NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 1 PAGE 39 BUILD A QUINZEE - YURT LIVING - TINY HOUSES - POW WOW TRAIL TWO HARBORS BEAVER BAY TOFTE LUTSEN GRAND MARAIS GUNFLINT TRAIL grand portage THUNDER BAY NIPIGON FOR THE NORTH OF THE LOVE outdoors events arts reviews business dining calendar classifieds free! issue 3 volume 12 mar 2015 PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID Grand Marais, MN 55604 Permit #45 POST OFFICE BOX HOLDER LOCAL HWY. CONTRACT ROUTE Little House IN THE BIG WOODS
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NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 1
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PAGE 39
B U I L D A Q U I N Z E E - Y U R T L I V I N G - T I N Y H O U S E S - P O W W O W T R A I L
TWO HARBORSBEAVER BAY
TOFTE LUTSENGRAND MARAISGUNFLINT TRAIL
grand portage THUNDER BAY
NIPIGON
FOR THE
NORTHO F T H ELOVE
outdoorsevents
artsreviewsbusiness
diningcalendar
classifieds
free!
i s s u e 3volume 12mar 2015
PRSRT STDUS POSTAGE
PAIDGrand Marais, MN 55604
Permit #45
POST OFFICE BOX HOLDERLOCAL HWY. CONTRACT ROUTE
Little HouseIN THE
BIG WOODS
2 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
2
visitthunderbay.com/skithunderbaythe perfect getaway - it’s in our nature.
CONTRIBUTORSElle Andra-Warner, Rosemary Bray, Gord Ellis, Joan Farnam, Linden Figgie, Joseph Friedrichs,
Chris Gibbs, Kelsey Roseth, Amy Schmidt, Javier Serna, Matt Silverness
Copyright 2015 by Northern Wilds Media, Inc. Published 12 times per year. Subscription rate is
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Along the North Shore, our geographical identity is formed in part by weather extremes. Frigid cold, heavy snow, summer thunderstorms, and even occasional heat waves. Because of these extremes, it could be argued that shelter is one of the most important foundations of our ev-eryday lives. It’s surprising then, that our chosen shelters come in such an array of shapes, styles and sizes.
We chose in this issue to explore a few of the many pos-sibilities for a northern home. Like the array of interesting folks that populate the north, there are a variety of homes that many would consider to be an alternative to the tradi-tional stick-built house.
Joseph Friedrichs writes about the growing trend of tiny houses. He speaks with Mark Hansen, a Grand Marais resident who built a tiny home on wheels that he calls a gypsy wagon. Hansen discusses the benefits of living with a tiny footprint. Friedrichs also talks with Grand Marais’ Betsy Jorgenson who lived in a tiny house more out of necessity than choice (story on p. 14).
Linden Figgie tells us about a couple that built and live in a yurt (story on p. 38). Rachel and Ian Andrus and their daughter Norah make their home in a canvas covered round home in the woods and have much to say about the benefits and challenges. And with a somewhat nuanced take on shelter, Rosemary Bray (story on p. 12) tells us how to build a quinzee, in case you need a temporary warm spot from which to fish or camp (though half the warmth comes just from shoveling the snow).
While all these non-traditional homes and lifestyles are a rich part of the northern identity, we acknowledge that we have folks in our communities who don’t have a home. While some of us choose to make a go of yurt-living in the woods, others are living in cars or uninsulated cabins be-cause they have nowhere else to go. There is in fact, a pop-ulation of homeless along the North Shore, which stands in stark contrast to a place filled with vacation homes and tourist destinations (see homeless story on p. 10).
As always, we have a guide to must-go-to events and Joan Farnam’s ArtScene, which gives a run-down on
which artists are showing where, new exhibits and art openings along the shore. Gord Ellis writes about a young woman who designs fashionable fur apparel, and Elle An-dra-Warner tells us about a ship, the Hesperia, owned by the original Glensheen mansion family.
March brings brighter sunshine and longer days. Birds begin to chatter a little more brightly and some of the crea-tures who have hardly shown themselves through the win-ter’s most frigid months begin to make timid appearances. March may just be the best month of winter, and I hope to enjoy every minute. I wish the same for you.—Erin Altemus
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FEATURES GUIDES DEPARTMENTS7 Along the Shore16 NorthShore ArtScene19 Events25 Calendar27 The North Shore Dish29 Health31 Northern Trails32 Fishing Hole35 Strange Tales36 Northern Sky38 Living in the North
39 Avista, Superior Escapes40 Backlund Realty41 Keller Williams42 Lutsen Real Estate Group44 Timber Wolff Realty47 Coldwell Banker Northwoods48 Red Pine Realty51 Coldwell Banker North Shore54 Bluefin Bay, Odyssey
CoverWinter Camping by Chris Gibbs
CatchlightMallard by Matt Silverness
real estate39-54
business11
aD dEADLINEMarch 20
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12 Build a Quinzee Rosemary Bray tells us how.
14 Tiny Houses Joseph Friedrichs looks at the trend.
33 Mush Lake Dog Blog A Beargrease recap.
6 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
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7Minnesota ice sculptor’s dedi-cation brings na-tional attention to Twin Ports
SUPERIOR, WIS.—Na-tional news is abuzz with the story of Roger Hanson and his plan to shatter world records. Hanson, from Big Lake, is attempt-ing to build the world’s tall-est freestanding wall of ice at about 70 feet tall by 95 feet wide. It’s an extreme-ly challenging task: the ice wall fell victim to Mother Nature once already and crashed to the ground in early February due to warm temperatures. De-spite the setback, Hanson has persevered and is back to building the wall.
Hanson is a self-taught electrical engineer, mechanical engineer and software developer who set up shop in a 32-foot trailer on Barker’s Island last fall to commence the “Lake Superior Ice Project.” Each day, Hanson toils tirelessly on the ice wall with the goal of boosting winter tourism in Superior.
“I really am happy with [the City of Superior and the Superior Tourism Development Fund] for giving me the opportunity to do this,” said Hanson. “I feel obligated to do the best job I can in enhancing their bottom line and bringing people to this area.”
To aid economic development, the “Ice Man” is calling attention to the Twin Ports, addressing frequent inquiries from the media and moving quickly from one interview to the next. His story has been shared by the New York Times, the Washington Times, the Weather Channel, the British Daily Mail and numerous other news organiza-tions. Thousands of people have visited the ice wall this season. Hanson estimates that upward of 500 vehicles stop by each weekend to take in the awe-inspiring sight.
The process begins with a steel cable strung between two 65-foot tall towers. Then, Hanson’s self-developed software program targets a spot in which to shoot a two-second burst of water. The program does this by calculating a target distance, angle, wind speed and temperature four times a second. The repetitive bursts of water, shot on the cable, drip down the cable and freeze, slowly building a sculpture over time. The cable is removed once the base is built, and the water is then shot directly onto the sculpture. The complex process, designed entirely by Hanson, involves specifically-pro-grammed computers, algorithms and numerous wires, seismic sensors, circuit boards, pipes, pumps and filters.
“I am only the contractor,” Hanson said. “Mother Na-ture is the artist.”
Hanson has faced numerous challenges while execut-ing the project including extreme winds, unstable soil comprised of silt and sand (Barker’s Island is manmade) and unfavorable temperatures.
“It’s supposed to be cold here in Superior,” Hanson joked, “That’s what they told me. It’s not! Not this year, anyway.”
The elements are making it hard for Hanson to prog-ress his sculpture this season. He’s hoping to pursue a world record next winter, if the elements work in his fa-vor. According to the Guinness’ website, the current re-cord goes to Yichun City, China. In 2010, the community built a 53-foot, 3-inch tall dinosaur-shaped ice sculpture.
Hanson will begin reducing the wall on March first, due to weather concerns, and he is hopeful that the City of Superior and the Superior Tourist Development Fund will partner with him to build another wall next season. So far, Hanson received $30,000 in funding from the two organizations and is seeking donations for the remaining cost of this season’s $50-60,000 project. For more infor-mation, visit icemanroger.com.—Kelsey Roseth
Roger Hanson
Roger Hanson’s ice sculpture in Superior, Wis. collapsed in February but he is rebuilding. | SUBMITTED
8 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
88MINNEAPOLIS—Martin Kubik’s passion for wilderness hiking has led him to resurrect trails after Mother Nature has destroyed them with wind and fire. According to Ku-bik, if he wasn’t leading the charge, no one would.
Born in former Czechoslovakia, Kubik moved to the U.S at age 17 and studied electrical engineering at the University of Minnesota. He first encountered wilderness hiking when he took a break from college and guided at Adventurous Christians on the Gunflint Trail and did a training trip on the Kekekabic Trail. He returned to hike that trail many times in the 1980s, even after becoming a full-time employee of 3M corporation in St. Paul. He observed a decline in trail maintenance over that same decade and by 1990 founded the Kekekabic Trail Club when it became clear that the Forest Service was no lon-ger going to maintain the trail.
“I organized 115 3M employees to clear the trail. We cleared over 1,000 trees in one year,” Kubik said.
Over the next decade, Kubik and the Kekekabic Trail Club cleared other trails within the Boundary Waters Ca-noe Area Wilderness as well, including, the Snowbank Trail, Brule Lake Trail, Kelso Lake Trail, and South Lake Trail.
Then in 2002, Kubik formed the Boundary Waters Ad-visory Committee (BWAC), which at first was supposed to just focus on lobbying, but after seeing the Brule Lake Trail get worse and worse, Kubik stepped in, did some brief training with the Forest Service on trail clearing et-tiquette and set to work, even lugging in a 40-pound fire grate to a new campsite that he helped to clear.
Now another trail needs work before it succombs to the wilderness forever.
The Pow Wow Trail near Isabella begins at the Lake Isabella parking lot. Camping overnight on the trail re-quires a wilderness permit as the trail is entirely within the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW). Much of the trail follows old logging roads that were in place before the area became designated wilderness. The trail is currently 32 miles long.
In 2011, the Pagami creek fire burned 95 percent of the area the trail goes through, and Kubik estimates there are currently 2,000 trees across the trail. Kubik would like to see the Forest Service take the charge on clearing the trail, but as of yet that hasn’t happened, and because of this there has been a dramatic drop in usage of the trail.
“Basically it’s not even hikable right now,” Kubik said. “You can hike it if you have chutzpah.”
Kubik made four trips to the Pow Wow trail in 2014 alone, and his pictures of the trail show a bleak but beau-tiful world. Green brush dominates a landscape dotted with dead, blackened trees. Low swamps, rock forma-tions and occasional small lakes break up the scenery. If it weren’t for the pictures of hikers climbing up, over and through deadfalls, one might feel inspired to check it out.
Kubik’s trips have been alone or with small groups of volunteers, who have begun the arduous task of remov-ing some of the fallen trees. On one trip, he cleared a mile of trail in five hours by himself.
For Kubik the allure of the trail is the wilderness setting.
“If you were to drive east or west, you’d have to go a long way to reach these kind of wilderness trails,” Kubik said. “Here there is no one around for miles.”
Kubik knows that volunteer hours are crucial to the survival of these trails.
“They have been able to preserve the resource,” he said. “If the Forest Service can get the money and the grants [to do the work] I’m all for it. They can do the bigger jobs. We can do the smaller ones.”
Recently the BWAC sent the request for funds to clear the Pow Wow trail to Sen. Klobuchar and Rep. Nolan. The Forest Service has since signed the agreement to clear the trail. This will clear about half of the 2,000 downed trees, Kubik said.
Kubik said that hiking and the trails are an obsession. But, he said, “If I didn’t save these trails, they would be gone ... if it was up to the Forest Service, two thirds of the trails [in the BWCAW] would be gone.”—Erin Altemus
Champion for wilderness trails looks to save another
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Martin Kubik is passionate about clearing the Pow Wow Trail after the Pagami Creek fire dropped thousands of trees on the trail. | MARTIN KUBIK
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ST. PAUL—Data from the aerial moose survey just completed indicate that the downward trend in the statewide moose population continues, even though there has been no statistical change in the pop-ulation during the past few years.
Results of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ annual aerial moose survey place the 2015 statewide moose population estimate at 3,450. This com-pares with estimates of 4,350 in 2014 and 2,760 in 2013. Overall, the number of moose is down approximately 60 percent from the 2006 estimate of 8,840.
The DNR has conducted aerial moose population surveys in northeastern Min-nesota since 1960. A spotter counts moose as a pilot flies a helicopter across 52 randomly selected plots of 13 square miles.
The DNR’s ongoing moose mortality re-search project also is providing important information on population status.
“This year, 11 percent of collared adult moose died, as compared to 21 percent last year. Although adult mortality was slightly lower, which is good, the number of calves that survive to their first year has also been low,” Cornicelli said. “This indi-cates the population will likely continue to decline in the foreseeable future.”
The adult and calf moose mortality studies are in their third year. As part of several studies, researchers will radio col-lar an additional 36 adult moose in the next couple of weeks. Another 50 new-born calves will be collared this spring. Re-searchers hope information and insights gathered during the studies will help iden-tify potential population and habitat man-agement options that may stop or slow
the long-term population decline.
Final decisions about moose hunting are made after the DNR consults with the affected Chippewa bands in the 1854 Treaty ceded territory of northeastern Minnesota. The DNR discontinued moose hunting in 2013 until the population could support a hunt.
The Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa and the 1854 Treaty Authority contribute funding and provide personnel for the annual aerial survey.
Minnesota’s moose popu-lation remains at low levels
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Aerial moose population surveys are conducted by helicopter each year and surveys continue showing a drop in moose numbers. | ERIN ALTEMUS
10 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
1010VIRGINIA—Along the North Shore, where many vacation homes stand empty for portions of the year, some folks find them-selves homeless.
Leah Hall, housing project manager at the Arrowhead Economic Opportuni-ty Agency (AEOA), said the homeless in Cook and Lake counties are often invis-ible; they do not conform to any stereo-types.
They are folks sleeping in vehicles or couch-hopping and women fleeing do-mestic violence with children. They are folks without steady jobs or going through a change in employment or a health crisis. The majority are not transient as many people often believe, Hall said, but are people who may have grown up on the North Shore and would rather sleep in a shack, truck camper, or even a fish house than in a homeless shelter in Duluth or other urban area.
A few examples of homelessness from Cook County from the last several months include a man who was evicted because he could no longer pay his rent due to a cut in work hours because his job relies on the tourism business. Another couple lost their housing due to job loss, couldn’t find new work quickly and moved to Duluth because they felt their long-term chances of finding sustainable employment would be better there.
Hall pointed out that households who live off-grid and choose that lifestyle are
not referred to or counted as homeless in the same way as someone who ends up living in a seasonal cabin because they have no other choice.
The causes of homelessness are com-plicated, but two factors contribute: lack of affordable housing and a gap between wages for seasonal work and the cost of housing.
Families who pay more than 30 percent of their income on housing are considered cost-burdened, particularly when they are in a lower income bracket. There is less money left over to spend on other basic necessities.
According to the Minnesota Housing Partnership, in 2014, 20 percent of home-owners and 41 percent of renters in Cook County and 24 percent of owners and 51 percent of renters in Lake County spent more than 30 percent of their income on housing.
The median home price in Cook County is $220,000 ($144,500 for Lake Coun-ty). One quarter of households in Cook County rent, but there are only 71 units of affordable rentals available for every 100 extremely low-income renters. In Lake County, the numbers are even more stark with only 54 units of affordable housing available for every 100 extremely low-in-come renters.
These numbers reflect an obvious need for more units of affordable housing, which both Cook and Lake counties want
to address. In Lake County, the Housing and Redevelopment Authority is looking at partnering with the AEOA to build more affordable housing in their commu-nity. In Cook County, the Economic Devel-opment Authority is conducting a housing study right now to better understand the housing situation and what the needs are for workers and residents of the county.
For now, the AEOA is helping to fill the gap for folks that are facing foreclosure, needing help with rental deposits and needing assistance heating their home.
There are offices in Two Harbors and Grand Marais where folks needing as-sistance can talk with a case manager. For those looking to move into a rental, there might be help with rental and util-ity deposits to help folks get started and get stabilized, Hall said. Hall also point-ed out that to stabilize, a household may also need educational training, food and transport, and the AEOA helps with these things as well.
“We look at the whole big picture of what is happening,” Hall said.
With folks going through foreclosure, Hall said, “even if things seem too far gone, or all hope is lost, people should call us, because we can give them advice as to how long to stay in their home, how to repair their credit in the future, how to prevent foreclosure and where to go next.”—Erin Altemus
In cabin country, homelessness exists
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NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 11
1111GRAND MARAIS—Backwoods explorers in the Superior National Forest may discover that little-used forest roads may not go to where the map shows they go. Actually, the remnants of the road will still go there, but encroach-ing brush will have rendered it impassable to any vehicle larger than an ATV.
In the parlance of the U.S. Forest Service, such roads are known as minimum maintenance roads. These days, no one fills the potholes or cuts back the encroaching al-der brush. About the only time an unmaintained road gets any attention is when it is used to access a logging job.
Jon Olson, forest engineer supervisor for the eastern portion of the Superior National Forest, says roads in the national forest’s road system are administrative roads, which means their primary purpose is forest manage-ment. The USFS doesn’t receive federal gas tax money to maintain its roads. It does not have an obligation main-tain or snowplow roads for home and cabin owners.
And now, USFS hardly has enough money to maintain roads at all. Olson says the Superior National Forest road maintenance budget is less than one third of what it was 15 years ago. Olson and two others at the Grand Mara-is USFS office are responsible for maintaining 300 miles of high standard, crushed aggregate surface roads, as well as additional minimum maintenance, high clearance roads (280 miles in Cook County alone). All road work is contracted out to local contractors, at least what road work the USFS can afford.
Olson said high standard roads used to be graded five times a year. Now they are graded three or four times per year. Roadsides are not being brushed or mowed. Large culverts are being replaced using money from another funding source, the Great Lakes Initiative, which provides funds to replace traditional culvert pipes with open-bot-tomed ones intended to improve fish passage. But the Great Lakes Initiative funding cannot be used for general road maintenance.
Aging bridges are another matter. Last fall, the USFS closed a bridge over the Temperance River because it was no longer safe for vehicle traffic. The bridge, which has been closed to commercial traffic for over 15 years, dates to the 1920s, when it spanned the Cross River on Hwy. 61. The estimated cost of replacing exceeds $600,000, which is more than the Superior National Forest’s annual road maintenance budget.
A bigger problem is that Olson’s work area has 19 bridges over 50 years old. In fact, much of his road in-frastructure is aging. Even the gravel road surfaces are starting to disappear as the binder material that holds the gravel in place deteriorates. Much of the eastern Superior National Forest road system needs to be resurfaced.
Olson says the road is-sues affect Cook County more than others, because USFS roads are an import-ant part of the county’s transportation infrastruc-ture. Most of the coun-ty-maintained roads run north from Lake Superior, primarily the well-known Sawbill, Caribou, Gunflint and Arrowhead trails. The only state highway, 61, fol-lows the shore of Lake Su-perior. Inland, the primary east-west arteries and con-nectors are high-standard USFS gravel roads. Else-where in the national for-est, arteries are state- or county-maintained roads.
Most USFS high-standard roads are short spurs that pro-vide access to campgrounds, radio towers, boat launches or similar USFS facilities.
Olson has talked with Cook County officials about the arterial routes and the shortcomings of his roads budget. They have also discussed USFS roads that primarily ser-vice residences and summer homes. He would like to find a way for the county to assume some of the maintenance responsibility.
Declining budgets for national forest road maintenance has been exacerbated by the need to cover the skyrocket-ing costs of fighting wildfires from the annual USFS bud-get. Legislation presently exists in Washington to fund large wildfire suppression, but it seems unlikely Congress will pass that and increase national forest budgets. For this reason, the USFS is studying the status of the road systems on every national forest. Superior National For-est officials stress that this study is strictly to gather in-formation and not a plan to close or reduce maintenance on existing roads. Doing so would require environmental analysis and public engagement.
But that doesn’t mean roads in the Superior Nation-al Forest won’t continue to deteriorate or disappear be-neath a shroud of brush. As that happens, folks who use those roads to hunt, fish or otherwise reach out-of-the-way places may find their driving access to the woods slowly diminishing. —Shawn Perich
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Who will maintain forest roads?
This minimum maintenance forest road is only passable by ATVs or foot. | ERIN ALTEMUS
12 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
12Build a Quinzee
Story and Photos by Rosemary Bray
The term “quinzee” was coined by the Athabascans, the native people of Alaska. A quinzee is a man-made hol-lowed-out mound of snow created as an insulated shelter during cold winter outings. Aboriginals throughout the northern regions of the world from Canada to Scandina-via built quinzees to protect themselves during the harsh winters.
Nowadays, quinzees are built mainly for recreational purposes, such as winter camping. When done properly, the insulated walls of the shelter are highly effective in keeping you warm and protected from the wind. Here is a step-by-step process on how to build a quinzee.
Supplies needed: snow, shovels, warm layers of winter clothing, strong back and shoulders, snacks, water, snow-shoes, random scooping supplies, good helpers, sticks and more snow.
My quinzee building partners and I ventured off to Oberg Mountain bright and early on a sunny midweek morning to accomplish our mission of successfully con-structing a quinzee. The thermometer on my vehicle read 3 degrees Fahrenheit and the winds were rather strong. However, we were soon to find out that staying warm would not be an issue, because all of the shoveling and scooping is a very invigorating task.
This is easily an all-day project, so plan to have enough daylight to finish in time. We arrived at 10 a.m. and left at about 4:30 p.m. and within that time frame, managed to build a 2-3 person quinzee.
Step 3
The fun begins—time to start shoveling. Snow on snow on snow. You will stay plenty warm and get thirsty, so layer accordingly. Bring water and take breaks as needed. We made our pile about 7-8 feet tall; the height, of course, depends on how big you want your quinzee to be. When completed, this quinzee could probably fit about 5 to 6 people.
Mix up different temperatures of snow by flipping the snow over the mound with your shovel as your pile progress-es. The mix of different snow temperatures will aid in the sintering process, or the bonding of the snow necessary in forming a solid, cohesive wall.
While you are piling the snow, use your shovel to form it into a dome-like shape. Do not pack too hard because that will make the mound denser and therefore difficult to hollow out.
Step 2
Once you have picked your spot, pack down a base to pile your snow. A base makes for a more distin-guished perimeter, which is always subject to change, and a more solid floor for the interior of the quinzee. Snowshoes are excellent for this step.
Step 1
Find a spot in the woods or on a lake, where you have lots of space and snow to build your quinzee.
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 13
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STEP 7
Continue hollowing and digging and scooping un-til you get it as big as you want. Better to have too much snow than too little so you at least have the choice to go bigger. Less space in relation to the numbert of people using the quinzee is best, because the air will be warmer.
The excess snow on the inside of the shelter can be made into beds or seats. Layering the base with balsam and spruce branch-es will provide warmer ground to sit on too. As I mentioned earlier, you will find yourself staying very warm and probably sweat-ing during the building pro-cess. Later on, the moisture of the sweat will be trapped in your clothes and will get very cold. To prevent hypothermia, bring an extra change of clothes to switch into for the night.
STEP 4Once your mound is complete, let it set for 2-3 hours. This process, called “sintering”, yields solid and sturdy walls. The snow crystallizes and bonds together during this time. Go for a ski or hike, or take a lunch break.
