Today our hearts go out to Forrest Parsons and the folks at Hungry Jack Lodge.
Category: Life at Tuscarora Lodge
Tending
Last night I had a dream about my favorite childhood place—the home where my grandpa (Pop) lived on Genesee Lake in Wisconsin. My mom and her sisters’ childhood home was near the Owens farm in Dousman where Pop spent the bulk of his farming career.
Playing in the lake with my cousins was the best part, but it was also fun to accompany Pop to the farm—to learn about cultivation, germination, soil irrigation systems…. Occasionally we visited neighboring farms. I can remember running the cornfield rows of the Pabst farms with my cousins. The last time I visited the area in 2006, The Pabst Farms was a development—complete with suburban neighborhoods, a business center, a YMCA. What a funny foreign weirdness that gave me.
I’m realizing more and more how touchy this local vs. federal ownership issue has historically been around here. As irritating as it can be, it seems to me that the ongoing conversation between all the stakeholders has the most potential to be an effective way to tend the land . It is possible that it takes a bureaucracy to bring the broad and narrow angles together. You can bet that I wouldn’t have initiated any prescribed burns on the properties near us—but I was mighty thankful in 2006 that somebody did.
As we sit at the dinner table and discuss government and politics with the kids, there are plenty of times that it is tough to justify the systems that we are part of. This is one time where we can feel proud of those systems. And that is a good thing.
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Mush for a Cure
Yesterday was a beautiful day on the Gunflint Trail—where organizers, volunteers, and mushers raised over 10,000 to benefit the National Breast Cancer foundation—participating in the Mush for a Cure fun run.Some participants (Mark Black) were quite serious about competing for the “most outrageous pink costume” prize.
Our favorite musher was Cook County 6th grader Jessica–she had a great run.
Middle School Exploratory Day
Cook County Middleschoolers get to choose an activity to explore each season—about 25 of them made their way to Tuscarora yesterday to celebrate Exploratory Day here—skiing, broomballing, snowshoeing, enjoying the sun and the woods.
March—winter or spring???
Andy looks forward to the first weekend in March because some corporate buddies come. Mike, Mark, and Trent are into repeating their Tuscarora traditions. First they work, this year cutting and burning a WHOLE LOT of brush. We all play broomball, where they spend a fair amount of time flat on their backs. Then to Trail Center, listening to Small Change, the local WTIP Friday night quiz show radio entertainment here (they even have a favorite team from Moose Loop ). They muse over the local flavors—Moose Drool beer, the consistency of their favorite waitress, Amanda. On Saturday—they all trek into Tuscarora to catch lake trout for Saturday night dinner in the back house….returning to the city and their families on Sunday. They’re very charming guys—and it’s sort of fun to see our world through their eyes—the Lake Wobegon-ness of our daily lives.
