared we would be heading home on this day.  It was open ended, after all.  The bane of the traveler, bad in-room wifi, sent us in search of an early morning hot spot.  The Thunderbird Lodge does not have a lobby – one goes to the dining room or the bar.  We were prowling for a signal before either was open.  Finally, we signaled a staff member cleaning the dining room and asked if we could come in just to get an internet signal.  Once entered, the Super exclaimed, “OMG, look at that sunrise!”

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Then I came back inside . . .

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[After the photo session we had breakfast . . . ]

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[You may have seen the Super’s contribution on FB?]

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[Then we went down the road a tad to Voyageurs National Park, the only national park in our fair state.  Befitting our daily routine of up with the loons, we were there an hour and a half before the park opened.  Oh, to our biking niece and nephew in California, this would be a beautiful place to come to ride the trails!  🙂  So, onward . . . ]

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[Then we turned back toward International Falls, turning off on side roads to try to catch a view of the lake.  Any relation to the Alexandria Houskas?]

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[What it says.  We went in and found out all about the wonderful things we would miss by not staying here for a few more days.   Some day (famous last words), the boat ride on Lake Kabetogama and to Kettle Falls.]

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[Paper mills in International Falls – they once employed 3,200 people, now it’s down to 500.  The plant across the border in Fort Frances recently closed for good.  Obviously, not a good thing for the area.]

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[Remember, we passed this on the way into town yesterday . . . ]

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[It exists on conjunction with this!  🙂  ]

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[Then we went inside to pay homage to Bronko – from International Falls he went on to be an All-American for the Gophers, and NFL Hall of Famer for the Bears, and a pro wrestling champion in the 20’s and 30’s.  The high school took its nickname, The Broncos, from him.  After his athletic career, he came back to International Falls where he lived the rest of his life.  Interesting stats from Wikipedia – Nagurski has the largest recorded NFL Championship ring size at 19½ and wore a size 8 helmet.  The ring is on display there – you could drive a Plymouth through it.  Now, he was only 2 inches taller and 10 pounds heavier than me – why don’t we look more alike?  The caretaker of the museum was a chap about our age, and we were his only customers.  Despite signs to the contrary, he said we could take photos if we didn’t use flash.  He was helpful and gave us a lot of history.  He’s concerned about the future of his town because it’s losing population – it’s smaller now than it was in Nagurski’s day.]

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[And a photo I particularly liked – the photographer’s name was Oberholtzer (wrong on the plaque).]

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[And the Super chipped in with these.]

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[And will now be leaving the museum to . . . ]

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[Could Bronko have played here?]

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[Homeward bound, heading south on US 71.  Little Fork-Big Falls has been a consolidated school since . . . well, forever, but I never knew they were 20 miles apart.]

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[Our pre-flight planning, turn off US71 at Northome to take Mn46, a scenic byway through Chippewa National Forest.]

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[And scenic it was . . . and then we took this 26-mile detour.]

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[I had to go.  Blackduck was made famous in the 60’s because of the state’s most ubiquitous bumper sticker then – Where Hell is Blackduck?   OK, the final photo was lifted from Brother Cam, who took it almost two years ago – this was on US71, which we were no longer on.]

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[We drove back toward Mn46 on CR13, past sunflower fields, fields of evergreens to . . . in response to overwhelming interest, I give you Hoot-N-Holler! And this, as far is I could tell, is all of Alvwood, Minnesota, at the intersection of 46 and 13.  A local establishment where everyone knows your name, and yet were very friendly with we strangers. We signed a buck and hung (‘hung’ is appropriate here because we weren’t hanging anyone) it on the wall.]

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[We told the locals our Blackduck story.  Obviously kids, there weren’t aware of the bumper sticker, but were aware of “Where the Hell is Funkley” from the 70’s.  I was not around then, so that was a new one on me.  They said Funkley was famous for the Funkley Bar and Lounge, a notoriously adult facility frequented by bikers.  I checked it out when I got home – the place is the smallest incorporated town in the state with a population of 5, located not far from Blackduck.]

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[Once again, heading south on scenic byway Mn46.  And here’s why – an avenue of red pines, one of my favorite trees.]

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[Then why Deer River, I hear you say? . . . ]

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[Because back in the days, when we were allegedly students at the U of M residing in Centennial Hall, at least three of our brothers heralded from Deer River, including the Erola brothers.  All of them paid their way through college by wild ricing.  I  believe I was responsible for sending this game report to the Minnesota Daily.  🙂  ]

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[How can one not appreciate a town named “Ball Club”?]

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[The Big Fish Supper Club, hard by Bena, I believe has been featured here before.]

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[Pretty famous school name around these here parts.]

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[And Akeley has its Paul Bunyan.]

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[At the end of every great trip, all roads lead through Nevis.]

Travel becomes a strategy for accumulating photographs. ~ Susan Sontag

Up next:  Somebody’s birthday?