STEP 5Back to work. Now comes the part we’ve all been waiting for: hollowing out the dome. Start by mak-ing a small tunnel for the entrance. The smaller the hole, the more protected the inside will be from the wind and cold air.
STEP 6As one of you digs out the snow, the other should go find 6-to 12-inch long sticks to poke in on the exterior of the mound as a measuring tool. This will give the scooper on the inside an accurate limit of where to dig so the walls have a good thickness and do not cave in.
This is a teamwork activity. A lot of outdoor programs will take their students out to build quinzees as a mandatory part of their curriculum. Figuring out a system among the group helps immensely for both efficiency and sufficiency. What worked well for us was having someone hollow out the mound on the inside, while the other stood at the entrance and shoveled out all the excess snow. We switched on and off between the tasks many times throughout the construction.
A helpful tip is to bring a mat or pad to kneel on while scooping out the inside. We didn’t bring one and our knees and butts got pretty cold.
14 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
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By Joseph FriedrichsA growing trend in the housing market
seems to have its roots in something natu-ral, realistic and geared toward the future: The tiny-house movement.
“I’ve talked to a lot of people in (Cook) County who think they have too much house,” said Mark Hansen, a builder of small homes who lives in Grand Marais but is staying in his tiny house on wheels in Duluth for the winter. “It costs them so much to heat these big structures. But I think the handwriting is on the wall. Most people are going to start living with less.”
It wasn’t long ago that building the larg-est house possible was considered the way to live and part of what constituted living the American dream. But Hansen, one of the founders of the North House Folk School in Grand Marais, has been fascinat-ed with tiny housing for nearly all his life. He said the size of a house is relatable to another of his life’s passions: boating.
“There is a saying that big boats mean big problems, and little boats mean little problems,” Hansen said. “The same goes for housing. Little house, little problems.”
And while it may be an upward trend, the idea of building, owning and ultimate-ly living in a small house isn’t for everyone, Hansen acknowledged. After all, a tiny house is often about the size of a deluxe ice-fishing shack, though many tiny homes feature a loft. A structure of that size leaves little room for luxury items. For example, there aren’t many tiny homes that feature giant televisions or bulky sofas. Most tiny houses don’t have a bathroom or shower inside. The size of the house all but elimi-nates the option to host a social gathering. Often times, Hansen said, building a small house comes down to practicality and/or necessity with respect to people’s finances.
In Cook County, new residents often find the housing market to be difficult at best. Spaces to rent are scarce and the op-tion to buy or build isn’t always realistic.
Hansen said some young couples arrive in the region looking for land and are forced to merely pitch a tent until better accom-modations arrive. Others, looking for something more reliable than a nylon roof, have opted to build a tiny house, even if it is only a temporary living situation.
Hansen himself is no stranger to living in a small home. He spends months out of each year living in his mobile 72 square-foot house, also known as a gypsy wagon, parked at a Duluth marina.
“Rather than buy an apartment, we went this route,” he said. “It’s a lot more fun and interesting.”
Building a tiny house and eventually living in it is often centered on economic benefits and minimalizing one’s impact on the planet. And while such notions might be genuine, if not necessary, when it comes to actually living in a small home, there can be mixed results.
Betsy Jorgenson, along with her hus-
Shrinking Homes a Growing Trend
Mark Hansen built this tiny house on wheels and is living in it for the winter. | SUBMITTED
Hansen has been fascinated with tiny homes nearly all of his life. | SUBMITTED
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 15
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band, Odin, recently spent a year living in a 12 by 16 foot house. The structure, which Betsy described as a “stick frame,” was located on property they own near the Ka-dunce River. After she became pregnant, the move into the tiny house was one of necessity, not necessarily planetary consciousness.
“It was not a lifestyle decision,” Jorgenson said. “It was an economic decision.”
Jorgenson said she knows at least five other people or couples in Cook County who also took to living in small houses while they waited for something larger to build or buy. And while Jorgenson was quick to point out that peo-ple in third-world countries have been living in tiny homes and gotten by with “a lot less for a lot longer,” it simply wasn’t the right fit for her blossoming family.
“I think the demographic is really, really small that can pull this off,” she said. “I think it’s a cool thing, but you just can’t have a lot of stuff.”
There is little question that living in a small house takes creativity, flexibility and ingenuity. As longtime residents of the Northern Wilds who are both active and well-ad-justed to living simply, one might consider the Jorgenson couple ideal candidates for living small.
So why didn’t the situation in a small house bode well for them? One word: space.
“You really have to minimize,” she said. “Or you need to have a storage unit … Or just accept it and become a true minimalist.”
The Jorgenson family has since moved to a newly-built home also located on their property near the Kadunce, this one boasting a 24-by-30 footprint. While she toiled through her year in the tiny home, it helped to see her future living quarters being erected nearby, she said.
“When you’re doing something with a challenge, you want it to have an end point,” she said. “That is what helped me get through it.”
Space issues aside, tiny houses are big on saving money. A 100 square-foot house can be built for approximately $8,000, according to Hansen. These structures are easy to heat or keep cool as seasons fluctuate. In addition, tiny houses can often be built without having to obtain a build-ing permit. And on a positive side, not having much space means you don’t need (or simply can’t have) many pos-sessions, which can also be viewed as a means of saving money.
While even the staunchest supporter of tiny homes should admit the lifestyle is not for everyone, there is no question building smaller homes is a trend in this country. Whether this trend comes from a standpoint of economic necessity or environmental consciousness isn’t so much the point. The reason more people will gravitate toward small houses, according to Hansen, is because the time has come to address the size of structures we dwell in.
“This is all going to happen,” Hansen said, “It’s just a matter of people getting wise to limited resources and more and more people on the planet.”
As for Jorgenson, a multi-level mansion might not be in her future plans, but another tiny house won’t be happen-ing either.
“I wouldn’t try it again, though there is a certain lure to casting away your possessions,” she said. “But camping is a good fix for that.”
“You really have to minimize ... Or you need
to have a storage unit … Or just accept it and
become a true minimalist.” -Betsy Jorgenson
A gypsy wagon on wheels.| SUBMITTED
The interior of Hansen’s gypsy wagon is carefully planned and aesthetically pleasing. | SUBMITTED
16 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
16 NorthShore ArtScene www.NorthShoreArtScene.com
By Joan Farnam
March swings in with lots of live music in venues across the county and great art exhibits up and down the North Shore.
First up is the Fiber Revolution: Art Quilts exhibit at the Grand Marais Art Colony featuring a wide range of quilts by nationally acclaimed fiber artists. The ex-hibit continues through March 8.
The Johnson Heritage Post opens for the season with “Illumination: Igniting the Imagination,” an exhibit organized by the Spirit of the Wilderness, with an opening reception from 5-7 p.m. Fri-day, March 13. Artists of every age will be included in this show, which continues through March 29.
Sivertson Gallery’s Inuit Premiere is March 20-21 this year featuring new carv-ings by Ron Apangalook and Toonoo Sharky and other Canadian and Alaskan carvers. The opening reception is from 5-7 p.m. March 20.
There are lots of art exhibits in the galler-ies in Thunder Bay this month, too.
The Carly Waito, Damara Genda and Julia Pott exhibits at the Definitely Supe-rior Art Gallery in Thunder Bay continue through March 14. Then the staff set up the exhibit at the gallery for Urban Infill- Art in the Core 9, a Waterfront District-wide event featuring 18 projects, 350 artists ex-hibiting and/or performing in 17 venues throughout the district. Urban Infill-Art in the Core events are held March 29-31.
The gala opening event for the art exhibit at Def-Sup will be March 29 at 7 p.m. (EST). The Lakehead Universi-ty Juried Student Exhibit continues at the Thunder Bay Art Gallery through March 1. The exhibits “Leo Yerxa: Imper-manence,” and “Drawn from Legends: Works from the Permanent Collection” conclude March 8.
Two new exhibits open at the gallery in March, too. An installation by Canadian artist Kim Adams, “One for the Road,” opens with an reception and artist talk at 7:30 p.m. (EST) March 13. The Lakehead University Major Studio Exhibition opens March 20.
Also in Thunder Bay, Gallery 33 is fea-turing work by Lakehead Visual Arts, a group exhibit of 31-member artists featur-ing oils, acrylics, prints and drawings.
The Ahnishnabae Art Gallery will hold a Grand Opening for its new space in the Waterfront District at 18 S. Court St. on March 20. The event will also feature the unveiling of a commissioned work by Ran-dy Thomas at the Thunder Bay Casino.
In Two Harbors, The Waterfront Gallery is exhibiting North Shore artists through May. The artists include Jody Tonder, Debbie Cooter, Lisa Stauffer, Rose Kadera Vastilla, Dick Cooter, Mi-chael Tonder, and Michelle Ronning.
In Duluth the Duluth Art Institute is featuring two exhibits this month: “Natu-ral Contract” with works by Ryuta Na-kajima & Aya Kawaguchi through April 19, and “A Retrospective Response,” an exhibit of paintings by members of the Lake Superior Watercolor Society
through May 1.
The Zeitgeist Cafe in Duluth is exhibit-ing new bodies of work by Ann Klefstad and Bridget Riversmith.
The Minnesota Ballet will present “Sleeping Beauty” at the DECC Sym-phony Hall March 27-28. For tickets, visit tix.com.
In other art news, the Grand Marais Art Colony will welcome two Artists-in-Resi-dence March 16-29: Mary Bergs, an instal-lation artist, and Marty Harris, a design-
er, printmaker and painter. Each will hold an open studio to talk about their work on Saturday, March 21. Harris will speak from 1-2 p.m. in the Print Studio and Bergs will present from 2-3 p.m in the Founders Hall.
A community engagement project with the artists is planned as well for March 28, with Harris leading it from 9 a.m to noon and Bergs from 1-4 p.m. For more information, call the Art Colony at 387-2737.
Cooper Ternes has set up a wood-turn-ing workshop in The Garage, where he
“Angry Crow,” sumi-e ink on maple, by Ann Klefstad, is one of the works in the exhibit “Flight” at the Zeitgeist Arts Cafe in Duluth. Bridget Riversmith is also exhibiting in the show, which will be up through April.
This hand-dyed, hand-spun, Swedish style Korkbragd by Julie Arthur is at the Kah-Nee-Tah Gallery in Lutsen.
“The Garden Series: Lavender and Lace,” oil over acrylic, by Sandi Pillbsury. The painting is on exhibit at a show at the Agora Gallery in New York City through March 3.
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 17
17will have space to work as well as a re-tail space for his turned bowls. Jill Terrill, who owns and manages The Garage, said there are two more spaces available in the building for artists. For more information, call 387-1004.
The Cook County Historical Society is planning an exhibit on the history of mu-sic in Cook County entitled “Music from the Tip o’ the Arrowhead” that will open May 24. The community is invited to contribute music memorabilia, photo-graphs and concert posters from the ‘20s to the present and can include everything from town hall polkas, country, jazz and rock bands, church choral groups and more that trace the rich history of music in Cook County over the years.
The exhibit will include videos and an electric piano from the old East Bay Ho-tel. Donations are being accepted to help mount this exhibit. See www.cookcounty-history.org or call 387-2883. The deadline to donate items is March 15. The originals will be copied and returned.
Noah Prinsen has created eight original prints for the book, “The Hungry Coast: Fables from the North Shore of Minne-sota” by Mariais Brand. The book will be released this spring.
Also in Prinsen news, he recently created three woodcut prints of Minnesota Nobel Laureates for “Nobel Creations,” an ex-hibit from the Nobel Museum in Stock-holm currently on display at the Ameri-can Swedish Institute in Minneapolis. Prinsen currently resides in Asheville, N.C.
Kah-Nee-Tah Gallery in Lutsen is fea-turing new work by landscape photog-rapher William Gillis Rosemount, and new prints by Gunflint Trail photographer Nace Hagemann as well as hand-dyed scarves, shawls and rugs by Tofte fiber art-ist Julie Arthur.
Tim Young is exhibiting his paintings at the Coho Cafe through May.
Thunder Bay potter Fritz Lehmburg is teaching pottery classes at the Baggage Building Arts Centre in Thunder Bay.
Twin Cities photographer Roger Nord-strom, who exhibited at the Johnson Heritage Post with Grand Portage pho-tographer Travis Novitsky last year, will have 24 of the photographs from his series “Time•Water•Earth” published in LensWork Magazine, an international fine art bimonthly photography publica-tion.
Painter Sandi Pillsbury has work in a show at the Agora Gallery in New York City entitled “Elemental Realms.” The exhibit runs through through March 3.
The art galleries in Cook County are planning an event over the Memorial Day weekend. Participating galleries include Sivertson Gallery, Betsy Bowen Studio, the Grand Marais Art Colony, The Ga-rage, Last Chance Gallery and Kah-Nee-Tah Gallery. They are also working on a Gallery Guide. Stay tuned.
The Arrowhead Regional Arts Coun-cil awarded career development grants to three Cook County residents: • Briand Morrison, $3,000. to help in the
production of a multimedia performance combining a slide show of his father, George Morrison’s, art with his jazz
guitar playing at eight locations in the state;
• Amy Schmidt, $3,000, to help support work with editor Patrick Donnely to complete her poetry manuscript: “Wear-ing a Dress of Onion Skins” and
• Erin Altemus, $1,680, to help support work with editor Ben Barnhart on a full manuscript edit and consulta-
tion for her memoir: “The Idealists’ Daughter.”
Other regional organizations who re-ceived support grants include The Good Harbor Hill Players, Lake Superior Community Theatre in Silver Bay and the North Shore Music Association.
Noah Prinsen has created eight prints for “The Hungry Coast: Fables from the North Shore of Minnesota” a book by Mariais Brand that will be published soon.
Kim Adams will be exhibiting his work at the Thunder Bay Art Gallery March 13-May 24 including this multi-media piece “Toaster Work Wagon.”
“Sedna’s Repose,” etching and aquatint, by Tim Pitsiulak, is one of the new prints at Sivertson Gallery for the Inuit Premiere, March 20-21.
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Arvik Amuasijartuq (Bowhead In Amautik) by Tim Pitsiulak
Friday, March 205-7 p.m. Opening Receptionwith introduction of guests & poetry reading
Saturday March 211 p.m. & 3 p.m. Throat singing performances
6 p.m. Guest speaker Kate Vasyliw of Dorset Fine Arts& throat singing performance
Inuit Premiere 2015
www.sivertson.com • 35th Anniversary Year14 W. Wisconsin Street • P.O. Box 178 • Grand Marais, MN 55604
Tickets are available in the K-12 office, Java Moose, Blue Water Cafe or from any CCSDEF board member: Hal Greenwood, Pat Campanaro, Doug Sanders, Annie DeBevec, Harry Drabik, Dianne Peterson, Gene Erickson, Susan Lappi, Lorelei Livingston, Beth Schwarz, Ann Sullivan
Partake in a delectable array of taste samples from 10+ Cook County Restaurants and Food Vendors
Bid on any of the quality silent auction items donated by local businesses and individuals.
Enjoy fine musical entertainment while you socialize with fellow supporters of the ISD 166, Cook County Schools
*The Cook County School District 166 Education Foundation awards grants to projects and activities that provide extraordinary educational opportunities for students in ISD 166. Over $92,000 in grants have been awarded since 2002.
Ask someone who has attended in the past; this is a “must-be-there” event!
E.A.T.S. 2015ENRICHING ACADEMICS THROUGH SUSTENANCE
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 6 - 8 P.M.Cook County Middle/High School
Only 150 tickets will be sold!$25.00 each
Gallery & Cottages Open Year Round
Winter Gallery Hours: W-F 10-6 • Sat 10-5 • Sun 10-4
4210 W Highway 61 Lutsen, MN 55612Located just between Lutsen
and Grand Marais 218.387.2585 • www.kahneetah.com
Find us on Facebook @ Kah-Nee-Tah Gallery & Cottages
And Instagram @kahneetahgallerylutsen
Featuring
Minnesota-made artwork, paintings, prints and unique, handcrafted
items such as fine silver jewelry, beautiful
beeswax candles, gorgeous ceramic pieces,
along with hand-felted and knit scarves, hats and purses.
*Join our free book exchange, just bring a
book and take a book*
JOIN US FOR OUR
End ofWinter Sale
MARCH 20TH & 21ST20% off scarves and hats
Plus up to 75% off select items throughout
the Gallery!
Spring Home & Garden ShowOn The CLE Grounds
APRIL10, 11 & 12, 2015
Friday: 4 pm - 9 pm Saturday: 10 am - 6 pm Sunday: 11 am - 4 pm
VISIT ALL SIX BUILDINGSwww.cle.on.ca
See The Latest In Home And Garden Products Over 300 Exhibit Spaces Plus Craft and Merchandise Tables
Free Seminars . Free ParkingCountry Market On Site . Attendance Prizes
$2 ADMISSION$2 ADMISSION
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 19
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Northern Wilds 2015 Restaurant AwardsNow - March 31.
What restaurant in the Northern Wilds region has your favorite pizza, wine, server or view? Vote now for your favorite restau-rants and win a $50 gift certificate with the 2015 Northern Wilds Reader’s Choice Restaurant Awards. You may not choose the same restaurant for more than three categories or your entry will be disqualified. Only one entry per person. Vote online at www.northernwilds.com, mail in your ballot or drop it off in the office. Voting ends March 31. Happy voting!
Epic Adventures Snowshoe FestivalMarch 1
Nipigon’s annual snowshoe festival is back. Michael Elliott, owner of Epic Adventures and host of this much enjoyed event, said the festival didn’t take place last year. But due to local de-mand, he’ll be offering it on March 1, at the Nipigon Community Centre. Registration begins at 10 a.m. and the cost is $10 for adults and $5 for children under 12. Some snowshoes will be available at the festival.
The festival has three events. First are the races, which include four categories. The novice course is 4.5 km, intermediate is 7.5 km, and the advanced is 15 km. There is a 1 km course for chil-dren, youth and seniors. Once the races are underway, there will be a walking tour for people not interested in competitive snow-shoeing. Their course, which is also the one the novice racers fol-
low, will go along the Baldspot Trail System. The third event will be a variety of games, including dizzy sprints and snowshoe toss.
Elliot explained the reason snowshoeing is such a popular rec-reational pursuit, is it isn’t hard to do. “If you can walk, you can snowshoe,” he said. “It’s great exercise, especially if you’re breaking a trail. It can be done anywhere there’s a snow-covered green space. Best of all, it offers people an opportunity to enjoy the outdoors and set their own pace.”
In recent years, snowshoeing has exploded as a sport. There are over 100 races in North America. The United States Snow-shoe Association is trying to get snowshoeing into the Win-ter Olympics. At the 2013 Nipigon Snowshoe Festival, the race between the advanced members was riveting. Three people started, and midway through, one man dropped out. The two remaining had a three-minute gap between them. And just as they were approaching the finish line, the man lagging behind sprinted past the man in the lead and won by six seconds.
If you would like to learn more about this fun-filled grassroots festival, contact Elliot at www.epicad-ventures.ca. Or you can meet him in person at the event. He won’t be hard to find, he’ll be wearing a long orange sweater. He explained his sister-in-law knitted it for him years ago. The bright garment was initially intended for hunting, but over the years it became Michael’s outerwear at the onset of winter. And the local people always know when the snowy season is over, because he puts it away until the next year. —Kim Casey
Charlie Parr plays at Lutsen on March 23 as part of DuLutsen Music Festival. | SUBMITTED
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 19
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Naniboujou Lodge and Restaurant
— Call for Weekend Packages & Dining to March 15 —
Located on Highway 61 just 14 miles east of Grand Marais
www.naniboujou.com 218.387.2688
Spring Writer’s Workshop Weekend
with author Peter BlauMay 1st & 2nd
Fee includes: 2 nights lodging, all meals, workshop, all taxes & gratuities.
For more information about Peter Blau please visit www.writecreatecommunicate.comContact Naniboujou for reservations.
Space is limited.
Wood Week March 5-9
The North House Folk School is devoting a week to wood-working in its many forms. Courses in-clude bowl carving, spoon carving, wooden bowl turning, carving simple wooden toys, engraving numbers and letters, and more. Students will have the opportunity to vis-it with other carvers and instructors on Saturday and choose from a variety of mini-courses, such as a field trip to the Grand Portage National Monument or a snowshoe hike through the woods. For more info, or to register online, visit www.northhouse.org.
Civil War Experience At Area LibrariesMarch 6, 9
Arn Kind, a member of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment (a reenactment group from Fort Snel-ling) will present an interactive program at several North Shore libraries in March. His presentation will include artifacts, uniforms and equipment that participants can handle, observe and interact with as part of a hands-on experience in living history. Kind’s group is known for its authenticity and has appeared in many documentaries and feature films such as “The Blue and the Gray,” “North & South, Glory,” “Gettysburg,” “Dances With Wolves” and “Gods and Generals.” Kind will present March 6 at the Silver Bay Public Library at 1 p.m. and at the Grand Marais Public Library at 6 p.m. On March 9, Kind will present at the Two Harbors Public Library at 6 p.m. www.arrowhead.lib.mn.us
Sleeping Giant LoppetMarch 7
The Sleeping Giant Loppet is a mass participation ski festival that offers fun for the whole family and challeng-es competitive athletes. The Loppet takes place in the wilderness setting of Sleeping Giant Provincial Park. It features multiple events with distances for skiers of all abilities including an 8-km mini-loppet. If you’re ready to increase your distance or work on your speed, then the rolling 20-km Marie Louise lake loop is for you. The popular 35-km tour is a relaxed event that takes in the scenic vistas and challenging terrain of the storied Burma Trail. For the ultimate challenge, register for the Loppet’s flagship event, the 50-km classic or skate distance. www.sleepinggiantloppet.ca
Trout DerbyMarch 8
Annual Trout Derby Picnic and Fishing Contest starts at the Gunflint Lake boat access. Register there between 9 and 11 a.m. You must be signed in before going fish-ing. Cost is $10 for snowmobile club members and $20 for non-members. Remember to get your trout stamp on your fishing license.
All fish must be in by 1 p.m. Cook out with fish burgers, hot dogs, brats and burgers, with all the extras included. There will be raffles and prizes such as a gas auger, smok-er, and even cash. www.boreal.org/ridgeriders
Classes | Events | Gallery Store
(218) 387-2737www.grandmaraisartcolony.org120 W. 3rd Ave | Grand Marais
Artists-in-ResidenceMary Bergs& Marty Harris
Saturday, March 21 Open Studios | Visit artists at work1 – 3pm
Saturday, March 28Half-day Classes | $159am: Mark Making & Picture Building1pm: Quilting Bee /Artist Salon
Balsam & River Street: 4 Balsam Street, Thunder Bay
We also have a meeting space and wedding registry!
The annual Trout Derby takes place at Gunflint Lake on March 8. | COOK COUNTY RIDGE RIDERS
Wood Week at North House Folk School
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 21
21Dog Days of WinterMarch 8
This just-for-fun event takes place at Trail Center Lodge on the Gunflint Trail. There will be sled dog races, skijoring, a snowman competition, snow sculptures and more. Have some winter fun while winter lasts. See www.dogdaysofwin-ter.info for more information and event times.
Seedy SundayMarch 8
From 1-4 p.m., you can bring non-hy-brid seeds to trade at a seed swap, help at the Baggage Building in Marina Park, Thunder Bay. Seeds not traded by 2 p.m. are put up for sale for $1. Workshops about seed synergy in the community and seed cleaning will take place in the adjacent Mariner’s Hall. Displays by lo-cal gardeners and refreshments are also part of the event. Contact JoAnne at [email protected] for more information.
E.A.T.S. March 12
Sample an array of food from more than 10 different vendors and restaurants while Enriching Academics Through Sus-tenance, better known as the E.A.T.S. event. The event will be located at the Cook County Middle/High School from 6-8 p.m. and will include a silent auction and live music for your enjoyment. Only 150 tickets will be sold at $25, so don’t delay. Tickets are available in the K-12 Cook County Mid-dle/High School office, Java Moose, Blue Water Café or from any CCSDEF board member. www.cookcounty-schools.org
Nipigon Ice FestMarch 13-15
Among climbers, Nipigon has a reputation for its won-derful walls of ice. The town has attracted many accom-plished athletes, including the Bozeman Ice Climbing Competition’s gold medal winner, Kendra Stritch. On the weekend of March 13-15, Nipigon will host its annual Ice Fest. Sterling Ropes has taken an interest in this event, and is sending a fleet of demonstration ropes for the clinics.
The fun begins Friday evening at the Nipigon Legion, located on Railway Street, where everyone is welcome to come down and listen to the Chrome Domes band. The ice climbers will be there to discuss and plan the challeng-
ing routes they are going to climb the following day.
On Saturday morning, the ice climbers will meet at the frozen waterfall across from McCollum’s Reflection Lake Resort, 26 miles north of Nipigon—some of the world’s best ice to traverse and navigate.
Saturday evening, the Legion will host two events. Pro-fessional ice climber, Whit Magro, will speak about his alpine climbing experiences. Adventure writer Dave Pagel will read stories from his recently published book, “Cold Feet: Stories of a Middling Climber.” Dave will present a retrospective of his adventures, ranging from Yosemite big walls and crumbling desert spires to the icy flanks of the Matterhorn and the mythic North Face of the Eiger.
On Sunday, the ice climbers will have more opportuni-ties to train. But this time no clinic or instructors will be available at the site. Greg Martin from Nemo Tents will offer a Winter Camping Clinic.
For more information, contact event coordinator Krya Bremer at [email protected].—Kim Casey
Training - PresenTaTions neTworking - skill enhancemenT
Cook County Emergency Services Conference
Emergency Responders— Save the Date —
Citizen volunteers interested in supporting and participating in the exercise are encouraged to contact Jim Wiinanen,
Cook County Emergency Management Director, 218-387-3059 or [email protected]
April 24 & 25, 2015
March 8, 2015
Dog Days of Winter Free Family Fun
Dog Derbys 8 dog-6 dog-4 dog-kid runs
SkijoringBonfire
Snowman Competion 2 catagories: 12 and under & 12 and over
Hot Dogs & Marshmallows to Roast, Coco
Teepee on the LakeSnow Sculptures
Where? Trail Center Lodge 1/2 way up the Gunflint Trail
For more information: 218-388-2214
dogdaysofwinter.infodogdaysofwinter.net
Johnson Heritage Post Art GalleryOn the Harbor, Grand Marais, MN
Hours: Sun-Mon 1-4 pm,Wed-Sat 10 am-4 pm, Closed Tues115 W. Wisconsin St. · 218-387-2314
our community can enhance health, longevity & happiness.
FREE
EVENT
6th Annual
SAT, APRIL 4
Visit with the Easter Bunny 9 a.m. - NoonPhotos with the Easter Bunny
Refreshments & SnacksRaffle, Dessert Walk
And Much More!
KIDS PLUS - PO Box 63 - Grand Marais, MN 55604
Youth Activities 9 a.m. - NoonAt the Cook County Community Center & 4H Log Cabin
Easter Egg Hunt 10 a.m. Outside the Cook County Community Center
$5 Child, $10 Family
Thank You for Your Support!Dairy Queen , Grand Marais State Bank, Johnson’s Food, North
Shore Care Center, Security State Bank, and Swanson & Heeren, P.C.
Nipigon Ice Fest takes place March 13-15. | SUBMITTED
22 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
22 St. Urho’s Day in FinlandMarch 13-15
The legend of St. Urho says that Urho chased the grass-hoppers out of ancient Finland, thus saving the grape crop and the jobs of Finnish vineyard workers. He did this by uttering the phrase: “Heinäsirkka, heinäsirkka, mene täältä hiiteen” (Grasshopper, grasshopper, go to hell!). Join the town of Finland for a weekend of fun. Friday eve-ning there is a Miss Helmi beauty and talent competition. Saturday there is a pancake breakfast and tug-of-war, fol-lowed by a parade at noon with music, food, crafts and more. www.friendsoffinland.org/st-urhos-day.
DuLutsen North of North Music & Ski Festival March 18-23
A handful of Duluth’s top musicians are joining forc-es for a six-day blowout of great music to accompany the Midwest’s best spring skiing. The line-up includes the Basement Tapes Band on Thursday at 8 p.m., the Hobo Nephews of Uncle Frank on Friday at 9:30 p.m. fol-lowed by Tired Eyes at 11 p.m., Brothers Burn Mountain on Saturday at 3:15 p.m., Sarah Krueger at 4:45 p.m., Woodblind at 9:30 p.m. and Red Mountain at 11 p.m. On Sunday Actual Wolf will play at 3:30 p.m. and on Monday, Charlie Parr will play at 8 p.m. All music is at Papa Charlie’s in Lutsen. See www.lutsen.com for updates to the DuLutsen music schedule.
The Inuit Premiere, fea-turing a large collection of new carvings and prints by Canadian Inuit and Alas-kan artists, opens at noon in Siivis in Duluth with throat singing performanc-es followed by an open-ing reception at Sivertson Gallery in Grand Marais. The reception is from 5-7 p.m. There will be a brief throat singing demonstra-tion and a poetry reading by Taqrilik Partridge. Re-freshments will be served. The Inuit Premiere contin-ues on Saturday beginning at 10 a.m. with throat singing performances at 1 and 3 p.m. At 6 p.m., guest speaker Kate Vasyliw of Dorset Fine Arts will give a presentation on the rich history of Cape Dorset, its people, artists’ cul-ture and the legendary print shop established there. All events are free and open to the public. A throat singing performance will end the weekend. www.sivertson.com
Baked Goods • Organic Produce • Fresh MeatsSandwiches • Groceries • Hardware • Trail Info
Gas-Diesel-Non-ethanol Premium
218-353-73896648 Hwy 1 , Finland, MN 55603
Open 6:00 a.m. - 9 p.m. Daily
Pre-buy St. Urhos T-shirts & Buttons
Here.
FRIDAY NIGHT, MARCH 13TH 6-8pm Miss Helmi Talent and Beauty Contest – various stops around town
8pm-Midnight Music at the West Branch
8:30pm-Midnight Music at the Four Seasons by Tara Nelson and friends
SATURDAY, MARCH 14TH8-10:30 am – Finland MN Historical Society’s Pancake Breakfast, and Craft Vendors at the Clair Nelson Center
Noon Tug of War across the Baptism River
Noon-1 pm Parade through Finland on Highway 1Call Cheri Bischoff at 353-7743 to register for parade.
Refreshments before, during and after the parade Finland Fire and Rescue. Four Seasons Beer and Mojakka Truck
1-3 pm Clair Nelson Center – Craft Fair, Lunch, kids games and polka music
1-4 pm Music at Four Seasons by Tara Nelson and friends
1-5 pm Music at Our Place by The Curry Band
8 pm-Midnight Music at West Branch
8:30 pm-Midnight Music at the Four Seasons by Tara Nelson and friends
SUNDAY, MARCH 15TH4 pm Raffle Ticket Drawing and Door Prizes, West Branch
• Pool with 110 ft. Figure 8 Waterslide• Breakfast Buff et with Waffl e Bar
• Rooms and Suites with Whirlpools and Fireplaces
• High Speed Wireless Internet• Near State Parks and National Forest• Snowmobile Trail Access from Our Lot
150 Mensing Drive Silver Bay, MN 800-634-3444, 218 226-4300
* Pay-at-the-Pump* 24-hour card reader* Speedpass Pumps* No Ethanol in our Super Unleaded* Also Diesel at some locations
today’s way to pay
Shade Trees, Shrubs, Apple Trees, Blueberries,
and Raspberries
Bare Root Plant Sale
1301 Hwy. 61 W, Grand Marais
The Blue Moose is offering bare root stock in the following categories:
OPENING MAY 8th!
For a complete listing and order form go to our website at
www.thebluemoosemn.com or call 218-387-2182.
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 23
23
WOOD WEEKMarch 5-9
• 9 Wood Courses• Saturday Mini-Courses• Saturday Excursions• Community Gatherings
••
- Earn Course Credit- Week-Long or Weekly Options
work study 2015
Work, Study,Accessibility
d e ta i l s n o w a v a i l a b l e
N o r t h H o u s e
2015
Spring/Summer
course dates
opening online
March 1
Sleeping Beauty, Minnesota Ballet March 27-28
The Minnesota Ballet presents Sleeping Beauty at the DECC in Du-luth at 7 p.m. March 27 and 28. Journey back in time to the Middle Ages, when richly-costumed dancers light up a stark stone castle and its drawbridge. The ballet brings to life the story of Princess Rose who pricks her finger on the forbidden spinning wheel. She lies asleep in an enchantment while fairies battle over her fate and a prince struggles to rescue her from the Forest of Thorns. See www.minnesotaballet.org for more info.
Snow Boundaries at Spirit MountainMarch 27-28
Red Bull Snow Boundaries is a 30-mile snowmobile course that mixes elements of snocross, hill climbing, cross country and ice racing. Riders will tackle water skips, log crawls, rock chutes and more, with $100,000 in cash and prizes up for grabs for those who go the distance. The race starts at Duluth’s Spirit Mountain Resort. There are several racing class-es that include women, amateurs and legends (40+ years old). There will be several viewing areas at Spirit Mountain for spectator viewing. See www.redbull.com for more info.
Urban Infill—Art in the Core 9March 28-29
Urban Infill-Art in the Core 9, Thunder Bay’s premiere art/music/performance event, features 18 projects and 350 artists at 18 different locations in the Waterfront District in downtown Thunder Bay. Urban Infill-Art in the Core was developed by the Definitely Superior Art Gallery as a means to revitalize the Thunder Bay’s core down-town by filling empty spaces with new, ex-citing, multi-disciplinary contemporary art for a weekend of celebration. The gallery itself opens three art shows with an open-ing reception from 7 p.m. March 28. Tour guides will be available throughout the evening for tours of the downtown art/performance sites. More than 1,500 at-tended last year. For more info, visit www.definitelysuperior.com
Diane Fueght is one of the exhibitors at Urban Infill-Art in the Core 9. This work is entitled “Consequences.” | SUBMITTED
The Minnesota Ballet performs the classic ballet Sleeping Beauty in Duluth March 27-28. | SUBMITTED
105 W 5th Street, Grand Marais, MN 55604P 218 387 3386 www.cookcountyymca.org
THE HAM 5K RUN & HALF MARATHON REGISTRATION IS OPEN!
If you Register from...
Half Marathon Fee 5K Fee
YMember*
Community Member
YMember*
Community Member
3/1-4/19 $60 $70 $45 $55
4/20-5/2 $70 $80 $50 $55
The Ham Run Half Marathon is a one of a kind race that travels along the scenic Gunflint Trail that winds its way through the Superior National Forest on the edge of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. There are very few places this wild and beautiful and no other race course like it in the world. Run the Trail Less Traveled, register today for the Ham Run.
March 1, SundayEpic Adventures Snowshoe Festival Nipigon www.epicadventures.caLake Superior College Nordic Spirit Ski Race at Spirit Mountain Nordic Center Duluth 14k and 26k races. www.nordicspirit.duluthxc.comSteve Blexrud Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7:30 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.comMoors and McCumber Monday Songwriter Series Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 2, MondayMacro Photography of Wildflowers Workshop Boulder Lake Learning Center Duluth 6-9 p.m. www.boulderlake.orgMoors and McCumber CD Release at Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 4, WednesdayTechnology Open House Grand Marais Public Library 6-8 p.m. www.grandmaraislibrary.org
March 5, ThursdayPianist Steward Goodyear Performs Beethoven’s Emperor with the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 5-9Wood Week at North House Folk School Grand Marais www.northhouse.org
March 5-21Magnus Theatre Presents Doubt: A Parable Thunder Bay www.magnus.on.ca
March 6, FridayMinnesota’s Civil War Experience Presented by Arn Kind of Historical Experiences Silver Bay Public Library at 1 p.m., Grand Marais Public Library at 6 p.m. www.arrowhead.lib.mn.usArt & Ambiance Art Auction Fundraiser for Thunder Bay Art Gallery 7 p.m. (EST) www.theag.caJim & Michelle Miller Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.com
Let it Be A Celebration of the Music of the Beatles Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 7:30 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 7, SaturdaySleeping Giant Loppet Thunder Bay www.sleepinggiantloppet.caTour Duluth Celebration of Cross Country Skiing Hartley Nature Center www.duluthxc.com/tour-duluthDuluth Women’s Expo DECC 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. www.duluthwomensexpo.comSnowshoe Hike from Cove Point Lodge to Beaver Bay Trailhead (3.6 miles). Meet at Beaver Bay Trailhead Parking Lot on Lax Lake Rd. 10 a.m. www.shta.orgMustache March Run Duluth 5 p.m. www.momentumracingevents.comJim McGowan Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.comJoe Paulik Sven & Ole’s Grand Marais 7-9 p.m. www.joepaulik.comThe Big Wu Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 9 p.m.-1 a.m. www.lutsen.com
March 8, SundayTrout Derby on Gunflint Lake Registration starts at 9 a.m. www.boreal.org/ridgeridersDog Days of Winter Trail Center Lodge Gunflint Trail www.dogdaysofwinter.net Seedy Sunday Marina Park Baggage Building 1-4 p.m. Thunder BayNorth Shore Care Center Open House to Celebrate 50th Anniversary Grand Marais 1-4 p.m. Coffee, Punch, Cake, Music and MoreWu Acoustic Family-Apres Ski Acoustic Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 3:30-5:30 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 9, MondayMinnesota’s Civil War Experience Presented by Arn Kind of Historical Experiences Two Harbors Public Library at 6 p.m. www.arrowhead.lib.mn.usRon James Pedal to the Metal Tour Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.comChris Koza of Rogue Valley Monday Songwriter Series Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 11, WednesdayDave Simonett-Spotlight North at Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 12, ThursdayE.A.T.S at ISD 166 Grand Marais 3:30-9 p.m. www.cookcountyschools.orgTimmy Haus Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 12-14Bockfest a German Celebration of Spring Fitger’s Duluth www.fitgers.com
March 13, FridayBundle & Go Irish Duo at Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.comKatie McMahon’s St. Patrick’s Day Party St. Scholastica Duluth 7:30 p.m. www.css.edu
Black River Revue Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 8:30 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 13-15Charles J Futterer Memorial Open Bonspiel Grand Marais www.cookcountycurlingclub.comNipigon Ice FestivalSt. Urho’s Day Celebration in Finland www.friendsoffinland.org/st-urhos-day
March 13-April 29Illuminations: Igniting Imagination Exhibit at Johnson Heritage Post Gallery Grand Marais www.johnsonheritagepost.org
March 14, SaturdaySt. Patrick’s DayIrish Whiskey and Beer Tasting Menu at Bluefin Grille in Tofte 6 p.m. www.bluefinbay.comBundle & Go Irish Duo at Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.comDaylin James and the Pink Cadillac Orchestra in Elvis Forever Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.comBlack River Revue Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 8:30 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.comGear Daddies Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. www.lutsen.comBalsam Basher Fat Bike Race at Korkki Nordic Center 10 a.m. Duluth
March 14-22Haywood Ski Nationals at the Lappe Nordic Ski Centre Thunder Bay www.skinationals2015.com
March 15, SundayLehto & Wright Apres Ski Acoustic Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 3:30-5:30 p.m. www.lutsen.comJim & Michele Miller Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.comPavlo Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 16, MondayArt and Elixir Clyde Iron Works Duluth 5:30-8:30 p.m. www.clydeironworks.comLucy Michelle w/John Munson and Chan Poling Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.comColin James Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 17, TuesdayWild Mountain Thyme Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 6:30-8:30 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.com
March 18-23DuLutsen North of North Music & Ski Festival Lutsen Mountains www.lutsen.com
March 19, ThursdayGordon Thorne Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7:30 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 20, FridayJoe Paulik Big Bear on Poplar Lake Gunflint Trail 6-10 p.m. www.bigbearlodgemn.comJoe Paulik and Friends Big Bear Lodge Gunflint Trail 6-9 p.m. www.joepaulik.comDulutson Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 9 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 20-21Inuit Premiere at Siiviis and Sivertson Galleries (Duluth and Grand Marais) Throat-singing Performances, Guest Speakers www.sivertson.com
March 21, SaturdayDuluth Superior Symphony Orchestra Presents: Runway Duluth DECC 7 p.m. www.dsso.comJoe Paulik Sven & Ole’s Grand Marais 7-9 p.m. www.joepaulik.comMichael Monroe Log Cabin Concert Greater Grand Marais 7 p.m. www.michaelmonroemusic.comGordon Thorne and Chris Gillis Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.comThe Ultimate Symphonic Rock Show with Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.comDulutson Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 9 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 22, SundayTimmy Haus Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.comThe Very Best of Celtic Thunder Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 23, MondayTony Buettner Presentation on Blue Zones at the ACA Grand Marais 6 p.m. www.sawtoothmountainclinic.orgCharlie Parr-Monday Songwriter Series Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 24-29UMD Theatre Presents: Detestable Madness www.d.umn.edu/sfa
March 25, WednesdayBarefoot Wonder-Spotlight North Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.com
March 26, ThursdayCarmina Burana with Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra Thunder Bay Community Auditorium 8 p.m. (EST) www.tbca.com
March 27, FridayMysterious Ways Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 8:30 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 27-28Red Bull Snow Boundaries Spirit Mountain Resort Duluth www.redbull.comMinnesota Ballet Presents Sleeping Beauty at the DECC Duluth 7 p.m. www.minnesotaballet.org
March 28, SaturdayUrban Infill—Art in the Core 9 Definitely Superior Art Gallery Thunder Bay www.definitelysuperior.org Treasures of the Earth Green Art, Goods and Craft Event Unitarian Church 835 W. College Street Duluth 10 a.m.-3 p.m. www.wendyupnorth.comSpring Carnival at Lutsen Mountains www.lutsen.comEric Frost Cascade Lodge Restaurant and Pub 7-9 p.m. www.cascadelodgemn.com
March 29, SundayJames Moors Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 7 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
March 30, MondayJohn Mark Nelson Monday Songwriter Series Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 8-10 p.m. www.lutsen.com
Northern Wilds Calendar of EventsWeekly EventsSundayPresentation at Caribou Highlands Lodge 7 p.m. www.caribouhighlands.comClassical Music Bluefin Grille in Tofte 6-8 p.m. www.bluefinbay.com
MondayLive Music at Bluefin Grille in Tofte 8-10 p.m. www.bluefinbay.com
TuesdayFingerstyle Guitar Workshop with Gordon Thorne at Moondance Coffee House in Lutsen 5:30-7 p.m. www.moondancecoffee.comLive Music at Poplar River Pub in Lutsen 6-8 p.m. www.lutsenresort.comOpen Mic Night with Boyd Blomberg Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 7 p.m. www.lutsen.com
WednesdayOpen Mic Gun Flint Tavern Grand Marais 5-9 p.m. www.gunflinttavern.com
ThursdayEric Frost & Bill Hanson Poplar River Pub in Lutsen 6-8 p.m. www.lutsenresort.comLive Music at Bluefin Grille in Tofte 8-10 p.m. www.bluefinbay.com
Dance Party with DJ Beavstar Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 9 p.m.-1 a.m. www.lutsen.comFirst Nations Night Sky Storytelling Fort William Historical Park Observatory 9:30 p.m. www.fwhp.ca
FridayFlashlight Tours at Glensheen Mansion 7-9 p.m. DuluthTours of the Universe Fort William Historical Park Observatory 9:30 p.m. www.fwhp.caLive Music at Moguls Grille & Tap Room in Lutsen 4-6 p.m. www.caribouhighlands.comLive Music at Bluefin Grille in Tofte 8-10 p.m. www.bluefinbay.comFriday Night Live Music with Timmy Haus Papa Charlie’s Lutsen 9 p.m. www.lutsen.com
SaturdayWorkshop: Celestial Photography Fort William Historical Park Observatory 9:30 p.m. www.fwhp.ca Music by the Fireplace Lutsen Resort 7-10 p.m. www.lutsenresort.comLive Music at Mogul’s Grille & Tap Room in Lutsen 4-6 p.m. www.caribouhighlands.com
26 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
26
BLUE WATER CAFE “The Meeting Place
in Grand Marais”
Open DailyIndividual, groups and family dining.
218-387-1597LOCATED DOWNTOWN
ON THE HARBORIT’S TIME TO GO TO BLUE WATER AND EAT
BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER CHILDREN’S MENUS
Tuesday 50% off burgers • Friday Fish Fry
$888Broasted Chicken Special
8 piece take-out
Buy Any DQ Item GET ANY
DQ Item 1/2 Off
Grand Marais120 W Hwy 61
Grand Marais, MN
Off regularly priced item of equal or lesser value. Not valid with any other coupons or specials. Limit 1 coupon, 1 per customer. Limit 1 per coupon. Void if copied. DQ logo property of AM.DQCorp Minneapolis, MN, 2011. Expires 12/31/2015
Not valid with any other coupons or specials. Limit 1 coupon, 1 per customer. Limit 1 per coupon. Void if copied. DQ logo property of AM.DQCorp Minneapolis, MN, 2011. Expires 12/31/2015
Two Harbors530 7th Ave
Two Harbors, MN
Two Harbors530 7th Ave
Two Harbors, MN
Grand Marais120 W Hwy 61
Grand Marais, MN
Make your ownSPECIAL
Two Harbors
Open Feb. into Oct.530 7th Ave
Two Harbors, MN
Grand Marais
Open Feb. into Nov.120 W Hwy 61
Grand Marais, MN
limited food menu
Red PaddleThe
BistroLocated 43 miles up the Gunflint Trail at Gunflint Lodge
Open Daily 7 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Menu Highlights• Homemade walleye chowder• Big deli style sandwiches• Juicy 1/2 pound hamburgers• Walleye & Wild Rice Quesadillas• Fresh lunch salads
Enjoy outdoor recreation featuring cross country skiing, snowshoeing
and dogsledding.
143 S. Gunflint Lake • Grand Marais, MN 55604
218-388-2296 • 1-800-328-3325
www.gunflint.com
LUNCH AT THE TAVERNGUN FLINT TAVERN ON THE LAKE
DOWNTOWN GRAND MARAIS, MINNESOTA
UNDER $10 MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 11:00 - 4:00
HOT DAGO 9.95We use Grass fed beef and pork sausage for our italian seasoned patty, grill it, toast our baguette, slather with our house marinara and melted mozzarella.**
HOT TURKEY OLD SCHOOL 9.95Organic house roasted turkey served open faced with Tavern mash and turkey gravy, side of cranberry compote
PHILLY STEAK AND CHEESE ON A HOAGIE 9.95Sauteed ribeye strips, green pepper, onions, provolone cheese and horsey sauce.**
MACARONI AND CHEESE WITH KIELBASA 9.95Baked, bubbly and delicious like grandma would do.