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Explore Minnesota (Part II), Day Two

August 26

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[It’s now the am in Roseau, Minnesota.  This is not a photo of a trailer park; this is a picture of a windshield.  There is an issue with summer travel the farther north you go – it’s called insectosplatia.  In this case, I counted the remains of 42 different species on the do what you wanted to dowindshield.  Caribou have been known to plunge over cliffs, sometimes executing one and a half gainers with a full twist, in order to escape the mass assault of these creatures.  The natural enemy of the flying insect is the windshield; however, the windshield has not been in existence long enough for insects to have developed an innate fear and to take evasive actions.  In our case, the Super’s super-duper diesel VW (a/k/a, bug (appropriate)) gets 46 mpg on the road.  She normally has to stop for gas every third year.  But in this case visibility becomes a real problem when she’s only down an eighth of a tank.  We had to stop regularly at gas stations to double clean the windshield while she put in about a buck-two-eighty worth of fuel!  Which of course leads me to the question of why does this happen, in consideration of such things as biology, physics, string theory, Sanskrit, and possibly the capital of Burkina Faso.egrets  The Super’s VW travels at highway speed (almost in spite of itself) and in doing so pushes a bow wave of air in front of it.  So this air, which has some heft to it, is moving forward in front of the car at, say, 65 mph.  The query then is why does this blast of air not move these small airborne creatures over and around said vehicle – they somehow are able to penetrate this shield only to become a globby mess of protoplasm on the windshield.  A question for Bill Nye, the science guy, or possibly the Car Talk guys.  I took a lot of photos through the windshield on the trip – and while the focus is always on some distant object, you may occasionally notice windshield bug residue in a photo.  As for the rest of the car, we dropped it Olav’s Towing & Sandblasting and pick it up again in about a week.]

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[Number 2 on the sign is a Bucket List item.]

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[But eventually we were released on our travels, through the tundra not unlike what I recall from driving over the top of the Great Lakes many years ago, until we arrived in Sprague . . . at its hotel.]

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[In the absence of research, we didn’t realize this would require extensive travel on a gravel road, thus mussing the Super’s vehicle.  We did see lots of deer along the way, however.]

And so to the Northwest Angle, the northern most point of the contiguous 48 states.

Print nw angle2

 Hail Minnesota

Minnesota, hail to thee!
Hail to thee, our state so dear,
Thy light shall ever be
A beacon bright and clear.
Thy son and daughters true
Will proclaim thee near and far,
They shall guard thy fame and adore thy name;
Thou shalt be their Northern Star.

Like the stream that bends to sea,
Like the pine that seeks the blue;
Minnesota, still for thee
Thy sons are strong and true.
From the woods and waters fair;
From the prairies waving far,
At thy call they throng with their shout and song;
Hailing thee their Northern Star.

The music and original stanzas were written and revised by two students at the University of Minnesota in 1904 and 1905. The official University of Minnesota song was adopted as the state song in 1945.

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[This is not Jake – we didn’t get his name – but I believe he said two generations of “Jakes” have died.  He was a nice chap, quite amenable to giving us the story of the area.]

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[Sand greens!  🙂  ]

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[As in everything up here, the most northern in the contiguous 48 of . . . in this instance post offices.]

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[The most northern international airport in the contiguous 48 . . . ]

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[And the school tells its own story.]

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[A final tour of the neighborhood . . . it’s not really a travel destination area, unless you’re an avid fisherman.]

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[Then heading on back, interrupting a heron reverie in the middle of the road along the way.]

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[Pay place, dirt road again, didn’t enter.]

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[Hadn’t run across this franchise before?  🙂  We’re back to Sprague and wanted to make sure we got a shot of this on the way out.]

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[This requires a long story.  Look at this place – seems like an entrance to a top secret facility.  There are cameras everywhere.  We were pulled over here, and questioned by a border guard in full riot gear, minus the Darth Vader helmet.  It was embarrassing . . . and incredibly discourteous.  Amazingly, in the short time we have been home we have heard several anecdotes of similar nature.  My brother this summer at the same crossing point; a friend who told a TSA agent at MSP to “never talk to my wife again like that;” people in Warroad and International Falls who have to deal with it every time they cross the border. Something has really gone afoul here.  The U.S.-Canada border used to be the longest unprotected border in the world – there is no reason it shouldn’t be so today (our last conflict with Canada was 200 years ago).  Honest to goodness, we had a much easier, and more pleasant, time crossing borders in Eastern Europe, and most places in Western Europe are like it used to be between the U.S. and Canada.  I have written on this before – and since now there is talk among some presidential candidates about building a wall on the Canadian border, I give you:

“Good Fences Do Not Make Good Neighbors” – Joyce Marcel (6-21-2007)

The “something” that does not love a wall – Frost impishly suggests “elves” – causes frost heaves to spill boulders. It attracts hunters who tear apart sections looking for a rabbit in a burrow.

Why have the wall at all, Frost asks. He’s raising apples. His neighbor is growing pines. “My apple trees will never get across and eat his pine cones,” he chides. His neighbor just huffs, “Good fences make good neighbors.”

Frost wonders, “Before I built a wall I’d ask to know/What I was walling in or walling out/ And to whom I was like to give offense.” It’s a fair question.