CHEDDAR TUNA MELT ON FRENCH 9.95Baked open faced with tomatoes, pickles, celery and onions in our mix .**
BOWL OF SOUP AND ALL YOU CAN EAT SALAD 9.95Your choice of our soup of the day and salad with a chunk of buttered warm bread.
GRILLED SALAMI AND SWISS 8.95On french with honey dijon, tomatoes, onions and greens.**
CAPERED EGG SALAD 8.95On toasted french, open faced.**
** choice of greens w/vinaigrette or ripple chips
HAPPY HOUR MON-THURS 4-7PM$100 off rail drinks, house wines & tap beers.
FREE CHIPS & SALSA IN THE RAVEN PUB $200 OFF APPETIZERS
Add a cup of soup for $4 Add a salad for $4DOLLAR OFF BREWPUB BREWS with your lunch meal.1/2 off select bottles of wine all day Tuesdays
WHAT ELSE?
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 27
27The North Shore DishNew Possibilities for Lighthouse at Emily’s
By Kelsey Roseth
This is bound to be a transformative year for the Lighthouse at Emily’s Restaurant. The Knife River establishment’s future is uncertain: the building that the restaurant is leasing (located where the Scenic Drive and Knife River meet) is for sale and the restaurant is surviving on a month-to-month lease.
However, there is hope for Emily’s. Plans are in the works for the North Shore Scenic Railroad to purchase the property, remodel the restaurant and bring business to the small town. Despite the unknowns the restaurant is facing, its dedicated em-ployees and customer base are optimistic and excited about the possibilities.
Let’s take you back to the beginning. Business was booming for Lighthouse at Emily’s Restaurant late last summer when the establishment unexpectedly announced that it was closing its doors. Emily’s said it was leasing its location and the building’s owner, who lives in the Twin Cities, want-ed to put the property on the market. The restaurant was closed in November and December. Moving to another property was not an option.
During that time, behind-the-scenes dis-cussions were taking place of who would buy the historic building (built in the late 1800s) and what would become of Emily’s. Eager customers wondered if the restaurant would find a way to re-open.
“Everybody was waiting with bated breath,” said Cynthia Lovold, the restau-rant’s general manager.
Then, amidst the uncertainty, Lovold heard some good news from the building’s owner and decided to post it on Facebook.
“I made this quip on Facebook that ‘Santa came early’ and we were going to open again,” said Lovold. “It went crazy!”
The restaurant was granted a month-to-month lease, starting in January, while the owner talked with a potential buyer—the North Shore Scenic Railroad. More than 600 people “liked” Lovold’s Facebook post and it received about 100 comments. More than 130 people shared the post. Through Facebook statistics, Lovold learned that the post reached 21,000 people.
“It was unreal,” she said of the large show of support for the small business.
The restaurant’s re-opening was excel-lent news to its regular customers and
long-time staff, including Ann Hoffmann, a server who has been with the restaurant since the beginning (and even recruited her three children to work with her over the years).
“It’s like family here, with the girls…They’ve always made everyone feel like family,” said Hoffman.
And those “girls” she is referring to are the Lighthouse at Emily’s owners: Lynne Compton, Claire Pierson and Brita Aug, who are sisters, and Andrea Darsow, Compton’s daughter.
About 10 years ago, “the girls” got to-gether and decided to open a restaurant that would pay homage to their grandpar-ents and parents, whose lives were spent fishing the North Shore. The goal was to create a cozy restaurant with a high focus on fresh fish, home-cooked comfort food and family recipes, including the marinara sauce and meatball recipes passed down for generations.
Also, the restaurant’s owners decided early on that close customer relationships were critical to their business, and to be taken very seriously.
“When you come in here it’s kind of like coming into Cheers. Everybody knows who you are,” said Lovold. “It’s like com-ing home.”
So, here is what’s happening with Emi-ly’s currently: the North Shore Scenic Rail-road is working to purchase the property and create a train stop in Knife River. If
the deal goes through, the Lighthouse at Emily’s will continue operating as is.
“It will be a boost to us because part of their thing is not to bring just a train ride, but an experience,” said Lovold.
The railroad wants to build a platform outside the restaurant and develop a few-hour train tour that brings riders from Du-luth to Knife River and back.
Ken Buehler is general manager of the North Shore Scenic Railroad, which pro-vides rides to about 70,000 passengers per year. He has lots of plans for the potential train stop.
“We think it’s a great opportunity,” he said. “It’s a whole new dimension to our business.”
Emily’s Lake Superior baked trout. | KELSEY ROSETH
Weekend music adds to a lively atmosphere. | KELSEY ROSETH
DISH cont. on page 28
28 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
28
Buehler has been researching Disney’s new model for train tourism, which brings passengers to a controlled destination and schedules time apart for both parents and children. Buehler said with a Knife River train stop, parents could eat lunch at Light-
house at Emily’s, then shop Russ Kendall’s Smoke House and the Great! Lakes Candy Kitchen. During that time, railroad super-visors could take the children to the mouth of the Knife River where the children could eat boxed lunches from Emily’s, listen to a geology talk and search for agates. Buehler said this is an opportunity for families to
further enjoy a vacation together.
“My parents would have killed for two hours away from their kids during the 24/7 family vacation,” said Buehler.
The North Shore Scenic Railroad is at-tempting to secure financing, with a goal of having the Knife River train stop ready
this summer. However, there are still a lot of agree-ments to take place and de-tails to work out. And, as the deal is pending, there is a chance it could fall through.
The Lighthouse at Emi-ly’s regular customers and nearly 2,000 Facebook fans are anxiously awaiting good news, hopeful for the future. The restaurant is facing an uncertain spring, but if you stopped in for a bite to eat, you wouldn’t know it. The staff is up-beat, welcoming and su-per-friendly, like nothing has changed.
5461 north shore driveduluth, mn 55804
2 1 8 - 5 2 5 - 6 2 7 4newsceniccafe.com
your winter haven
218-387-1915 401 E. HWY 61, GRAND MARAIS, MN
Sun-Thurs: 11am - 8pmFri & Sat: 11am - 9pm
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Take Out or Dine InExpires 3-31-15
$3 OFF Any Large PIZZA
Take Out or Dine InExpires 3-31-15
Salads, sandwiches, and light entrees.
Live music every Tuesday& Thursday night.
Opens 4 pm weekdays, 11:30 am Sat & Sun
Lakeside DiningDelicious blend of traditional
and contemporary items.Breakfast, lunch & dinner daily.
Classical Music, every Sunday · 6-8 pmAcoustics by the Fireplace, every
Mon., Thurs. & Fri. · 8-10 pm
Local Discount: 10% Food & Drinks
Sun -Sat 8 am - 9 pm
MARCHHOURS
Winter Entertainment
Happy Hour - EVERYDAY 3-5 pm · $1 o� drinks$2 o� all appetizers · ½ price selected bottle of wine
Fresh Fish on the Menu Daily
Save the Date!Spring Food and Wine Lovers
Weekend, May 1st & 2nd
Traditional Irish Boiled Dinner Special and more. Get a free pint of beer on us!
ANNUAL CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY
Tuesday, March 17on theMenu
New Items
South of the BorderC · a · f · e
Breakfast Served All Day Lunch • Homemade Soups
Open 5 am - 2 pm Everyday!
We’re Open Before the Fish Bite!
Located at the stop light in Grand Marais218-387-1505
SurfSide Resort on Lake Superior, Tofte, MN218-663-6877
Spa Open 9am - 6pm Spa 218-663-6888 www.surfsideonsuperior.com
Irish Whisky & Beer Tasting Dinner
Sat, March 14th 6 pm seatingReservations 218-663-6877
Breakfast, Lunch, Afternoon Tea & Sunday Brunch
Open Fri, Sat, Sun 8am - 3pm
Cook Spencer Tikka preps a Beacon burger. | KELSEY ROSETH
DISH cont. from page 27
Local beers are on tap. | KELSEY ROSETH
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 29
29
It is 2015 and theNorth Shore Health Care Foundation is celebrating
its 22nd year.
www.northshorehealthcarefoundation.org
Our mission is to benefit health care for those who live, work and visit in cook county.
For more details on what we do please visit:
By Amy Schmidt, RN
A Danish study of twins concluded a person’s genetics aren’t the only thing de-termining life expectancy. In fact, genetics has relatively little to do with it, contrib-uting only 20 percent to a predicted life span. So, what’s responsible for the other 80 percent? Of course, there are unforeseen circumstances that will factor in, but it’s interesting and encouraging to note that much of a person’s life expectancy is deter-mined by their lifestyle and environment.
In 2004, researcher and explorer, Dan Buettner, teamed up with National Geo-graphic and a group of longevity researchers to identify what populations of the world live longest. They termed these niches of people Blue Zones and found people in these regions were 10 times more likely to reach age 100 than people in the U.S. Upon further research, they discovered these cen-turions shared nine unique characteristics leading to increased longevity. Buettner and his team coined these characteristics The Power 9.
Throughout 2015, Sawtooth Moun-tain Clinic will be exploring these nine concepts. This month, we are focusing on Plant Slant, eating a diet based richly in beans and vegetables. Beans, like soy, lentil, fava and black, are the foundation of most centenarian diets. Meat (usually pork) is eaten only five times per month, on average, and is served in portions of only 3-4 oz., approximately the size of a deck of cards. In other words, beans were often the main dish and meat, if eaten, was more of a side.
Many of the foods in a typical American diet promote excess body fat and as well as excessive glucose (sugar) and insulin in the blood. These, in turn, promote develop-ment of several chronic diseases including Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and high cholesterol, and various forms of cancer.
The good news, however, is that part of
the solution to this reality is quite simple: the mighty bean. Known as perhaps the single most complete food, beans contain high levels of protein, select necessary vi-tamins and minerals as well as fiber and complex carbohydrates, a form of carbohy-drate that allow the body’s blood sugar to increase very slowly, a preferable situation. All things considered, a diet rich in beans helps reduce your risk of developing one of the chronic diseases listed above.
Including beans in your diet is also an ef-ficient and cost effective choice. One cup of cooked beans is equal to one cup of vegeta-bles and a 4-ounce protein serving, helping to meet the USDA’s My Plate recommen-dations. Plus, beans are cheap, especially compared to the price of meat. They’re ver-satile as well. The same pot of beans can be used to make all the meals of a day (think huevos rancheros with refried beans for breakfast, simple bean and avocado tacos for lunch and a hearty bowl of bean and vegetable soup for dinner). Not to mention, because beans increase satiety (the satisfied feeling of being “full”), they go a long way in helping to control appetite.
And, because it would be remiss to not mention this, research has shown that bean consumption doesn’t necessarily con-tribute to an uptick in flatulence. Increase, if any, is diminished within a few weeks of eating legumes regularly.
So, while there’s no guarantee eating beans will make you live longer, it’s a pret-ty good bet that doing so will help you live better in the meantime.
More information, recipes and inspiration can be found at www.beaninstitute.com
If you’re interested in learning more about the controllable factors leading to longevity, consider attending Tony Beut-tner’s presentation on March 23, at the ACA. He will be discussing some of the ways our local community can harness the lessons of the Blue Zones, adding healthy years to our lives.
Where You Bean All My Life?
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30 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
30
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PolyMet
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Northern Wilds Newspaper
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full
PolyMet Mining is closer than ever to opening a modern, safe copper-nickel mine on the Iron Range. It’s a project that, in addition to 360 full-time, middle class mining jobs, will create an estimated 650 spin-off positions supporting plant operations.
To support a new generation of Iron Range families
JOBS
33136_18.indd 1 2/9/15 8:53 AM
Over a half century ago, a few folks comfortable in their own
skin decided they deserved their own credit union.
Ever since, our members have steered clear of banking hot air
to take advantage of better rates and fewer fees
on traditional financial products.
Stop on over (fully clothed, preferably).
Because if you’re up here, you belong here.
Silver Bay | Lutsen | Grand Marais | Grand Portage
www.northshorefcu.org
hans is famous for his scorching saunas and never letting
a banker see him sweat.
www.ParksandTrails.orgThe people who created this park
Northern TrailsA Fashion Designer with Roots in Fur
When you enter Katie Ball’s work space, located near the Canada/US border, you can feel her roots. The room is wood floored and funky, with a variety of co-loured furs, vintage jackets, fashion posters and jewelery acting as decoration. A large window gives her both natural light, and a view directly into the back yard, which happens to be the woods. This workshop is where she diligently—and happily—cre-ates mostly fur-based items for her compa-ny Silver Cedar Studio.
“I love it here, it’s a great space,” she says with a smile, dimples showing.
Ball 32, is a smashing woman, with long, dark hair and expressive eyes. She nearly glows with health. It’s easy to see why she was a successful fashion model for so long. But her background in fur goes well beyond her fashion. She is, at heart, a trapper’s daughter, and has a true connec-tion to one of the most enduring activities in Canada.
“I always helped my Dad with skinning and stretching,” she says. “Working with beavers on the boards. Helping skin the marten. Mostly just helping him pull out the furs. He handled the knife mostly, for safety purposes of course.”
Ball is the daughter of Steve Ball, a long-time trapper in Thunder Bay. Katie is the only child of Ball and his wife Carole, so she got a lot of attention and time at the trappers shack. She says she would “feed the critters” and help with the various traps. But Ball says her love of trapping was mostly about being outdoors and go-ing for a walk on the lake seeing what ani-mals she could see.
“There were a lot of different experienc-es obviously,” she smiles. “A lot of truck rides and good stories.”
As Ball grew older, and became a teen, she grew out of the trapping life a little bit. She started to get in to modeling and what she calls “different aspects of life.” Much of her modeling was for alternative photogra-phers, some of it goth based.
“It made for some interesting experienc-es,” she says.
At some point, Ball moved to Atlanta to model and see if she could handle living there. She found that big city life was not for her. She missed being able to escape to the bush and she missed her family and
Dad’s trap line. She doesn’t regret any-thing, but she knew that an urban-based life was not for her. As she approached 30, she also felt her modeling days were prob-ably over.
“It helped me grow as a person and cre-atively,” she says of that time.
Ball moved back to Thunder Bay where she worked at a veterinary clinic and a pet store.
“Then I decided it was time to get back to my roots,” she says.
Just over two years ago, Ball went to the annual Northwest Fur Trappers Associa-tion’s convention in Thunder Bay. She vis-ited with her Dad and some other trappers
and was checking out the various booths. Ball says she went to say “hi” to Becky Monk, an old friend who is also a trapper. She was looking at the different coloured furs, and carved furs that Becky had on hand, and all the different types and tech-niques they were using with fur.
“As I was talking to her she was asking me about my modeling and how things had been going,” says Ball. “Really just casual conversation, and I mentioned I’d wanted to create my own pieces. I wanted to start creating my own pieces to possibly sell and market. And Becky just asked me this simple question: ‘Have you ever con-sidered fur?’ And I haven’t looked back.”
Ball then took part in a fur sewing pro-
gram the trappers’ association put together and made her first fur hat. She says it was an envelope hat made of possum fur. Ball says possum is known to be difficult to work with, and is not particularly attrac-tive, as it’s stringy and not very full. The hat turned out pretty well, despite being made of possum.
“Becky said if I could sew with that, I could sew anything,” Ball says with a chuckle. “And it was a great learning expe-rience. I still have it.”
When Ball started Silver Cedar Studio, her original goal was to work on fur, but
Katie Ball models a fur hat she designed and sewed. | GORD ELLIS
NORTHERN TRAILS cont. on page 32
32 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
32
WHY GO: In recent years, Black Bay has become one of the hottest yellow perch spots for ice fishing in Ontario. There’s also good lake trout and salm-on fishing for boaters in the summer.
ACCESS: Hurkett is about an hour’s drive north and east of Thunder Bay on the Trans-Canada Highway.
VITALS: Black Bay is the expansive bay located to the east of Sleeping Gi-ant Provincial Park. At about 60,000 hectares, the bay has a surface area of about 150,000 acres. According to Fritz Fischer, fisheries assessment su-pervisor with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, the average depth is between 15 and 20 feet north of Bent Island. South of Bent Island, where fewer dare to venture, there’s depths dropping off into the 100-foot range.
GAME SPECIES PRESENT: Yellow perch, walleye, northern pike, lake trout, Chinook salmon, coho salmon, steelhead trout.
YELLOW PERCH: After a commer-cial fishery for perch and walleye on the bay was closed down in 2003, the perch fishery rebounded fairly dramat-ically, Fischer said. “There was an ini-tial increase until about 2008, a really dramatic increase,” Fischer said. “It’s kind of leveled off from there.” But it’s
leveled off to a place where many an-glers expect to fill their 25-perch limit.
Fischer said most of the better perch action is on the shallower side of Bent Island—to the north.
“There are some jumbos out there, too,” Fischer said. “Some people do lim-it out.”
Light panfish gear will get the job done, along with brightly-colored or gold jigs, tipped with minnows.
BE SAFE: The reason few travel south of Bent Island is because it’s deeper and the ice conditions can be much more variable. “The deeper water is closer to the lake, so it’s often very sketchy out there,” Fischer said. “People don’t want to die.”
Regardless of where you choose to fish on the bay, be careful. “Take all of your normal precautions,” he said. “Have everything you need to be safe on the ice.”
HOUSE RENTALS: Shelter is just about required on Black Bay because of the wind, which can bite even on milder days. So bring your shelter and anchors to deal with the mighty wind. Or rent a fish house from Hamilton Baits in Hurkett. They can be reached at 807-857-1462.
WALLEYE: The walleye fishery has not recovered, and is closed north of Bent Island. “People do fish for them south of Bent Island, and some big fish are caught down there,” Fischer said, who noted the regulations (namely, the possession limits) differ on that portion of Black Bay than from the rest of the province. While the pro-vincial possession limit is six walleye and/or sauger per day (combined), the possession limit is one fish for those with a conservation license tag and two fish for those with a sport fishing license tag.
COME BACK IN THE SUMMER: For whatever reason, few spend any time fishing for yellow perch during the warm water months, Fischer said. Instead, the angling attention shifts to lake trout and salmon for boaters, once the ice disappears from the bay, which typically occurs in late May.
“If you go out for salmon, you will more likely catch more lake trout than salmon,” Fischer said. Most of the salmon that are around are Chi-nook, but there are occasional catches of coho salmon.
BLACK BAY, LAKE SUPERIOR
with the focus on making more typical hats, collar and cuffs. She says that’s the majority of what fur accessories are these days , and what people expect see. But her back-ground in fashion took hold. She began to experiment, and quickly found a groove.
“I’ve kind of ventured off from (the traditional items) now,” she says. “I’m still making those pieces and they are still my bread and butter. But at the same time, I want to start using fur in different ways that people wouldn’t con-sider as normal uses—just to use fur throughout the year rather than when you need it because it’s cold out.”
While Ball is trying to think outside the box with her designing, she is firmly a traditionalist when it comes to the tools of thread. Her main tool is an ancient looking thing called The Bonis Never Stop machine. Ball has three of them in her workshop, and although they look museum ready, she says they are real workhorses.
“Each of them are over 100 years old and they are all from actual furriers, “ she says. “Basically what it does is instead of sewing vertically, you are sewing horizontally. With fur sewing there really is no seam allowance as there is in typical sewing.”
Ball is a bit secretive about her designs, but shows the columnist a few of her pieces. They are brilliant and abso-lutely unique. She has been working hard to prepare for her first fashion show, planned for the trapper’s convention in Thunder Bay, in late February. The plan is to have 32 pieces ready. It’s a tall order for one woman, but she feels ready.
“It’s going to be the unveiling of my pieces that are a little more avante garde and will be different ways of looking at fur,” she says.
You can check out Katie Ball and her work on Facebook at Silver Cedar Studio or www.silvercedarstudio.com.
Katie Ball with a fur hat she designed and at work at one of her 100-year-old Bonis fur sewing machines. | GORD ELLIS
Black Bay
Lake Superior
NORTHERN TRAILS cont. from page 31
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 33
33
When I narrowed down my team to the final 12 dogs, a special two-year old named Ringo didn’t make the final cut. But Matt and I worried that the vet check prior to the race might reveal some inju-ry or illness that we didn’t catch. So we brought Ringo as the alternate: lucky dog number 13.
And as luck would have it, another boy named Sultan had a sore/stiff shoulder that we had not noticed and a vet did. Sul-tan was out and Ringo was in.
Ringo has given me some problems in past races. I didn’t think he’d make it very far in the Beargrease, but he’s still one of our kennel favorites, and I was happy to have him along for as long as he would run.
Hitting the trail was a relief. There is so much anticipation leading up to the race. Once we were finally on the trail I could just let go of all my worries and anticipat-ed problems. Leg one from Two Harbors to Finland was easy—and fast. Too fast. The trail had just been pummeled by over 40 teams in front of me and gravel and rocks stuck up through the snow. I stood on the drag pad the entire run and still clocked in at 10.7 mph. I was aiming for under 10. On some of the steeper downhills, I couldn’t get the brake to dig in deep enough and we screamed downhill until the gradient eased and we slowed a bit.
At the Finland checkpoint, I noticed sev-eral teams had stopped briefly and gone on. My plan was to rest two hours and then continue, so we did.
I left with the team headed for Sawbill about 9:30 p.m. Again, the trail and the team were fast, and I continued braking the entire 30 miles to Sawbill. My speed
came down to under 10 mph and we pulled into the checkpoint sometime after midnight. A team of volunteers helped me to my spot in the woods. This was an un-assisted checkpoint and I set about taking off booties, laying down straw and light-ing up the cooker to heat water and melt snow. Once everyone was fed, I sat with my back against a tree, turned off my head-lamp and waited. An hour later it was time to get everyone ready to go again. Unfortu-nately one of my girls had a swollen wrist and I had to leave her in the vet’s care at the checkpoint.
It was almost 4 a.m. and a bunch of us decided to leave the checkpoint at the same time, but each team had to wait for the
volunteers to help us out of the woods and back to the trail. Somehow I ended up on the waiting list. My team was going crazy by this time. I tried to keep Cha-cha from chewing on the gangline, but by the time volunteers came for us, she had chewed the line down to the bare cable. I was not about to switch out line at that point, so we left.
Snow fell heavily by the time I was on the trail. It seemed to be piercing me in the eyes. The light of my headlamp reflected off of each flake and soon my eyes were
exhausted trying to decipher whether there was an uphill or downhill ahead. By 7 a.m. I was able to turn off my lamp and the world turned to a calm grey.
I was all alone out there. I passed one team on this leg and saw no one else. Just me and the dogs. We continued on down the Lima Grade toward Trail Center and I began to feel very tired. I slipped my hand through a loop of rope on the sled and dozed off. Every time we hit a bump
Northern Wilds managing editor Erin Altemus and her husband, Matt Schmidt, have 26 dogs at their Mush Lake Racing kennels. Erin’s blog chronicles the day-to-day training and adventures of sled dog racing.
MUSH LAKE RACING DOG BLOG
Beargrease RecapStats: 4th place (13 minutes behind 3rd place, 14 minutes in front of 5th place).
38 hours and 47 minutes total run time; 24 hours and 2 minutes total rest time.Average Speed 8.2 mph. Cumulative Race Miles 319.
www.ExploretheGunflint.com800-346-2203
Check live webcam for updates on ski trail conditions and snow totals
Lucky bib 16. | ERIN ALTEMUS
The mushers behind Mush Lake Racing. | SUBMITTED
MUSH LAKE cont. on page 34
34 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
34(which was probably every few seconds), I’d jerk upright, and then doze off again. This continued for some time—me bobbling around on the runners, the dogs pushing on. By the time we reached Trail Center I actually felt some-what refreshed.
I took the trail one leg at a time. My personal motto became: “Don’t count your finish line until you’ve crossed it.” Meaning, never get overconfident. When the race is go-ing well, great, but that doesn’t mean you’ll finish—that’s what I kept telling myself.
Once at Trail Center, I thought about the leg ahead, the “loop to nowhere” as mushers call it. When I left Trail Center, I had a moment of uncertainty, worried my dogs wouldn’t take the right trail like in the Mail Run. Another musher had left just ahead of me and as I approached his team, which had stalled on the trail, I thought mine would simply go around the side and pass. I think my leader Judy saw the trail going underneath his dogs and simply want-ed to follow the trail, so she did, right through the middle of his team. Luckily, he helped me untangle the two teams and go on by and down the lake.
The trail heads from Trail Center toward Gunflint Lake, careening down huge hills and around 180-degree turns. When we reached Loon Lake, by then in the dark on Mon-day early evening, we saw a head lamp in the distance and my dogs picked up speed until we finally passed that team on the other side of the lake. But by the time we neared Devil’s Track, one of my dogs, Nancy, wasn’t pulling and I finally put her in the sled bag to ride out the final 10 miles of that leg.
At Devil’s Track, I was over half-way done on the trail. I left Nancy behind. She had gotten a sore elbow and wrists after the technical stretches of trail on the loop to no-where. With 10 dogs I headed back to Sawbill.
As the sun rose Tuesday morning, the team slowed down. With a smaller and more tired team, the hills felt bigger. I underestimated our run time for the leg by at least an hour. At Sawbill, Matt asked me if Jenny Greger (another rookie in the race with a strong team) and I had been playing leap frog. “I never saw her,” I told him. Turns out she had been gaining on me and came in two minutes behind me. She kept going right out of Sawbill and on to Finland. I stopped and rested my team for 3.5 hours.
I left Sawbill with nine dogs, and here is where my rookie boy, Ringo comes back into the spotlight. I was surprised that he was still part of the team, and as we left the checkpoint and started up the Heartbreak Hill grade, Ringo suddenly started yipping. It was more of a howl and his whole body convulsed as he single-doggedly started pulling everyone upward. That whole run to Fin-land, every time we approached an intersection or needed a burst of energy up hill, he rallied the team. There was a cohesiveness about the team in that leg; everyone just understood what they were supposed to do—they gelled. It was the best run of the race.
We pulled into Finland, took the team off to the side,
watered and snacked them. I ran into the bathroom, grabbed dry socks and readied the team to leave. I left Gabby behind there. I could just tell that she had done enough.
The hills leaving Finland must be some of the steepest and longest on the trail. A few miles out of the check-point, I stopped to check on a dog, and Colleen Wallin passed me. This is the point in the race where everyone’s race strategies converge. I knew Colleen and I had been running at a similar pace, and I could see that now. Frank Moe had left Finland not long before me, and about half-way to Two Harbors, Colleen and I (who had been leap frogging and running together a bit) passed him.
At Two Harbors I took a two-hour nap. I had a leave time of 1:19 a.m. and Colleen was only two minutes ahead of me. Frank was not far behind and Jenny Greger was just behind him. The first- and second-place runners, Nathan Schroeder and Ryan Anderson, were two hours ahead of all of us, so this final run would determine 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th place for the four of us.
But just when its going well, things fall apart—it had been this way for almost 300 miles. I was down to four males and two females and I couldn’t run any two males side-by-side. Well, I thought I could, which is why two of them got into a tussle in the checkpoint. Then Matt tried to lead my team to the left on the trail (back to Finland) and we’re all screaming at him to go right. By the time I left the checkpoint, I had lost an additional two minutes. And the dog I had put in lead next to my veteran leader Beezus, was not going to work. I stopped and tried Ringo.
This could be the point in the story where I tell you that Ringo stepped it up and led us to the finish, but he did not. He looked back at me like “I have absolutely no desire to be in lead.” What I needed was an extra piece of gangline, but Matt had scavenged through my sled, eliminating any extra weight so I could get to the finish faster. I started stringing extra necklines together until I had a spot for a single dog just behind the leader and then I took the cord off my mittens and used it to tie Judy back in lead next to Beezus. Finally, we were moving down the trail.
At that point, I didn’t expect to catch Colleen. I just wanted to stay in fourth place. “Don’t count your finish line...” I kept telling myself.
The hills were relentless the entire way. Somewhere we took a wrong turn and ended up on a plowed road, but we managed to find our way back to the trail. At one point, I thought I was close to the finish and got really emotional, just so happy to be there with the team and impressed with how amazing these six dogs were that I had with me. But then the hills kept coming. Finally, we pulled into Billy’s Bar on the outskirts of Duluth just after 6 a.m. And wouldn’t you know that our oldest dog, Judy Blume, who has been living on our couch for the past eight months, only getting off of it to train for the races, and our young-est dog, Ringo, who we thought would only last two or three legs, were among the six finishers.
Will I do it again? Probably. Though a 300-mile race without so many hills looks awfully tempting. But hills, like pain, are easy to forget.
Ringo howls to go at the start of the Beargrease. He finishes the race three days later. | KRIS AUSLAND
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MUSH LAKE cont. from page 33
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 35
35Strange Tales
By Elle Andra-Warner
The Congdons of Glensheen Historic Estate
What does a history-making wooden yacht, a Lake Superior shipwreck, and an 80,000-square-foot timber-and-stone castle in the state of Washington have to do with Duluth’s Glensheen Historic Estate and its original owners, Chester and Clara Cong-don? Well, it seems, lots.
Chester Adgate Congdon, son of a Meth-odist pastor, was a poor Minnesota law-yer who had only $9.46 cash in his pocket when he was courting schoolteacher Clara Hesperia Bannister. However, his fortunes began to change after becoming the assis-tant U.S. Attorney for the district of Min-nesota. In 1881, he and Clara married, moved to St. Paul and in 1892, to Duluth where Congdon became a wealthy man, a mining magnate owning dozens of com-panies. By 1905, when he commissioned a St. Paul architect to design a family home for his wife and children, Congdon was the second richest man in Minnesota, after the Ontario-born railway baron in St. Paul, James J. Hill.
The 39-room mansion on 22 acres along Lake Superior became known as Glen-sheen. A Jacobean-style manor home, it was surrounded by extensive formal gar-dens, a gardener’s cottage, carriage house and stream. Construction costs were $854,000 (more than $21 million today). The family moved into Glensheen in No-vember 1908.
The early 1900s was an era where the American wealthy liked to own yachts to entertain friends by cruising the Great Lakes, and Chester Congdon was no ex-ception. In 1911, he had his yacht Hespe-ria built at the Bath Marine Construction Company in Bath, Maine. It was a 53 by 12 wood design with a raised deck and powered by a four-stroke, six-cycle internal combustion gas engine. The yacht was de-signed by New York naval architect Morris Whitaker, a prominent boat builder who built many cruisers for use on the Great Lakes and was the first person to put a die-sel engine in a “motor launch.”
To accommodate Hesperia (named after his wife Clara’s middle name), Congdon built a fancy stone boathouse and L-shaped pier at Glensheen that was the largest pri-vate pier on Lake Superior. Over time, the waves have pushed rocks to make the boat-house landlocked and also took away the L shape of the pier.
To get the Hesperia from Maine to Duluth, Clara Congdon’s nephew Alfred
Bannister and two friends went to New York in 1911 to bring the yacht through the Great Lakes, starting from the Hudson River. Hesperia made history as the first privately-owned motorized vehicle to pass through the Soo locks and her voyage was featured in the Motor Boat magazine.
Five years after it was built, the Hespe-ria was destroyed by fire on June 25, 1916 during a refueling accident (no one was hurt), leaving only the hull, which was lat-er repaired and sold for $300.
In 1914, construction began on another home for Congdon, this time a mammoth 30,000-square-foot summer residence on 900-acres in Yakima, Wash. Known as Congdon Castle, it has been described as “a symphony in rough-hewn timbers and stone” with more than 80 rooms, including 18 bedrooms. Completed in 1916 and now called Westhome, it remains in the Cong-don family.
And what about the shipwreck con-nection? In 1912, the 532-foot steel hulk freighter Salt Lake City (built in 1907 by the Chicago Ship Building Co.) was re-named by its new owners, the Chester A. Congdon after Duluth’s Chester Cong-don. Seven years later on Nov. 6, 1918, the Congdon with cargo of 380,000 bushels of
wheat, departed Fort William (now Thun-der Bay), and ran aground in heavy fog at the northeast end of Isle Royale on Canoe Rocks, a rock outcropping now called Congdon Shoal. The crew was all rescued, while only 20 percent of her cargo was sal-vaged. Another storm two days later broke the freighter in two and today, the wreck-age sits in 50-200 feet of water with the bow section on the south side of reef and stern on the north side. At the time, the Congdon was Lake Superior’s first ship-wreck to be valued at $1.5 million with cargo. In 1984, the shipwreck was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Chester Congdon, born June 12, 1853 in Rochester, N.Y., died unexpectedly on Nov. 21, 1916. Clara, born on April 29, 1854 in San Francisco, died on July 7, 1950 at age 96.
The last surviving of the Congdon chil-dren, Elisabeth (born 1894) continued to live at Glensheen until she and her nurse Velma Peitila were brutally murdered on June 27, 1977. Though never married, Elisa-beth had adopted two daughters, Marjorie and Jennifer. Elisabeth’s son-in-law Roger Caldwell was convicted of the two mur-ders; her daughter Marjorie Caldwell was acquitted but later ended up in jail for oth-er crimes.
Glensheen, which had been willed to University of Minnesota, opened to the public as a museum on July 28, 1979, and continues to be one of Duluth’s top attractions.
“The entire Congdon family, including my grandmother, Elisabeth Mannering Congdon, enjoyed the Hesperia and they often entertained friends on the raised deck as they sailed on Lake Superior.”—Suzanne Congdon LeRoy, great-granddaughter of Chester and Clara Congdon and author of the true story of Elisabeth Mannering Congdon, Nightingale: A Memoir of Murder, Madness and the Messenger of Spring (2014).
The Heseria was built in Maine in 1911.
36 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
36northern sky
MARCH 2015By Deane Morrison—MINNESOTA STARWATCH
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Electric Shields & AccessoriesSnowmobile Rentals
After a long winter, March makes amends with the spring equinox and planet shows in both morning and evening skies.
The month opens with Venus floating above Mars in the west, over the sunset horizon. All month long, the planets pull farther apart. On the 21st, look an hour after sundown to see Mars and a hair-thin crescent moon form a reclining semicolon. The next night, the waxing crescent repeats the performance with Venus.
In the east and south, Jupiter outshines even Sirius, the brightest of stars. Following Jupiter across the sky are the stars of Leo, led by the backwards question mark called the Sickle, which outlines the lion’s head and is anchored by bright Regulus. Bringing up the rear is a triangle of stars marking the hindquarters and tail.
If you’re an early riser, don’t miss the chance to spot Sat-urn in the claws of Scorpius an hour or two before dawn. On the 12th, a waning moon dangles next to the ringed planet as it sits atop a line of starry claws facing Antares,
the scorpion’s red heart. Viewing Saturn is best after the 17th or 18th, when no moon interferes.
March’s full Worm Moon, named for the reappearance of earthworms in the softening earth, shines the night of the 5th. This moon has also been called the Sap Moon, for the running of the maple sap beloved of pancake eaters everywhere. It’s the smallest full moon of 2015, thanks to falling on the same day that it reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its monthly orbit.
The sun crosses the equator at 5:45 p.m. CDT on the 20th. This is the moment of the vernal equinox, when Earth is lighted from pole to pole and the northern spring begins. In the days around the spring equinox, the sun and its warmth also move most rapidly north, stirring up the famous March winds.
The University of Minnesota offers public viewings of the night sky at its Duluth campus. For more information and viewing sched-ules, see the Marshall W. Alworth Planetarium at www.d.umn.edu/planet
Jim Miller, A.L.A. Certified Senior Lighting Designer On-site lighting design and delivery • 30+ years experience
Bringing the beauty, function and art of great lighting to your new construction or remodel.
The quality and service you can’t find at a discount store.Specializing in LED technology! “We make lighting fun.”
Family Owned Since 1947
218-475-2330
Money Exchange
Parcel PickupDuty-Free Liquor
10,000 U.S. and Canadian Souvenirs
Gas
www.RydensBorderStore.com
Open 7 days a week(218) 388-2265 • 372 Hungry Jack Road www.HungryJackLodge.com
Newly Constructed
Lodge
• Lakeside Cabins •• Snowmobile Rentals •
• 24-Hour Gas •
• Grill • Open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Dec 26 - End-of-March
Located Midpoint on the Gunflint Trail
All Trails Lead to
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 37
37
Send in your ballot or fill one out online at:
www.NorthernWilds.com
Best Dining in theNorthern Wilds
Vote for your favorite restaurants for a chance to win a $50 gift certificate.Do you have a favorite place to get a beer, to eat breakfast or take the kids for dinner? We want to know and so do our area restaurants. The restaurants you vote for must be located in the Northern Wilds coverage area, which includes the North Shore communities between Duluth and Nipigon, including Finland, the Gunflint Trail, and the outlying communities of Thunder Bay. Do not choose the same restaurant in more than three categories. If you do, your entire ballot will be disqualified. Only one ballot per person. You can mail in your ballot, drop it off at our office or vote online at www.northernwilds.com. Voting ends March 31, 2015. Look for the results in the May issue of Northern Wilds.
And which restaurant is “worth the drive?” _____________________________________
Name
City
Phone
Email
Mail this ballot to: Northern Wilds Media, Inc. P.O. Box 26, Grand Marais, MN 55604
or Vote online at www.NorthernWilds.com
OFFICIAL BALLOTOfficial Ballot
Which Restauranthas the best...
Only one ballot per person.
2015
38 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
38
By Linden FiggieLiving in a yurt requires a generous amount of creativi-
ty, flexibility, and certainly an adventurous spirit. Making it home requires even more.
Since summer 2011, Ian and Rachel Andrus have lived year-round in a yurt they built themselves, and the jour-ney has been nothing short of rewarding.
A yurt is a dome-shaped, one-room shelter, typically made with a polyester or vinyl cover, a wood stove for heating, and a single entrance. The nomadic structure of a yurt, it’s functional mobility, and low cost appealed to Ian and Rachel.
Initially, the couple’s journey into yurt dwelling began with off-the-grid living.
“We were interested in an off-the-grid cabin, to experi-ence that lifestyle of hauling water and chopping wood,” Ian said, “and it was really hard to find a place that was reasonably priced.”
Ian and Rachel eventually became caretakers for a friend’s land and lived in a small cabin on their proper-ty. Their utility and living expenses were low and that allowed them to save money for future land of their own. During the same time, Ian interned at the North House Folk School where he was exposed to numerous traditional northern crafts. This experience, along with living in a re-mote setting, grew his and Rachel’s interest in yurt living.
Ian and Rachel didn’t have a grand plan for their transi-tion into yurt life. Their reasons were impromptu.
“We just kind of went for it,” Ian said. “You can’t really think too much about it.”
Though Rachel grew up on a park ranger residence and was accustomed to backcountry camping and travel, the yurt experience was brand new.
“I had no expectations,” Rachel said. “I was ready for an adventure.”
Ian began working as the yurt-building instructor for the North House following his internship and was able to use the expertise of fellow instructors and the shop space for sewing the canvas and general construction.
Building the yurt was intermittent over a few months. Ian harvested the ceiling poles from his parents’ property and constructed the lattice slats out of black ash. He used a one-inch layer of breathable polyester batting material for the outer covering, which allows for moisture control.
Within its polyester layer, the yurt is insulated with four layers of wool-blend blankets, which were originally used by a farmer to cover and protect pumpkins from frost.
Ian described the yurt structure in anatomical sections—the poles, the skeleton; the outer canvas, the skin; and the insulation—the muscle, the key to it all.
“The muscle of the insulation is the weight that holds ev-erything together,” Ian said. “Nothing flaps, it’s just solid.”
Rachel agrees. “We’ve been through some crazy storms,” she said. “In the summer, wind howling, I was always afraid the roof was going to collapse or the walls were going to cave … but it doesn’t. It’s just really solid. I totally believe in the yurt structure.”
Ian and Rachel put thoughtful consideration into their yurt design and used as many all-natural materials as possible.
“In the beginning we really wanted to go with a natural fabric,” Ian said, “but the longevity of cotton is not very long, so we opted for polyester.”
Ian and Rachel were strategic in their heating design, too. Instead of positioning the wood stove on the side of the yurt, as most commercial yurts have it, they put the stove in the center with the pipe going up through the dome.
“Having the stove in the center is key,” Ian said.
“If you have your stove over on the side of the wall,” Rachel added, “all your heat is only in that one tiny space.”
Overtime, Ian and Rachel have made improvements. A solar panel fuels a 7-volt battery that they use to charge their phones and laptop and to run a string of small LED lights.
“We started with an oil lamp and candles,” Rachel said. “We moved through that slowly.”
Ian and Rachel have learned a lot about efficiency and creativity.
“It’s so fun to think of all the ways to save space,” Rachel said. “It’s key to have the bed elevated pretty high. It keeps us sleeping warm and gives us a ton of storage.”
One favorite feature is the water pump, which was de-signed for sailboats.
“When you’re hauling water,” Ian said, “you want to be as efficient as you can with it.”
Both Ian and Rachel find the benefits of the yurt to far outweigh the challenges.
“A lot of people think it’s a hardship,” Ian said, “but it allows you to be creative with how you use these little things and how you can make things more efficient over time.”
With the birth of their first child, Norah, just under a year ago, Ian and Rachel have had to be even more creative with use of their space. “Norah just requires more stuff,” Rachel said, “And we keep having to move things up high-er and higher. We’re just running out of space.”
Tucked snuggly away in the woods, the handmade yurt has flourished into a homestead. A trail winds from the driveway through the woods to their front door. Addi-tional paths lead to their wood shed, greenhouse, and a second yurt.
“It’s freeing in a lot of ways,” Rachel said. “It was easy; it was cheap; it was fun to build. It was fun to have done it all ourselves.”
Apart from the function and creative stimulation, Ian and Rachel have found a deeper connection with nature and the world around them.
“We can hear a raven’s wings beating if it flies over-head,” Rachel said, “The wind going through the trees, the wolves howling, owls hooting—it’s great to be able to hear.”
Ian and Rachel’s journey from camping as kids to living in cabins and now a yurt has made them think about what is important in the places they exist.
“There’s a part of me that likes it when people think we live in an interesting way. It makes me feel like I’m on the right track,” Ian said. “I don’t want to just do what every-body else is doing. I want it to be unique and interesting and creative and challenging and all that. That’s what I want my life to be, an interesting story.”
Ian and Rachel have relocated the yurt a number of times, from the North House courtyard to friends’ prop-erty, to one piece of land to another. Its nomadic function and sound structure have allowed them to explore and discover what values they hope to one day permanently deep-root into a home.
Nomadic Dwelling: Making a Yurt a Home
Ian and Rachel Andrus stand with their baby, Norah, in front of their yurt. | SUBMITTED
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 39
39
$309,9003 br 1400 sq.ft. red B.C. cedar bungalow built in 1993 with
cathedral ceilings & wood f/p in living rm. Open concept kit./dining/living rm. with windows facing lake & patio doors to
600’ Lake Superior Shoreline, the closest property to Isle Royal, can see Rock of Ages Lighthouse beacon. Minutes across the border. Ultimate privacy; year-round cabin with power, phone, Internet, drilled well. Call or email for details: 218-388-9413 [email protected].
FOR SALE: Remote cabin on Kemo Lake north of Grand Marais MN. 16 acres and 500 ft. shoreline. Mixed timber. Moose, deer, grouse, and great lake trout fishing. 20 x 24 furnished cabin, shed, 14' Lund boat w/ 7.5 HP Evinrude motor. A great place to relax and enjoy nature. $229,000 218-387-1926
Your Wilderness RetreatNeed Help Remodeling?
www.NaceHagemannConstruction.com
218-388-2231Insured Licensed Contractor
BC#20630518
MALCOLM CLARK, Broker
640 Beverly Street, Thunder Bay, Ontario, P7B 0B5 Canada
Little Trout Bay, 20 minutes north of the Minnesota/Ontario border, 3 large estate-sized lots, very sheltered with southern exposure. Tremendous views. Power and telephone available. Priced beginning at $199,000 USD
LAKE SUPERIOR LOTS
New Levels of Service
PIE ISLAND2 miles of beach front on Lake Superior
facing south. Also a 1/2 mile of frontage on Perch Lake. Escarpments, hiking trails, great Lake Superior fish-ing and boating. Ideal for resort development or your own private getaway. 358 acres. All amenities nearby. $985,000 USD
HARRY LAKE LODGEThe ultimate fly-in fishing resort. To-tally outfitted with
all the modern conveniences. 80 miles north of Thunder Bay. Incredible fishing! Main lodge, beach house with sauna and hot tub. Diesel generator, fish cleaning house, boats, motors. Harry Lake is a very large lake with no road access and Harry Lake resort is the only improve-ment. $295,000 CDN
NICOL ISLANDROSSPORT
Tremen-dous Lake Superior building
sites. Lakefront and interior lots for sale with docking facilities. Causeway opened year round. Power and phone. Starting at $55,000 CDN
2 well built log homes. Each with log sauna buildings, sand beaches, sheltered mooring area, more building sites and southern views of Scotch Lake. Surrounded by crown land and largest of only a few private parcels on this huge lake. Very secluded and private. Great fishing/hunting retreat. $990,000 USD
UPPER SCOTCH LAKE6 LAKE SUPERIOR ISLANDS
2 to 95 acres. Starting at
$90,000 USD
LOT 18 KAM RIVER
Almost 400 feet on the north side of the Kam River with southern exposure. total of 12.36 acres - all high ground. $248,000 CDN
NORTHERN LIGHTS LAKE ISLANDExceptional log home on over 2 acres with over 500 ft of shoreline. Cathedral ceilings, beautiful stone fireplace, guest camp, boathouse, large deck and more. Great views! $239,000 CDN
STUART LOCATIONHuge developable escarpments with tremendous, breathtaking views of Lake Superior, islands and Isle Royal Michigan. Property includes frontage on 2 inland lakes, CrystalLake, 1 mile frontage and Lake Lenore - 2.5 miles of frontage. Over 6,000 acres. Road system throughout the property. A great variety of animal and pland life. A tremendous investment opportu-nity. $3,500,000 USD
RETAILLake or Pond? Aeration is your first step toward improved water quality. Complete Systems: $189 - $369!!! WATERFALL? We have Super Hi Efficiency water pumps that can move up to 17,000 Gallons per Hour!! $ave Thousands in electricity costs! www.fishpondaerator.com (608) 254-2735
5000
$698.95!
LAND OWNERS
classifieds Hovland Dream Home on 10 Acres with Creek!