When the Chinese built the Great Wall, it was an attempt to keep out marauding Mongols. Sometimes it worked. Sometimes it didn’t.

The Maginot Line was an attempt to stop the Germans from attacking France. Instead, the Germans went around it.

The Berlin Wall was an affront, designed to keep a captive people inside the Iron Curtain. The world rejoiced when it was torn down.

The Isreali-Palestinian Wall, besides meandering here and there to steal a little more Palestinian land, bristles with barbed wire, cameras, electricity, sensors, watchtowers and sniper posts. By building it, Israel is giving the world a lesson in cold brutality.

In the latest issue of The Nation, Naomi Klein spotlights another aspect of that particular wall: it is helping the Israeli economy. The creative intelligence of the country has been poured into “selling fences to an apartheid planet… Many of the country’s young entrepreneurs are using Israel’s status as a fortressed state, and its occupation of Gaza and the West bank, as a kind of twenty-four-hour showroom.”

During the years since 9/11, the federal government has obsessively focused attention and money on border control. The Canadian-American border is a mess. The American passport system failed this summer. So if illegal aliens are still flooding in, either our government is incompetent or it has an impossible job. Either way, how will a fence help?

Latin Americans are workers, not apple trees out to eat our pine cones – or our lunch.

Who are we walling in, Frost asks? Who are we walling out?

Clearly, it’s ourselves we’re walling in. We’re creating our own jail. We’re walling out fresh people, fresh ideas and fresh labor. We’re walling out the world.

If we let the conservatives win this fight, we turn America into one large gated community. And no matter how we feel about illegal immigrants, we will all be deeply injured by the results.

Frost’s neighbor, clutching his stones, is “like an old-stone savage armed/He moves in darkness as it seems to me/Not of woods only and the shades of trees.”

Walls create darkness. Eventually, they collapse. Historically, when have they ever make good neighbors? They must not be built.]

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[Warroad is all about Marvin Windows.  I guess you’d say Warroad is Marvin Windows. The business burned down in the old days, as businesses in the old days often did, but the family decided they would rebuild – right there in Warroad.  When they had their first profit sharing (the photos), one of the Marvins drove to the Twin Cities to get enough silver dollars to give their employees a bag full of them.  When the Great Recession hit in 2008, they never laid off any employees.  It’s now an international business.]

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[Warroad has a hockey history similar to that for Roseau – home to such as the Christian brothers, T. J. Oshie, Henry Boucha, and Gigi Marvin.  Still upset over our border crossing incident, we totally forgot to visit the Christian Bros. hockey stick company!  😦  ]

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[Baudette, on the Rainy River, now internationally-known as the hometown of the Carlos Creek Winery owners.]

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[After entering Baudette, we back tracked a bit because we had yet to see the big open water of Lake of the Woods.  We went out to Wheelers Point where the view of the “big water” appears to be blocked by a barrier island?  Oy!]

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[So then, why not just a picture of us enjoying a nosh and a brew where the Rainy River empties into Lake of the Woods?]

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[We were shocked, if not surprised, to learn that these places do better tourism-wise in winter rather than summer.  Something about ice fishing really gets some people’s juices flowing!  Full disclosure:  I went ice fishing once; once was enough.]

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[Back through Baudette, and along the Rainy River, still on Mn11, heading toward International Falls.]

8-26-15-74 - Copy8-26-15-75 - Copy[Then, as if on cue, the Super mentioned something about not seeing fire watch towers.]

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[Hay!]

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[Hay!  Hay!]

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[Hay!  Hay!  Hay!]

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[Hay!  Hay!  Hay!  Hay!]

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[Bees!  Saw lots of these along the route – good sign!]

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[Hay-ay-ay . . . ]

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[Good-bye!]

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[Upon arriving at “The Falls,” a/k/a America’s icebox, we just did a drive through . . . ]

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[Just a bit further through Ranier . . . ]

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[On the way to . . . the Super, not a fan of traveling without plans, did call ahead from Roseau to make our overnight destination here, on Rainy Lake.]

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[Our first sighting on going lakeside . . . all the years in D.C., we always thought a houseboat vacation on Rainy Lake would be the way to go – and here they were!]

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[Lake view from the lodge deck.]

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[Gorgeously perfect day to sit out and enjoy the view.]

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[Our server was from Kansas City – and yes, B’ball Dan, she knew Arthur Bryant’s but had never been to Stephenson’s.]

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[I think I’m really getting the hang of this retirement thing!]

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[And since dining is right here . . . ]

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[Why go anyplace else?]

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[And it comes with such a great view – I believe those are bald eagles circling just outside out window!]

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[And, of course, we split a two-filet walleye over wild rice dinner, because it’s the Minnesota thing to do!]

There’s only four ways to get unraveled; one is to sleep and the other is travel. ~ Jim Morrison

Up next:  While there was talk of going 4 days, we settled on one less.

Apologies to the Super . . .

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[I forgot to include her contributions, the first two from the View Point Saloon on Rainy River and the last two from the Thunderbird Lodge on Rainy Lake.]

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