Newly constructed, completely finished, two giant bedrooms, in-floor heat,
Terry R. Backlund Broker/OwnerLori A. Backlund Real Estate Agent
6X raven FeatHer rd. Grand Marais6.65 acres with an incredible Lake Superior view. Close to town.MLS# 6003012 Price: $135,0001846 caMp 20 rd. HovLand, Mn 40 wooded acres priced to sell.MLS# 6002984 Price: $32,000
2.29X e. Hwy. 61, Grand MaraisWooded 2.29 acre lot with stubbed in drive and close to town.MLS# 6002332 Price: $45,9001846a caMp 20 rd. HovLand20 wooded acres priced to sell.MLS# 6002983 Price: $16,000
310XXX soderBerG Ln. BircH Lake202 ft. lake shore lot on 5 acres. Driveway and build site.MLS# 6002970 Price: $149,9001.57X e. Hwy. 61, Grand Marais Nice 1.57 acre residential lot close to town.MLS#6002333 Price: $35,900
474X soutH sHore dr., Grand MaraisVery nice 5 acre parcel near Devil’s Track abuts Fed land.MLS# 6002390 Price: $42,500
253 soutH sHore deviL’s track Lake
4 Bedroom 2 Bath 3 Car Garagewith Guest Cottage on 216 ft. of
lake shore.MLS# 6002643 Price: $384,900
7412 GunFLint traiL Grand Marais
16 x 12 log cabin on five acres. Handy mid trail location.
MLS# 6002855 Price: $75,000
216 soderBerG Lane BircH Lk GunFLint traiL
Very private cabin. One bedroom with loft. Deck and dock. Garage. 300 ft
lakeshore on 7.63 acres.MLS# 6002859 Price: $297,500
110 w. 5tH ave. Grand Marais
3 Bedroom 2 Bath. Being sold fully furnished. Would make a fabulous
home or income property.MLS# 6003308 Price: $227,500
Drop dead gorgeous Lindal Cedar home with substantial upgrades throughout entire home
Owner will complete kitchen, flooring throughout and master bath to buyer suit - or new owner can
complete based on own design criteria.
Lutsen 24 Lodge LaneMLS#6002521 $254,900
Extremely well maintained 3 bedroom 2 bath Lutsen Log Lodge located on Ski Hill Road
in Lutsen. Newly updated 3 season enclosed porch. Nicely appointed home with vaulted ceilings, master bedroom with private bath and jetted tub. Open main level floor plan
with great room, kitchen and fireplace. Private Association with carefully crafted declarations for your benefit. Vacation Rentals and private management available or perfect for second
home or permanent residence.
Grand Marais 661 Pike Lake RdMLS#30752 $219,900
Fantastic package! 37 acres on Pike Lake Rd. 2 bdrm 2 bath and 1 car garage. Only 8 miles to
town but pure private.Direct access to Superior Hiking Trail and Cascade River.
REDUCED
Lutsen 505 Poplar River RdMLS#6002439 $419,000The Poplar River Condominiums are Lutsen Resorts most flexible luxury accommodations. These three bedroom units offer outstanding views of Lake Superior. Nestled on 20 acres of land across the Poplar River from the Main Lodge, the site offers privacy with convenient access to all Lutsen Resort Amenities and activities.
Grand Marais 185 N Pike Lake RdMLS#6003124 $449,900
Enjoy the solitude on nearly 600 feet of meandering shoreline along the north side of Pike Lake. Located
at the end of North Pike Lake Road this is literally the last private piece of land on this part of the lake. This
home was built in 1993 and is used year round as a prime vacation spot. The property boasts 1 bedroom
plus a loft that serves as additional sleeping space. Full kitchen and ¾ bathroom round out the amenities. A
woodstove will keep you toasty warm on winter nights. For the summer there is a large lake facing deck. Dock and fire ring round out the amenities along the shore.
REDUCED
Grand Marais 241 Mile O Pine RdMLS#6003228 $390,500
Gunflint Lake 3 Season Home on 200’ of prime frontage, 3 BR, 1 ¾ baths, big rock fireplace, 11
big picture windows, guest cabin, boat dock, well and approved septic. Living and dining area is nicely paneled with a paneled ceiling. Excellent
Lake and woods views with 11 picture windows. The porch wraps two sides of the house and is
6” wide. The house comes with most furnishings including a big moose head, bearskin rug and flint musket to complete the North woods life. Enjoy
days by the lake on a new aluminum dock.
NEW LISTING Lutsen 48 County Road 34
MLS #6003287 $999,000It’s unusual or likely simply unavailable to find nearly 850’ of Lake Superior shoreline spread over 13 acres in the heart of Lutsen. This property is accompanied by a three bedroom lake home that was built for the ages. The lake home is timeless with respect to design and architecture. Three bedrooms, one bath with a Great Room and wood fire place. Recent updates to kitchen and bathroom. Sincerely, likely some of the best views on the entire north shore with moderate stair access to ledge rock shoreline. Property is currently examining land considerations for Administration Sub-Division. Application is in process showing the possibility for one or two additional shoreline lots with back lots for protection. Proposed land considerations attached.
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 43
43Jonvick Creek Beautiful home sites in mature Maple, Spruce and Birch forest. $29,500-54,900xxx Sawbill Trail 120 Acres located up the Saw-bill Trail. Large Maples MLS# 27551 $199,900xxx Mountain Ash Ln Cedar covered hillside overlooking Lake Superior in Lutsen.
MLS#6002389 $179,900xxx Leveaux Ridge 3.45 acres Birch Forest, pines, Lake Superior View MLS#6002548 OUTSTANDING VALUE! $29,500
Johannes Toftey Homestead Sites Beautiful hillside lots in Tofte with Lake Superior and Carlton Peak views. $35,750-55,000
Tofte Airport Home Sites Located between Lut-sen and Tofte. Convenient Location with outstand-ing values. $24,750-33,000
Tait Pines Nestled hillside adjacent to Tait Lake in Lutsen, just 13 miles up the Caribou Trail. $37,950-$57,750Caribou Hillside Outstanding homesites tucked along the hillside of Caribou Lake. $52,250-$126,500
342 Rd Schroeder 160 acres covered in Maples, Birch, and other mixed forest. Can be sold as par-cels. MLS#6000143 $199,000
GreaT VacanT Land VaLUeS
Lutsen real estate Group · Office: 218-663-7834· Toll Free: 866-663-7750 · www.lutsenrealestategroup.com
Lutsen Sea VillasThe Lutsen Sea Villas have withstood the test of time. Nowhere else is there a shoreline like this on the entire coast of Lake Superior. The owner’s and management company have upheld excellent standards and quality while maintaining the unique integrity of this original seaside coastal development, and they are well run by Lutsen Resort.
H5 Sea Villa MLS#6000600 $185,000G2 Sea Villa MLS#6002909 $159,000G5 Sea Villa MLS#6002092 $172,000
D4 Sea Villa MLS#6002267 $159,000 D3 Sea Villa MLS#6002884 $164,000
Grand Marais 1817 W Hwy 61 MLS#6002458 $139,900Hwy 61 West from Grand Marais, located close to town on a private wooded lot. This home has 4 bedrooms and plenty of options for a new owner to add sweat equity. Property may be divisible. Mix of residential and commercial zoning.
Grand Marais 517 S Gunflint LakeMLS#6000932 $599,000
Gunflint Lake home on nearly 12 acres of forest land with 619’ of private shoreline on Gunflint Lake. Two stall detached garage,
Well-built and well maintained 2 bedroom 2 bath Lake Superior Home near Black Point on Cascade Beach Road in Lutsen. Wood burning fireplace with living, dining and
kitchen combined with orientation toward lake and very nice views. Separate year-
round sun room and third room study. Main level laundry with separate study/craft room
or 3rd bedroom option.
Hovland 90 Stonegate Rd MLS#6002703 $699,000 This home blends pure quality restating an original Lake Superior homestead with a Clarence Kemp addition that seamlessly ties two areas under one roof with masterful eloquence. Kitchen with custom made cabinetry, high-end appliances, gas stove, granite countertops and a custom designed brick-oven. An open living space with the Great Room with vaulted ceilings with Lake Superior view. Kitchen, great room and dining room are all connected.
Lutsen 5295 W Hwy 61 MLS#6002804 $129,000Two+ bedroom manufactured home located downtown Lutsen. New septic and deck summer 2011. Newer roof, furnace and dishwasher. Great location with convenient horseshoe driveway and level lot. Solid foundation. Walking distance to “downtown Lutsen” and close proximity to area employers and related businesses. Very nice floor plan with well appointed furnishings included.
Lutsen 261 Caps Trail Tait LakeMLS#6001233 $334,500Tait Lake in Lutsen. Wonderfully appointed and extremely well maintained 2 bedroom, loft and 2 bath south facing home on a 2.9 acre parcel and 190’ of shoreline with dock. Abundance of natural light throughout the home. New addition in 2006
includes second bedroom, bathroom hallway and laundry. Office added in 2011 (could be converted to third bedroom). Excellent value. Call Katterine today for your private showing.
GREAT
VALUE
REDUCED
Lutsen, MN 44 Lodge LaneMLS#6003364 $269,500 This 3 bedroom 2 bath Lutsen Log Lodge has been carefully maintained. Main level has 2 bedrooms and a private bathroom. Second level has a private master bedroom and master bathroom with jetted tub. Open kitchen area to main great room with fireplace. Its location on the Ski Hill Road offers the convenience to year round activities in the Lutsen area. Find this opportunity as year round residence, a private vacation home and/or vacation rentals.
Lutsen, MN 5170 W Hwy 61MLS#6003083 $349,000Authentic and classic late 1940’s - 1950’s log home located in Lutsen near Caribou Trail. Deep, private and recessed 2 acre lot. Home has been meticulously maintained and well cared for spanning four decades and two generations within the same family. Drilled well providing seasonal water use. Septic functional but non-compliant. Cool cabin, cool piece of real estate, mutli-options present themselves for future use consideration. An all around cool place.
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
44 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
44WATERFRONT HOMES ON THE BIG LAKE & IN THE WILDERNESS!
Call TimberWolff for Your Personal Tour of Homes & Land!!!
L o c a l 6 6 3 - 8 7 7 7 • To l l f r e e ( 8 7 7 ) 6 6 4 - 8 7 7 7I n f o @ T i m b e r W o l f f R e a l t y . c o m
Ski, Fish and Have Winter Fun Up North!Winter Wonderlands For Sale!
CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK AND LIKE TIMBERWOLFF REALTy!
ToWnHome aT WIndsong on Lake suPeRIoR! Up and Coming Beaver Bay boasts an easier drive to the cities and really good Value! Amazing layout to soak in the Views, this home won’t disappoint! mLs#6002658 $339,000
WInTeR WondeRLands FoR saLe aT LuTsen
mounTaIns! Ski In Ski Out, Super Nice Condos and townhomes at Caribou Highlands, a wide variety available from
the small getaway studios to the Top Notch 4 Bedrm Townhomes. Call TimberWolff
today, we are your Condo Experts! FRom $115,000 mLs#6002881
neW! #620 moose mTn 4-5 bedrm mint townhome!
mLs#6002082 $330,000 neW! 605 moose mTn
4 bedrm mint townhome! mLs#6002557 $297,000
on deeRYaRd Lake, with garage/workshop/cabin with 100 ft of Nice Shoreline and nearly 3 acres of south sloping land. Electric, well, septic tank, AND dock! Can’t beat this value for Lutsen Lakeshore Living! mLs#6001066 $139,000
FeaTuRed LIsTIng! 526 Moose Mountain, Mint Condition with Great Views, a Must See at bargain ReduCed! $189,500 mLs#6002963
INCOME GENERATING VACATION HOMES
QuIeT oasIs on THe BIg Lake! Relax and just Enjoy Life, A masterpiece of main level living for the couple who enjoys entertain-ing but also enjoys having their own space at the end of the night, why, that’s why you have two guest quarters! mLs#6003227 ReduCed! $799,999
easY LIvIng on Lake suPeRIoR! Super location between Grand Marias and Lutsen with Incredible
views of the Big Lake! Meticulously Maintained, move in ready, Great Opportunity to make this your Dream Lake Superior home!
mLs#6001226 $569,500
dRamaTIC sHoReLIne and InCRedIBLe
vIeWs! Must see Lake Superior home, main level master bedroom,
very cool cobblestone fireplace, open kitchen to family floor plan! Great Tofte location, walk to Coho Café! mLs#6001714 $650,000
BeauTY and THe BIg Lake! Quality crafted townhome features an
owner’s suite so luxurious your family and guests may wonder if you’ll ever reappear!
476’ of shared shore w/ a point that juts dramatically into the lake forming Good
Harbor & Cutface Creek beach. Water, sewer, ext. maint. covered by Assoc., Just Show up, Relax, and Explore! mLs#6002475
ReduCed! $337,500
maRveLous Lk suPeRIoR LIvIng! Well maintained Family Compound with yr round
newer home on 8+ ac and 340+ ft accessible shoreline! But’s it really about “The Shining Rocks” The “Rock
1” log cabin was built early 30’s, and it’s been lovingly maintained by only a handful of families since. Cabins Rock 1, 2 & 3 create this incredible family compound!
mLs#6002529 $799,000
oPPoRTunITY oF a LIFeTIme! Enjoy expansive views and a lot of elbow room
with over 300 ft of Lake Superior Shoreline! Well constructed home is ready to be updated! Gorgeous
Stone fireplace, two car detached, Lovely Lutsen setting! mLs#600899 $679,900
neW! CLassY, CoRneR ToWnHome at Tofte’s upscale Surfside Resort. #7 is a stone’s throw from accessible shoreline you’ll LOVE, this townhome, and it’s affordable with the Quarter Share option! No other end unit compares on price, views or locale to the Big Lake. The interior is right out of the pages of Architectural Digest, total Luxury! $199,000 mLs#6003491
LoveLY BLueFIn BaY Lake Superior home! Modern and functional space from the kitchen
overlooking the lake and Great Room, flowing through a newly
remodeled upper level, you’ll fall in love with this Townhome!
Nice rental revenues makes this vacation home a keeper!
mLs#6002385 $554,900neW! #70 BeHInd
CoHo! Must See!! mLs#6003372
$560,000,
FamILY WInTeR Fun aT THe LuTsen sea vILLas! If you haven’t seen the Villas in a while, you better look again! Most have been updated, especially K3 and C5! Let us show you the NEW LOOK in the Sea
Villas and you will LOVE them! aT WaTeRs edge k3
vILLa, suPeR BaRgaIn aT $177,500 ReduCed
TaIT Lake Home In LuTsen! Enjoy Fall leaf color from the breezy deck overlooking the 260 ft of shoreline! Tons of light flows through the Living Room
focusing on Wilderness lake views. Well maintained year round home is totally dialed in and the garage boasts a roomy workshop with spacious guest suite!
mLs#6002868 ReduCed! $329,000
nICe Lake vIeW Home oveRLookIng nInemILe Lake! Tons of Space, great views and Affordable Low Maintenance Living! mLs#6002645 $145,000
neW! Lake suPeRIoR CoTTage wrapped in the history
of the North Shore! Accessible and SPECTACULAR 177 ft of Lake Superior
in Wilderness Setting! Staggering views of Lake Superior from the kitchen
and dining area! you’ll love having your morning coffee on the new deck
surrounded by mature spruce and pine! 3+ Bdrms, 3 garages! Sweet location just west of Tofte, walk to Blue Fin, Bike to Lutsen!
$475,000 mLs#6003473
neW! eLeganCe & ComFoRT on Lake Superior’s Cascade Beach Rd! Lovingly remodeled, the owners focused on Luxury and Style in the Northwoods: a massive stone fireplace
for the ages; a master bath filled with natural stone, steam shower and soaker tub; and a living room noble as the Big Lake! Separate Glass Studio with Billiards, Foosball & darts! Rustic guest cabin
captures the Old Time North Shore. $899,000 mLs#TBa
anCIenT PInes on TaIT Lake! Lovely log sided Cabin with Vaulted Ceilings, Gorgeous Fireplace, and Awesome Views! So much to Offer, yr Rnd Living on Tait Lake in Lutsen! mLs#6003095 $369,000
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 45
45
Call TImBeRWoLFF ReaLTY or visit www.timberwolffrealty.com for more information!
“CABIN” LIVING IN THE GREAT NORTHWOODS! LIVE IT UP NORTH!
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sTaggeRIng Lake suPeRIoR vIeWs, sTunnIng Home! Bowl Over your
Guests with the Lake Superior views, quality crafted home with fine finishings and thoughtful design! Lovely setting perched atop the Sawtooth Ridges over Blue Fin
Bay in Tofte! mLs#6002322 $550,000
LoveLY Home In CounTRY seTTIng just West of Grand Marais” Tons of light
flows through this home, hillside views on level land with great Family Home, a Must See! Great craftsroom,
Large kitche open to Dining, this home offers a ton! mLs#6003299 $165,000 ReduCed!
CRazY BIg Lake BIg mounTaIn vIeWs! Epic Home with Sprawling views, too Incredible to Imagine, you MUST SEE! Main Level Living, huge deck,
loft bedrooms and lower level family/guest space. Over 6 acres! mLs#6002052 $275,000
CaBIn LIvIng WITH eLBoW Room! Great location between Blue Fin Bay and Lutsen Mountains, make this your winter getaway retreat! Easy access
to hiking, biking, snowmobiling…you name it and it’s within minutes! 4+ acres, nice Lake Superior views and a two plus garage! mLs#6000042 $140,000
aRCHI-TeCTuRaL desIgn Near Carlton Peak! Good bang for your buck for square footage, this multi-level home is very Cool. Updated gourmet kitchen,
new flooring and carpet and two garages! mLs#6001636 $240,000
CLean LInes and Easy Living in Tofte! Sweet 2 plus bedroom, detached garage and nice Lake Superior views, you will enjoy
coming home after a day of outdoor adventure! A Must See to appreciate how nice this home
is! mLs#6001945 $169,000
CusTom CRaFTsmansHIP, Small Footprint design! Main level bedrm and Loft bedrm, large office, bath on upper
and main floor! Huge, heated workshop/garage, any man’s dream! Very affordable living with option to rent the garage apt.
with a little finishing! mLs#6002254 moTIvaTed seLLeR $234,900
devIL TRaCk Rd Home! Nice home for someone looking for sweat equity,
desirable location on 10 ac of nice land! Tons of potential! $180,000 mLs#6000256
neW deC 2014! FunCTIonaLLY desIgned FoR gReaT FamILY
LIvIng! gReaT BuY aT $163,500 mLs#6003318
FunCTIonaL Home on 6 aC in between Lutsen
and Tofte, just a minute to the Ski Hill or Sugarbush XCountry trails!
Garage, tons of space! $199,000 mLs#6002213
FIne LIvIng In FInLand! Cherry cabinets in Kitchen, Huge deck
overlooking Pines! Garage and sheds. Great Price! $175,000 mLs#6002456
naTuRaL BeauTY! Main level year round living just east of Grand Marais, with insulated garage! mLs#6002327 ReduCed agaIn! $184,500
suPeR oPPoRTunITY, Rent the Lower Level and love living on the main level with wrap around deck
and LOVELy Lake Superior views! Really worth a look, great living spaces! mLs#6003021 BaRgaIn
PRICe! $189,900
sTaRTeR, keePeR! Zippy Grand Marais home, large yard and
Neat Home! A Must See at $99,000 mLs#6003099
daRLIng LITTLe Log CaBIn In BeauTIFuL
seTTIng! Must See interior of cabin with hickory floors and exposed hewn
logs, Fabulous Vibe! Great Tofte location! mLs#6003135 $99,000
LookIng FoR THe LaRge FamILY! Tons of space in this 4 plus bedrm
home with Mother In Law Suite so you get free baby sitting!!! A Must See, very near to the Schools and
the y! mLs#6003097 $199,000
Rugged TeRRaIn CRadLes THIs sHoWBoaT CaBIn!
Towering Pines silhouettes the view toward Lake Superior from the upstairs deck, a
nice functional design with open kitchen to family room, newer construction with garage!
mLs#6002692 $209,900
daRLIng LuTsen Home, the perfect Hobby Farm! Fab location
on Caribou Trail, Newer addition created main level and upper level
bedrooms with modern baths, excellent use of space. Farmstyle kitchen and spacious living room overlook the apple trees and perennial gardens!
Garage, small greenhouse and barns! mLs#6002736 $225,000
TuCked aLong sPRIngdaLe Rd. Developed
build site with drive, sheds, sauna and drilled well! Older trailer home. $52,700 mLs#6003229
saLePendIng
Huge FamILY Home WITH Lake vIeWs oR aPaRTmenT ComPLeX? You deCIde! Lake View home on 10 acres set up as a three apartment home between Lutsen and Grand Marais! Needs some repairs, but can’t beat the value. Attached 2 car plus detached 4 car garage! mLs#6003371 ReduCed! $275,500
Ski, Fish and Have Winter Fun Up North!Winter Wonderlands For Sale!
46 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
46CAMPN’, HUNTN’, FUN GETAWAy LAND, INVEST IN yOUR FUTURE!
VISIT US AT WWW.TIMBERWOLFFREALTy.COM FOR PICTURE SLIDESHOW!
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Lakeshore BuiLd sites!
15 aC and approx.. 2000 ft of shoreline on Tanner Lake in Isabella! mLs#6002450 $170,000
sWeeT CLaRa Lake LuTsen sHoReLIne! Level Access from Build Site to Rocky Shores, your Future Cabin will overlook Superior National Forest Lands! Electric, yr round
access, Old Cabin in place to use now and build later! mLs#26055 $199,000
voYageuR PoInT on PoPLaR Lake! New boat dock allows you to get out
over the water and look down the bay. Nice path from dock to boat house and to elevated home
site. mLs#6002494 $159,000BaRgaIn CLaRa Lake sITe!
yr Round Access, Electric at street and cleared build site perfect for your Getaway Cabin on Coveted Clara Lake! mLs#6001680 $150,000LaRge LakesHoRe LoT on CHRIsTIne Lake in Lutsen, year
round access with over 10 acres and 200 feet of shoreline! Hilltop building site with cleared
path thru cedar forest to Christine Lake, a super wilderness lake great for paddling your days away!
mLs#28961 $129,000
siLver Bay to LittLe Maraisto FinLand & isaBeLLa!
New! Rocky Wall Overlooking Lake Superior just outside Silver Bay PRICe ReduCed! $105,000
mLs#600323980 acres for $79,000 Blesner Lake Rd!
mLs#6003110 Show Stopping Views from this White Tail Ridge Building Site, looks over Wolf Ridge ELC, Astounding Mountain Top Views! mLs#6002468 $79,000
Rocky Wall land with Driveway in place, HUGE views of
Shovel Point! mLs#6002434 $99,000
Sonju Lake Road in Finland! Several large parcels from $44,900
mLs#6001324Huge Lake Superior views,
build site surrounded by cliff wall and creek! mLs#6001295 $89,900160 acre parcel of upland maples and
boreal forest. Beautiful forest, absolute quiet, total seclusion. Owned by the same family since 1904! mLs#6002612 $140,000
schroeder area near the cross river!
40 Ac of Maples and boreal forest meandering toward a sweet moose pond and
creek, with driveway in place and cleared build site! mLs#6002822 $125,000
Sweet mint cabin on 10 ac of maples! $87,900 mLs#6002164
Gorgeous Acreage Overlooking Sawtooth Range!
yr Round, Electric. $45,000 mLs#6003185
DRAMATIC Mountain Top Views, Rolling Hills, Maple Forests fading in
to Spruce and Pine and yEAR ROUND ACCESS…simply said a MAGNIFICENT piece of land…tons of acreage available, or just pick up a 40 for $70,000! MUST SEE, call Emily today! MLS#6001560,
multiple#’s call for full map and prices! FRom $70,000 mLs#6001560-66
10 Ac Parcels of Maples! Scramble across the Rolling Terrain of Mature Maples (Breathtaking in the Fall) to a
Sweet Building site Perched Over a Mixed Boreal Forest, Good Levels of Serenity
For Sure! year Round Access and Electric at Road! mLs#6000676 $56,900
Sugarloaf Retreats on High Ridge Drive, located up the Surgaloaf Road from Sugarloaf Cove Naturalist Area,
Enjoy large acreage parcels at rock bottom prices! From $62,000! mLs#25701-4
Entrepreneurs Wanted! Commercial land with storage buildings in place, Lake Superior side of Hwy in Schroeder. Perfect
for additional storage bldgs. To increase revenues, or start a Hardware, contractor, Farmer’s Market spot…May build to suit!!
mLs#6002386 $99,000 toFte area
near BLueFin Bay resort!
LeVeaux Mountain, Super Views and Wildlife Ponds! FRom $52,500
mLs#6002929 & mLs#6002995 Just Up the Sawbill Trail Grab your little piece of the Northwoods, rolling terrain and small community feel with
year round access, great build sites! mLs#6001346 From $17,500!!
Toftevaag on the Sawbill, Nice Lake Views! Walk to the Coho,
great location! FRom $53,000 mLs#29252Cool Spot for your Dream Home!
Driveway is in place leading to a drop dead gorgeous building site with
ledge rock vertical drop water fall! mLs#6002624
ReduCed! $54,900New! Mature Spruce and BIG Lake Views! Walk to Blue Fin Bay, drilled well in place!
$49,900 mLs#6003482
Lutsen Lake views & wiLderness Lands!
Turnagain Trail Hunting Parcel! Convenient to Everything, but end of the
Road! FRom $59,000 mLs#6003036 Over 15 ac of Wilderness on Turnagain Trail
in Lutsen! mLs#6002934 $69,500Prime Build Site(s) just off theCaribou at
10 Ac nearby Poplar River in Lutsen, great hunting or hiking land at a SUPER GREAT
price! Nice Boreal Forest with build site bordering USFS lands!
mLs#26729 $39,900
30 acres of Prime Wilderness Land with year round access and electric at
street with Views of Lutsen’s famed Clara Lake! mLs#6001462 $137,500
Lovely 20 acre parcel located on the outskirts of Lutsen, only minutes to Bigsby
and Caribou Lakes! Nice mixed forest with high ground for choice building sites. Great price for your Northwoods getaway!
mLs#31531 $37,900Gorgeous Views of Williams and Wills Lake in Lutsen! year Round Access, electric, Mountain Top site
bordering USFS land. A Wonderful place to build your Northwoods home!
mLs#6001685 $79,000Super Building Site on Honeymoon
Trail Lutsen locale with electric and all year access! High ground!
mLs#6001796 $28,800Grand Marais Location
Location Location!
60 Acres Minutes to Grand Marais near Devil Track Lake! Easy walking/biking access across Fed land to Monker Lake!
mLs#6002586 $95,900
Birch Drive just west of Grand Marais, wilderness living with SUPER build sites,
borders USFS lands, year round access! Great buy at $45,000 ReduCed! WoW!
mLs#6002349A River Runs Through It! 160 Acres of
Upland and River Frontage on the Cascade River near Eagle Mountain, a Rare Find
with tons of opportunity. Whether Hunting land or Wilderness Retreat, this is a Great Opportunity! mLs#31732 $140,000
Own your own park in the heart of Grand Marais! mLs#6002396 $17,000
Bordering Cascade River Park! Potential to subdivide or keep it all for
yourself! Nice Lake Superior Views from multiple build sites, hike right in to the Park land with access to Cascade River falls and Lake Superior! mLs#31097 $200,000
County Rd 7 Murphy Mountain Lake View lands! Bargain Buys in young Poplar Forest, easy clearing for Sweet Lake Superior Views
for as little as $39,900! Or Enjoy Hilltop Build Site with driveway in place, creek bordering
site for $89,900! mLs#2563360 Ac with Lake Views E of Grand Marais!
Keep this gem all to yourself and enjoy plenty of elbow room! mLs#6002841 $124,900
Parten Way on Pike Lake Rd! Panoramic Vistas of the Sawtooths, road rough in, a five minute drive to new Pike Lake Landing! yr
Round access! $39,900 uP mLs#6003047Wild Plum Drive, East of Grand Marais! Nice level build site, yr round and electric
avail. $49,900 mLs#6003492
“CABIN” LIVING IN THE GREAT NORTHWOODS! LIVE IT UP NORTH!
mY oH mY mILes oF vIeW! Lake Superior Sprawls from your feet on a
park like Serene Lakeshore parcel with plenty of shoreline from an elevated building site. A
Must See! mLs#6002686 $275,000
dReamY Lake suPeRIoR land and lakeshore! Several acres of privacy and way more
than 200 ft of Level Access Lake Superior shoreline in Schroeder, near Sugarloaf Cove Naturalist Area! mLs#6001554 ReduCed! $275,000
JaW dRoPPIng CooL CaRIBou Lake LoT! Mature Maples, Birch and Cedars
on hillside building site with the backdrop of ledgerock walls and Ledgerock boulder shoreline, an Architect’s Dream Site, an incredible piece of
land and lakeshore! mLs#6002791 $250,000
400 FT WITH 14 aC on devIL TRaCk Lake! What more can we say? Oh yes, there is a nice meandering driveway through
mature red pines leading to level access beach shoreline. Quite nice!
mLs#6002721 $375,000
meandeR doWn THe dRIveWaY to your Inland Lake Dream
Spot! Level Lake Access on White Pine Lake in Lutsen, year round access, bordering federal land
with electric at Driveway. Tons of Value, One of a Kind Spot, Must See! mLs#6002667
$175,000 gReaT vaLue!
Ski, Fish and Have Winter Fun Up North!Winter Wonderlands For Sale!
in escrow for future projects WIFIMLS 6001762 $94,000
124 Bridge Run - LutsenCaribou Highlands Resort
Land near Lk Superior ParkTofte Park Rd - Tofte Prime 4A parcel has location and great value for dream cabin. Buy 2A for $65,450 near Tofte boat accessMLS 6002831 $119,000
1 Norwood Shores - LutsenLake Superior Townhome
Enjoy your days on Lake Superior in Lutsen with this 2 BR, 1 BA four season low maintenance Townhome.
MLS 6002488 $249,000
Located between Tofte/Lutsen, spectacular lake views, borders Superior National Forest, Must See!!
MLS 6003159 $69,000
Aspen Ridge - 5 AcresLake Superior Views
Lutsen Resort Log CabinLake Superior Living
Have your own log cabin at historic Lutsen Re-sort. Rental revenues to offset ownership costs, fine dining, resort amenities for daily activities.
MLS 6002457 $435,000
SOLD!
Contact Nan & Deb to discuss great opportunities218-370-8433
BUYERS invest in life on the shore!
SOLD!
SOLD! SaLE
PEnDing
REDUCED
48 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
48RealtoRs®: Mike Raymond, Broker • Gail J. Englund, GRI • Doug Anderson, Realtor
Sandra McHugh, Realtor • Jack McHugh, Realtor • Linda Garrity, Realtor
(218) 387-9599 • Fax (218) 387-9598 • [email protected] Box 938, 14 S. Broadway, Grand Marais, MN 55604
www.RedPineRealty.com • (800) 387-9599
lake superior properties iNlaND Water properties
2 speCtaCu-lar lake su-perior lots at terraCe poiNt. Outstanding shoreline views all the way to Artist Point & Grand Marais. Each has dramatic shoreline. Great location west of town. priced at Mls 6000590, $600,000 and Mls 6001067 $300,000
total peaCe aND privaCy– greeNWooD lake Spectacular custom executive log home and retreat located on 2 lots, 750' of shoreline and over 13 acres. The main
home consists of 2932 sq ft of living space. 3 bedrooms including a lovely master suite, 2 baths with showers and one with whirlpool tub. The lake view is spectacular through lots of glass from all the rooms. Mls# 6002467 $989,000Huge parCel - CasCaDe lake. This is the only private land on the lake. Enjoy the utmost privacy and unspoiled wilderness views with 87 acres and over 3,000’ of shoreline. Includes a well-maintained cabin, sauna, dock and outhouse. Easy year-round access. Unique opportunity to own a private wilderness compound! Mls #31513 $700,000.
WilsoN lake lot. Strikingly beautiful 5.4 acre lot, 355’ of shoreline with great build sites near the lake or tucked around the bluff for gorgeous views. Mls #6002430 $259,500.
MCFarlaND lake CabiN Beautiful cedar log cabin on McFarland Lake. Cozy hide-away with sauna building, Log guest cabin, storage building. Great shoreline with new dock. Partially furnished. Large deck, nice cedar
trees. Great view of palisade. Mls #6002033 $259,000
NortH FoWl lake. Rare opportunity to own a private wilderness escape. 2 BRs, full kitchen, comfortable living room and large deck. Large open yard, sauna, storage
shed and dock. Great privacy, 200’ of shoreline, abutting the BWCAW. Water access. Mls #30184 $199,000.
Devil traCk lake - lot. This Devil Track Lake lot has easy access from county road, power, phone and great building sites. South shore, 200 ft. frontage, great views. Build your home on the lake here. Mls #6001771 $198,900.
solituDe oN looN lake. These lots are located on the south side of Loon Lake and offers great lake views. The main road is in place and power is on the lot line. These lots offer a great shoreline and many nice trees. Mls #6001605, 6002124, 6002128 $192,000
CHiCago bay HoMe. Located along coveted Chicago Bay Road, this charming Lake Superior cottage has fresh paint, new carpet and counters. Roomy spaces with large windows for great views of the lake. Mls# 6002611 $185,000
lake superior - beaver bay lot. Elevated site with slope to lake. Rug-ged shoreline. Towering white pines, spruce, birch and cedar. Must be seen to be appreciated. Views to offshore island. Great building site. Mls #6002594 $379,000
oNe oF a kiND lake superior parCel This Lake Superior lot has ledge rock, coves, creeks and a spectacular view of the lighthouse in Grand Marais and the Sawtooth Mountain ridges to the west. Only a short walk to the shops and din-ing in Grand Marais. The over-sized septic was installed and built to accommodate 5+ bedrooms. End of the road privacy, private bridge over a bubbling creek to access the site. Mls#6003042 $729,000
CasCaDe beaCH CabiN Spectacular ledge rock Lake Superior parcel on Cascade Beach Road. There are rock out-croppings, a cove and could be improved to year round use. Mls# 6002552 $399,000
trout HaveN Six lots at Trout Haven at Hare Lake at a package price. Excel-lent investment opportunity. Lots platted and ready to sell. Great location within 20 min-utes of Lutsen/Tofte, and just minutes from many great fishing and camping lakes in the Timber-Frear chain or BWCAW. The lots have nice elevation and gentle shoreline access. Power and phone, county road, good home or cabin sites. Mls#6003161 $295,000
Locally owned and operated since 1996
sHareD lake superior liviNg. This spectacular building site has pristine views of the shoreline from a nicely elevated lot. The site was prepared and is ready to build your dream home. Water, sewer, electric and broadband are ready for hookup. Only 8 owners share a park-like setting on the
big lake, with gentle beach and a scenic river. Secure and pri-vate with owners association to share expenses. Building plans available. A garage site included. Located east of Grand Marais, with lake access nearby, and easy proximity to the wilderness. Mls 6003400 $124,900
guNFliNt lake CabiN iN piNe Forest. This cabin sits on a fantastic pine filled lot with 200 feet of mean-dering shore and fabulous view of the Canadian shore across the lake. The cabin needs work, it's
in rough shape, but it has classic features like a wall of glass over-looking the lake, cathedral ceilings with loft and large open floor plan. A super location with great access to Gunflint and the BWCAW. Adjoining lots available. Mls 6003420 $299,000
guNFliNt trail--tuCker lake lot. Have tons of privacy on this 3.68-acre lake lot with over 550 feet of shoreline, plus 237 feet more shore across the private road, in a protected bay. Nice trees, great building site. Pristine views, and direct access to the BWCAW. Tucker is a natural environment lake with a 10 horsepower motor limit. The lot has been approved for septic. Mls 6003363 $239,900
guNFliNt lake, bWCaW, aND bor-Der vieWs. Nicely el-evated lake lot, large white pine, easy access to the rocky, classic wilderness shoreline. Outstanding
views of the Canadian shore. Super building sites with driveway in place, and power, phone and Broadband available. Meandering 200 feet of boulder shoreline. Rare chance to own a vacant lot on Mile-O-Pine Road. Mls 6003422 $230,000
guNFliNt lake, piNes, vieWs. Nicely elevated lake lot with easy access to the 200 feet of meandering shoreline. Outstanding views of the Canadian shore. Super building site and classic wilderness lake shoreline on this huge border lake. Driveway is in, power, phone and Broadband available. Rare chance to own a vacant lot on Mile-O-Pine Road. Mls 6003423 $230,000
NeW! Harriet lake re-treat. Lots of Privacy, Lakeshore, Acreage plus 2 Older Cabins. Want seclusion? Here is a classic homestead property at the end of a pri-vate road. It has 87 acres and 1300 feet of shore-line on a peaceful bay of Harriet Lake. There is no other private land on the bay, and adjoining
on two side of this property. It's just you and the Superior National Forest! There are two older cabins that can be swept out and put to use. They're in pretty good shape. Good road access, good fishing and lots of white pines. Mls# 6003484 $325,000
NeW! bearskiN lake CabiN. Log Cabin, Towering Pines, West Bearskin Lake. Totally charming Charlie Boostrom log cabin sits in a forest of towering white and red pines. The cabin is in great shape and has been lovingly maintained. This is your ideal vision of the perfect log cabin on a great wilderness lake. The 2 bedroom cabin is a summer-use place to reflect and escape. Hardwood floors, beamed ceilings and large kitchen. It comes furnished and is ready for you to move in. There's a sauna in the lower level with a stone foundation and plenty of storage room for your gear. The dock is ready for your boat, and the wilderness is call-ing with easy access into the BWCAW just a short paddle down this premier Gunflint Trail Lake. Mls# 6003448 $319,000
NORTHERN WILDS MARCH 2015 49
49RealtoRs®: Mike Raymond, Broker • Gail J. Englund, GRI • Doug Anderson, Realtor
Sandra McHugh, Realtor • Jack McHugh, Realtor • Linda Garrity, Realtor
Quality Devil traCk lake lot. Heavily wooded south shore lot with 150’ of shore. Easy shore-line, great views, excellent building sites. Power/phone. More shoreline available. Mls #6001770 $149,900.
greeNWooD lake Lovely, wooded lot on desirable Greenwood Lake. High elevation with spectacular views of the whole lake, bays and islands. This lot is surveyed, has a new driveway and turn around. Mls#6002946 $119,000
paNoraMiC vieWs Unit 11A and 11B at Terrace Point offers buyers an opportunity to enjoy panoramic lake views and Lake Superior experiences. Architectural designs inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright and John Howe. There are numerous built in furnishings built
to a high standard. Mls#6002759 $235,000 and Mls#6002760 $215,000
trout HaveN. Six nicely wooded, west-facing lakelots on Hare Lake. Easy county road access. Power available. Beautiful views, nice shoreline, good trout fishing. starting at $82,000.
CasCaDe river property. If you're looking for peace, quiet, and beautiful wilderness views, this could be the location for you. Off the beaten path, yet good ac-cess. Good building sites on 25 acres overlooking the beautiful Cascade River. Mls #6002440 $84,900
CouNty roaD 60 - graND Marais. Earth home with over 5 acres and a creek. South exposure with stone hearth and charming details. 4 BR, 3 BA with a 2-car detached garage. Up-
dated and remodeled with many custom features. This home is designed for the person who wants to live the rural, energy-efficient lifestyle. Mls #6001812. priCe reDuCtioN! $219,000
CouNtry HoMe - Hov-laND. Moose Valley 4 BR/3 BA home on 7.76 acres. Master suite with huge walk-in closet. Open living room with stone fireplace, formal dining room, big kitchen.
Office/den opens into the attached garage. 32’ x 40’ pole building has storage for toys. Partially finished basement. Country living at its best! Mls #6002258 priCe reDuCtioN! $229,000. CouNtry liv-iNg. Enjoy peace and calm with true country living. Charming rambler nestled in 26 acres of meadow and woods. Plenty of storage, built ins, and garage space, even a heated studio! Mls #6002460 $242,500
sNoWsHoe ruN lots Snowshoe run is set along a high ridge overlooking Hare Lake in a mature northern hardwood forests. Year-round plowed and maintained
county roads, power at each property and a clear water, trout lake. These beautiful home sites were planned for generations of enjoyment and are protected by covenants. Mls# 6003206 thru 6003212 prices start at $24,900
lot 1, NiNeMile lake End of the road, large lot adjoins Superior National Forest and Cabin Creek Unit Roadless area. Great trees, views and building site. Power, year-round round access. Mls #6003203 $89,300
Locally owned and operated since 1996
lot 8, NiNeMile lakeEnjoy expansive views from this par-cel that features a spectacular point with 548' of shoreline. Property features 2.3 acres with ledgerock outcroppings, mixed tree cover,
and outstanding views. For added privacy, lot adjoins State of MN lands for undeveloped shoreline as your neighbor to the south. Mls #6003205 $97,900
log HoMe privaCy - Flute reeD river.Log Home Privacy. Tucked away on 10 heavily wooded acres is your dream log home and hide-a-way. This home has all the warmth and charm of a north-woods lodge, with one level living, open great room, sunroom, and lots of windows that bring the beautiful forest and light inside. There is a charming studio cabin for your hobbies or for guests, a large 2-car detached garage with attached living space, and a 24 X 30 pole building. Lovingly built by the seller, you'll notice the quality, care and custom details as you approach from the long and enchanting drive. Mls# 6003351 $336,500
Flute reeD river propertyVery nice property for your homestead or retreat. The river meanders through with a perfect build site. Heavily wooded. Electric at the road. Year round access. Mls#6003200 $45,000
HoMes & CabiNs
iNlaND Water properties
aCreage overlookiNg guNFliNt lake. Privacy near the BWCAW with 27 acres and outstanding views of Gunflint Lake and the Canadian shore. Fronting the Mile-O-Pine Road with power, phone
and Broadband available. Subdivision potential. Mls 6003421 $95,000
MiD-trail soutH FaCiNg lot in a private development of 11 lots surrounded by US Forest land. Heavy tree coverage of mature of red and white pine and cedar. Minutes from the amenities of the mid Gunflint Trail area. Mls 6003402 $99,000
aMaZiNg HoMe Near trestle piNe lake. 3 BR, 2 BA home up the Gunflint Trail only a few minutes from many great lakes. Great cabing set in a private lot. The interior has an open bright feeling and is move-in ready! Mls #6002885 $169,000
CouNtry HoMe WitH Huge sHop aND apart-MeNt. Quality home on secluded 20 acres in maple forest. Sunny living/kitchen area. Expansive master loft-suite. Huge deck with large yard and open mature woods. 3-car garage. 3100 sq ft. shop/office/apt.
perfect for cottage "industry" or other creative use. More land avail-able. Mls# 6002767 $599,000
NeW! uNit 11, CHateau leveaux. Priced to sell! This fully-furnished lower level unit walks out to a beautiful view of Lake Superior. Futon in living room allows flex space for extra guests. Guest suites within building avail-able for reduced owner rates which allows
even greater privacy. This is a terrific opportunity to own a piece of the big lake. Since it comes furnished, new owners can begin earning revenues immediately, offsetting their cost of ownership. Mls# 6003472 $59,500
NeW! sister lake parCel. Nice lake lot with good tree cover, high and level build-ing sites. High point of sur-rounding area has awesome views. Excellent shoreline with great views of the lake. Partial driveway already in place. The lot is potentially part of a pending plat which allows access to two other lakes by portages: Harriet and Five Dam Lakes. Power is possible. Mls #6003499 $89,600
MCFarlaND lake - lot 5 acres and 244’ feet of shoreline waiting for your getaway. Paddle directly into the BWCAW or relax by the shore taking in the view of the Palisades. Mls# 6002905 $179,500
CoNDoMiNiuMslake superior CoNDo/toFte. Great lake views from this 2 bedroom + loft unit with 2 baths, fireplace, bal-cony looking up the shore. Chateau LeVeaux offers many updated ameni-ties, indoor pool, sauna, game room, and on-site manager. Mls #6000473 $100,000.
NeW! sea villa-lake superiorWalk into this newly remodeled Sea Villa and you'll feel as if you're walking right into Lake Superior it's so close to the water's edge! The entire main floor has been tastefully remodeled inside and out. Over $35,000 worth of improvements make this home stylish, comfortable & inviting while still holding onto the North Shore charm. Successful rental revenue is a big plus, too!! Owners and guests can walk to the pool/sauna building and to the play-ground. Build a bonfire right on the shoreline on those bold, starry nights. A bright & welcoming open concept style on the main level really lends toward togetherness and relaxation. Pic-ture it now: a fire roaring in the woodstove, the waves crashing, a fantastic dinner cooking in the new kitchen...create meals and memories!! The Gitchee-Gami Bike Trail runs right in front of the Sea Villas and the Lutsen Ski Resort is a mere 5 minutes away. Take advantage of the hiking trails that are all nearby, fish the inland lakes. Mls #003518 $249,900
50 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
50
Catch up with our latest Northwoods Adventure @ "What's up at Red Pine" www.redpinerealty.com
RealtoRs®: Mike Raymond, Broker • Gail J. Englund, GRI • Doug Anderson, RealtorSandra McHugh, Realtor • Jack McHugh, Realtor • Linda Garrity, Realtor
(218) 387-9599 • Fax (218) 387-9598 • [email protected] Box 938, 14 S. Broadway, Grand Marais, MN 55604
www.RedPineRealty.com • (800) 387-9599
Scan your smartphone here!
river/Creek FroNtage
laND/builDiNg sites
Devil traCk area parCel. Very nice 10 acre lot with direct access to South Shore Dr. Driveway to a cleared area that could be used as a building site. Slightly rolling terrain with moderately heavy growth that includes every type of Boreal Forest tree! Mls#6003184 $89,000 5 aCres - Walk to lake. Deep wooded home site – just steps from Devil Track Lake, and DNR access. Enjoy the lake without the high taxes! Mls #6002697 $72,500.Maple Hill - HoMe site. Heavily wooded parcel with great privacy, county rd frontage, power and phone. Super location for your home or vacation retreat. Walk to golf course, easy access to Gunflint Trail or Devil Track area. Mls# 6002601 $70,500
tHirty aCres - paN-oraMiC vieWs. Here is one of those rare mountain tops with a 180 degree view of distant Lake Superior and views of the ridge to the north. It's spectacular! Trails are in place to walk the whole perimeter. There is a cleared easement in place to
get to the property. Mls# 6003353 $68,900 10 aCres - graND Marais. Great piece of property located minutes from Grand Marais, on Pike Lake Rd. Seasonal view of Lake Superior. Many nice build sites. Mls #6001078 $64,900 laND - CouNty roaD 6. Beautiful 5-ac lot just minutes from town. Meadow, power/phone. Shed and pond. Driveway in. Great home site. Mls #6003084 $59,900. Forty aCre paraDise. Mixed topography of beautiful rolling land with many great build sites. Old growth cedar, spruce, pine and birch. Mons Creek meanders through the property border where it abuts State land. Mls #6003078 $50,250WoNDerFul vieWs oF lake superior! 3 lots available; wooded and private. Minutes to ski hill, Superior National, Lutsen shops. Oberg Mt. Surveyed, year round access. Mls #6002918, 6002919,06002920 lots start at $52,000. reCreatioNal parCel iN HovlaND. 43+ acres close to the public landing on Tom Lake. Survey complete; may subdivide into two 20+ acre parcels. Road plowed year round in special taxing district. Owner/Agent. Mls #6001471 $37,500 oFF tHe beateN patH. Can't beat this property for remoteness. If it's seclusion you seek, this wilderness 19-acre recreational property is for you. Sur-rounded by State & USFS lands. Hike in access from Devil Fish Lake. Mls#6002961 $37,000.
CeDar grove busiNess park lots. Cedar Grove Business Park is the ideal location for your existing business or new start-up! Conveniently located in Grand Marais, near the start of the iconic Gunflint Trail. Full infrastructure in place including paved streets, municipal sewer and water, electric and telephone. Call us today for a guided tour of this unique and affordable business park opportunity.
HoMes & CabiNs
NeW priCe! log CabiN - roiliNg river. This log home sits on the scenic Flute Reed River in Hovland, just a short walk to Lake Superior's shore. The seasonal cabin has a great screen porch, modern kitchen
and comes furnished with cabin-style furnishings and sportsman's décor. +/- 400' of dramatic river frontage. You can't beat the sound of a North Shore river! Mls #6003153 $140,000.CabiN - irisH Creek roaD. Beautiful recreation, hunting, nicely forested land that hasn't been logged since early 1900. Seller is a musher and has trails throughout property and old logging roads on adjoining state lands. Mls#6002992 $67,500
store aND CabiNs big opportuNity. Prime commercial location in Hovland with 1,000 feet of Highway 61 front-age. Large commercial space now operating as a gift shop, small 2 bedroom home and 1 functioning rental cottage. Two other small cabins could be rented, and there is room for many more.. Mls #6003052 $299,900
laND/builDiNg sites
piNCusHioN trail parCel. This parcel has forest with direct access to the Pincushion Ski Trail system, Superior Hiking Trail and Devil Track River. Resort/Commercial zoning. Mls #6003391 $214,900. NeW priCe! Caribou lake - HoMe site. New price is well below tax assessed value, and seller is open to offers. Magnificent, old-growth cedar and maple trees frame a corner lot with a great, high build site on Sawmill Bay.185' of lake frontage. Mls# 6002756 $98,000Maples, vieWs, privaCy. 85+ acres near Hovland. Good end of road access, adjoining tons of federal land., great view of pond. South exposure and views. Mls#6003156 $99,900 Find us on Facebook
stuNNiNg river - piNCusHioN trails. A unique opportunity for skiers and hikers. Trail easement runs through the property. The RC zoning allows for a resort/lodging type business. Mls #6003390 $85,900.40 aCres - MoNs Creek FroNtage. easy road access. Good building sites. Mature trees. Deeded access to Lost Lake. Mls #6002120 $79,900. 40 aC – lost lake retreats. Mons Creek flowage with great views and tons of wildlife. Private and secluded location. Includes deeded access to private lake. Mls #6002121 $79,500. WooDs, Water & seClusioN. Nice ‘40’ with good timber and 1000’ frontage on Mons Creek. Great building site. Private deeded access to Lost Lake. Mls #6002119 $69,900. graND Marais - City lot oN Creek. Wooded lot with City services: water, sewer and electric at site. Nice south exposure and frontage on scenic Cedar Creek. Quiet street. Mls #6001830 $63,900 laND oN tHe Flute reeD river Enjoy privacy and seclusion in a deep 13 acre parcel with over 300 feet of trout stream. County road with power, phone and broadband available. Good sites to build your home or cabin in the woods. Mls#6002960 $49,900
perFeCt start-er HoMe. This cute and affordable country home with a nice, private yard. There is an A frame cottage for storage or would make a great play-house. This is a perfect starter or empty nester. Has a nice two car detached garage. Finished second bedroom in lower level, laundry and extra storage. Mls#6003034 $149,900
CoMMerCial properties
NeW! CoMMerCial lots iN lutseN. Two commercial-zoned lots fronting Hwy. 61 in Lutsen across from Lockport Store. Great visibility, nice forest, lake view. Third lot to north is zoned residential. Bring your business idea! Old black-smith shop building on Lot 1. Mls# 6003506 $179,000
great toFte loCatioN--2 beD-rooM HoMe. Quality built one-level home has 2 bed-rooms, 2 baths, fireplace, full base-ment and attached heated garage. New tile and carpet flooring. Nice deck off the dining room with a large private back yard. Huge spruce trees give lots of privacy. Commercial zoning if you want to run your business here. Mls#6003116 $179,900
seCluDeD retreat - CaMp 15 loop. This 2 bdr, home sits on 77 acres and features all the creature comforts with solar power and shower house, There’s a large 2-car ga-
rage with workshop plus 2 guest cabins that provide plenty of space for the whole family or group. Trails, solitude and wilderness – a perfect place to live remotely or as base-camp for your adventures. Mls# 6001657 $174,900.
NeW! CouNtry liviNg oN 2 aCres.Minutes to Grand Marais. Well built and well maintained rambler. 3 bedrooms, One level living with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, and a full
basement for future expansion.New steel siding, exterior doors and gutters. Very nice deck off the living room. 30 x 40 detached garage for all your storage needs. Mls 6003401 $195,000
beautiFul lutseN HoMe. 3- BR country home in Lut-sen on 3.67 acres. Light filled living and dining rooms. Eat-in kitchen. 1 3/4 baths. Full basement. Sauna. New septic system. Double detached garage. Owner /agent. Mls #6002162 priCe reDuCtioN! $209,000
92A Tom Lake Rd - $79,900 Rolling, wooded, lots of potential for recreation or building. MLS 6002723
110A W Highway 61 - $649,900 110A wooded land, on Hwy 61 corridor. Year round access, many development options, multiple zoning (Far-3, R-1, and Commercial) MLS 6002185
200A Camp 12 Rd - $159,900 Surrounded by state and federal land. Mature trees, gently rolling topography. MLS 6002411
40A Camp 12 Rd - $49,900 40A off of Irish Creek Rd. Surrounded on 3 sides by State land. Ap-prox ¼ mile of babbling frontage on Irish Creek. MLS 6002405
43A County Road 7 - $299,900 Seasonal Lake Superior views, multiple zoning, electric at road. MLS 6002300
40A County Road 69 - $39,900 Good location and large 40A tract. Power available. Access via logging road and easement off Arrowhead Trail. Exceptional price! MLS 6002427
25A Tom Lake Rd - $49,900 25A close to Tom Lake. Enjoy the lake without the high lakeshore taxes. MLS 6002625
115+A Arrowhead Trail - $84,900 Excellent prop-erty priced right. Electric and phone at street. Private access from Co Rd 69. MLS 6002839
Forest Rd 304 - $164,900 80A of maples, spruce and balsam, Durfee Creek and beaver ponds. Bordered on two sides by public lands. MLS 6003013
Large AcreageLake Superior View
Bloomquist Mtn. Road 5.8A - $44,900 10 miles east of Grand Marais with power at the property, driveway, and several building sites partially cleared! MLS 6001709
NEW Silver Fox Rd - $69,900 5+ acres, located east of town, easy year round access, and utilities are all available. Very peaceful & quiet lot, perfect setting for building your dream home. MLS 6002966
County Rd 67 - $69,900 4.16A with Lake Supe-rior so close you can see the waves rolling in to the state-owned shoreline, meaning you’ll have walking access to the lake! MLS 6002892
East Highway 61 - $59,900 20A Large, private parcel close to town with elevation, meaning panoram-ic views of Lake Superior! Large building site has been leveled. MLS 6000432
Murphy Mtn Rd - $67,500 View of Lake Superior, 5A, within 10 minutes of town. Surveyed, pins are all clearly marked, utilities in place and septic sites are identified. MLS 6003425
2888 W Hwy 61 - $319,900 Great views with 1.24A, 200’ ledgerock shoreline embedded with Thomsonite Stones. Close to town, relatively easy building site and nice mix of trees. MLS 6002353
Big Bay, Hovland - $87,500 Deep Lake Superior lot w/11A of heavily wooded land. Gently sloping topography to 318’ of shore. PRICED TO SELL!!MLS 6002372
Stonegate Road - $239,000 Your choice of 3 Hovland lake lots! Features 2+ acres with 200’ of frontage.Very private, convenient location & well wooded. MLS 6002103
57XX East Hwy 61 - $129,900 4.1A Hovland lake lot, 281’ shore. Drive-way, septic mound, and electric in place. East to walk shingle/small cobble beach. MLS 6002142
5788 E Hwy 61 - $225,000 5A Lake Superior lot; 280’ shore. Drive-way, septic mound, and underground electric already in place. Easy-to-walk shingle/small cobble beach. MLS 6002980
Lk Superior Lots
1658 Croftville Road3BR, 2BA, with 225’ of easily accessible mean-dering shoreline on very private lot. Enjoy your gas fireplace and a cozy, warm sunroom all on
one level. Detached double car garage.MLS 6000697 $475,900
156 Stonegate Rd3BR, 2BA gem of a lake home. Excellent lake views with wrap around deck on 4A with 212’ of shoreline. Beautiful hardwood floors, granite
counters and quality custom solid wood cabinets.MLS 6002724 $599,900
2580 E Hwy 61Quality built, custom designed, 3 BR, 2BA home with tons of windows overlooking the lake. Granite fire-
Bluefin Bay - Tofte Units at Bluefin Bay offer stunning views of Superior and access to both award winning amenities and restaurants! Excellent rental potential. Unit 16 2BR, 2BA unit with stunning view over the old Tofte Harbor. MLS 6000300 $309,000 Unit 45 3BR, 3BA unit, recently remodeled. Can be rented as two units or one. MLS 6002761 $455,000
Surfside on Superior Become an owner at Lake Superior’s newest premiere resort, Surfside on Superior. Quarter-share ownership is 13-weeks of year-round, maintenance-free ownership which you can decide to use yourself or generate rental income to offset the costs associated with ownership. MLS 6002764 $189,000MLS 6003432 $215,000
Condos
Grand Marais Condo Two bedroom units with Lake Superior views and underground heated parking. Convenient walk anywhere city living!
MLS 6003092 $159,900
East Bay Suites3BR, 2BA, open floor plan and deck with Lake Superior and village views. The ultimate in vacation living. East Bay Suites consistently provides high
occupancy rates all year long.MLS 6002655 $315,000
Temperance LandingUnfinished true log home in stunning
Temperance Landing development. Buyer may purchase unfinished and
bring in their own contractor or home is available to be finished by builder for
$495,000.MLS 6001904 $240,000
Inn at Terrace PointQuality, quality, and more quality.
1BR, 1BA unit with walkout comfort to enjoy your lake patio. Outstanding architecture by John Howe (a Frank
Lloyd Wright student). MLS 6001369 $199,000
108 Gunflint Trail4BR, 2BA home right on the
Gunflint Trail. This lot is com-mercially zoned with great visible location at the beginning of the
Gunflint Trail. 2.5 car garage could be converted to retail space.
MLS 6002154 $244,900
Tire & Auto LodgeA successful business in a great
location, a known and respected source for repair and tires. Proven business opportunity with a con-
venient place to live. Truly turnkey with employees.
MLS 6002504 $549,000
Broadway AveGrand Marais Rare vacant land zoned commer-cial in downtown Grand Marais. This commercial opportunity is a special find with excellent location just north of the Beaver House offering high visibility and heavy seasonal traffic.MLS 6002316 $99,900
W Hwy 61 Nicely wooded with development opportunities. Zoned Commercial and R-1. MLS 6002301 $149,900
Commercial
Beaver House Dreaming of owning your own
business? The iconic Beaver House in Grand Marais could be yours!
Great location and strong seasonal repeat business. Fantastic business
45 Casper Hill Rd2BR open concept, year round home tucked away in the woods on 5A. De-
tached 2 car garage with workshop; 2BR guest cabin, lovely perennial gardens,
mature trees and lots of wildlife.MLS 6003112 $229,900
7249 Hwy 61 - TofteWell-built 4BR home with Lake Supe-rior views, on 2A of level, commercially zoned land. 32’ x 40’ garage makes this the perfect site for small business expan-
sion, studio and workshop space.MLS 6003375 $199,900
49 W 9th St Year round family home with 3BR, 2BA. Oversize 3.5A lot, space for
gardening, 2 car garage and full base-ment. Wood burning furnace and LP
gas hot water heat boiler. MLS 6003081 $199,900
6012 North Rd Sunny 2BR home with impressive floor to ceiling split natural granite stone fireplace.
Many upgrades through the years, large deck and yard, insulated chicken coop,
garden beds & sheds.MLS 6003513 $198,900
415 E 3rd Ave Well built 2BR home with park like setting
in a quiet part of town. Massive wood burning fireplace insert, all one level living, but upper level also now being used as artist
studio.MLS 6002974 $269,000
260 County Rd 48 3-4BR home on 7.66A. Lake Superior views,
landscaped yard, raised garden beds, huge deck. Full basement with plenty of space for a workshop and family room just 5 minutes
from town.MLS 6003519 $289,900
1373 Schoolhouse Road 2BR home, new furnace, septic system, well pump, siding and gutters on over
6A. Detached two-car garage. Gardener’s dream with indoor greenhouse, blueberries,
raspberries and apple trees.MLS 6003196 $189,900
263 Devil Track Rd2BR, 2BA, minutes from Grand Marais, huge garage with room for cars and a full collection of toys. Spiral stairs show off craftsmanship while the windows open
onto great views.MLS 6002503 $254,900
415 E 4th AveLovely 3BR, 2BA home, centrally located in Grand Marais. Updated kitchen with
stainless appliances. Large deck overlooking the landscaped yard, big trees and gardens,
and BIG detached garage. MLS 6003429 $279,900
2291 County Rd 7Spacious, open custom built and designed country estate showplace with 3BR, 2BA on 10A. Large horse arena, artist’s/writer’s cabin, and Lake Superior views. Total quality!
MLS 6002681 $779,000
328 Ball Club RdCharming cabin on 20A, about 15 min-
utes from GM. Close to great fishing lakes, the cabin overlooks a delightful pond that is a magnet for deer, moose
and other wildlife. MLS 6002565 $129,900
2117 E Hwy 61Exceptional 2BR home with fantastic
Lake Superior views on 5A. Just minutes from town, open floor plan, large ther-mo-pane windows with beautiful views
from every room and deck.MLS 6003424 $349,900
Land
Gunflint Trail 6A, great location right off of the Gunflint Trail, close to town AND the golf course. Utilities are readily available. Healthy mix of trees. MLS 6001301 $39,900
Have you always wanted to live on a golf course? Here is 9A adjacent to Gunflint Hills Golf course with a great mixture of trees! PENDING MLS 6003224 $50,000
Wood Mountain Rd This affordably priced 8+ acre lot abuts Federal Land, is surveyed & septic sites are identified. Located off Taylor Land & is close to town. MLS 6002424 $47,900
Squint Lake 5A surrounded on 2 sides by government land. Convenient mid-trail location with easy access to many recreational activities. MLS 6003242 $69,900
County Rd 14 Nicely wooded 20A parcel consisting of two lots! Year round access with electricity and telephone readily available. MLS 6002375 $74,900
10A with year round access, electricity and phone. Abuts Federal land and provides access to an incredible amount of Gov’t land. MLS 6002376 $44,900
116 Overlook Dr 3.33A with Lake Superior view, privacy, and is user friendly for building. Located at the end of Overlook Trail in Tofte, utilities available & year round access. MLS 6003380 $59,900
Silver Fox Rd 5A of northwoods privacy with all modern conveniences about 8 minutes from town. Gently rolling with some very attrac-tive building sites. Abuts government land. MLS 6002967 $49,900
Roman’s Rd Close to Devil Track Lake and lots of recreational activities. 1.06A MLS 6002324 $19,900 1.72A MLS 6002323 $29,900
Solberg Lane 20A close to town but is definitely off-the-grid for a real North Woods getaway. Nicely elevated with the possibility of solar and wind power. Rustic outhouse and bunkhouse cabin on the site. MLS 6003176 $62,800
20A remote with exceptional privacy close to town. Additional acreage available. MLS 6003311 $33,900
Stonegate RD 2A with lots of potential uses. Power, phone, and broadband are a stones throw away. MLS 6003282 $21,000
Rosebush Hill Lane Nicely wooded 5.40A with shared driveway only minutes from town. Identified septic sites and fully surveyed! Approx. 430’ of creek frontage. OWNER will consider a Contract for Deed! MLS 6003093 $49,900
W Hwy 61 Great location and development opportunities right off Hwy 61! 7.1A Commercial lot (Zoned Com-mercial and R-1). Additional acreage of R-1 behind. Agent Owned. MLS 602301 $149,900
County Rd 7 Wooded 5A parcel with nice mix of trees and fields with quality build sites. Privacy yet close to town, this property is the perfect place for you north-woods home! MLS 6002413 $79,9005A of nicely wooded, level land. Very private but close to town on County Road 7. South of the intersection of Co Rd 7 and Co Rd 44. MLS 6002282 $54,900
Meet Our Agents:Serving Cook County since 1971
VIRGINIA DETRICK PALMER 387-2131
BOB CARTER370-9054
HARRY DRABIK475-2359
RICK AUSTIN388-9434
ERIC FROST370-1362
415 W 5th Ave 3BR, 1BA home with high ceilings,
gas fireplace, sliding doors leading to a large front deck and a solid foundation. Central location in Grand Marais. Yard
consists of 4 city lots.MLS 6002423 $129,900
406 N Broadway2BR gem in the heart of town!
Wood floors, gas fireplace, granite counters, and stainless steel
appliances are featured in this lovelyGrand Marais home.
Greenwood LakePicturesque, low maintenance cabin on 2
acres & 400’ shoreline. Nice size main BR, sleeping loft, open LR/DR with lots of
windows. enticing deck overlooks the lake. Fire pit and shared boat launch.
MLS 6003430 $199,900
Greenwood Lake3BR, 2BA cedar cabin with 4 season porch that overlooks the lake. Private boat landing, 200’ shore, dock, and
multiple off grid operating systems so you can enjoy cell phone,
MLS 6002709 $389,900
McFarland Lake 2BR cabin with large loft on 3.21A and
151’ of shore. Beautiful kitchen; large center island and granite countertops. LR has high, vaulted ceilings, free standing fireplace, and
doors to deck and covered porch.MLS 6003086 $279,000
Poplar Lake Very quiet 1.8A with over 200’ shore.
Driveway in place with a newly built (2011) garage on site! Close to Trail Center, but
the ultimate in BWCA access with multiple portage routes out of Poplar lake.
MLS 6003273 $179,900
Birch LakeStunning 2BR, 2BA home with huge deck overlooking the dock & boat-slide on the 275’ of shore. Landscaped yard on 5.96A with heated bunkhouse for extra guests. Sauna, garage, garden sheds & outhouse.
MLS 6003427 $399,900
Gunflint LakeYear-round access to charming log cabin on
7.78A and 150’ of shore! Wood interior with pitched/cathedral ceilings and propane lights,
stove and fridge. There’s also a detached garage, outhouse and 12x12 storage shed!
MLS 6003253 $199,900
McFarland Lake Ideal lake getaway with 1A and 166’ shore. Year-round 3BR, 2BA home with a combination solar and generator electrical system. Tons of garage storage for all
your lake and snow toys!MLS 6002203 $359,900
McFarland Lake Rustic 2BR cabin on the waters edge! Great big view! Screened gazebo, cool canopy of grand old cedar trees. LP
appliances for the basics all you need is a whisper-quiet generator.
MLS 6002622 $249,900
McFarland LakeSpacious northwoods cabin on 20A
tucked away in the woods. Private 10’ lake access easement for your dock! Main level
BR, open great room, vaulted ceilings, large loft and covered porch.
MLS 6002188 $149,900
Iron Lake2BR cabin nestled in a beautiful pine forest. 1.43A with 150’ of shore. Cabin features knotty-pine woodwork, large screened-in porch and woodstove. Carry-down access
means you’ll basically have the lake to yourself.MLS 6002714 $149,900
Clearwater Lake4BR, 2BA home on 4.93A with 145’ shore.
Great views, great dock and swimming area. Full walkout lower level with plenty of storage, wine room and sauna. Border Route
Trail is outside your backdoor.MLS 6003428 $399,900
Flute Reed River Cozy historic little cabin. Its exact age is uncertain, but has been there a long time nestled in a crook of the protected Flute
Reed River watershed. The cabin is primitive and rustic but very well kept.
MLS 6003288 $69,900
Clearwater Lake 3BR, 2BA on secluded bay. Over 900’
of shore and 32A. Sauna, insulated two car garage, small storage sheds and large open pole shed for all your boats
and canoes!MLS 6003329 $469,000 Pending
Inland Lake Lots
Devil Track Lake Private 2.97A lot with unique, natural boat harbor and over 245’ of frontage on north shore! MLS 6001302 $229,900
Nicely wooded lake lot on 2A and over 150’ of shore. Tons of recreational activities nearby, including a number inland fishing lakes. MLS 6003046 $159,900 PENDING
Birch Lake Heavily wooded 1.54A, 150’ of frontage on great trout lake. Direct, year round access off the Gunflint Trail. MLS 6002478 $149,900
Kemo Lake One of only 4 lots on south shore. Private 2.34A with 200’ frontage on excellent trout lake! MLS 6002735 $159,900
Poplar Lake Convenient mid-trail location with deeded lakeshore access to Poplar Lake. Building site cleared, driveway is in and all utilities available. MLS 6002116 $52,500
.94A with 291’ of shore. Healthy mix of huge White Pines, Cedars & Balsams; feels like your own private park. Cleared building site, electricity, phone & broad-band is available. MLS 6003028 $169,900
Leo Lake 169’ shore, on 3.70A, mid trail location, with public access to other lakes nearby. MLS 6002665 $134,500
Squint Lake Nicely wooded 2+A, excellent mid - Trail location with over 212’ of shore. Directly abuts USFS for added privacy. MLS 6002593 $94,500
Sag Lake 1.1A and 191’ frontage on Sag. Year round access, electric & phone. Direct access to BWCAW. MLS 6002374 $69,900
Spectacular views, 611’ of shore, and 7.5A with year round road with direct access to BWCAW! MLS 6002373 $169,900
Tom Lake Year round, 1.10A, 171’ shore, nicely wooded, drive-way and cleared building site.MLS 6003350 $54,900
34A, 600’ shore, nicely wooded with maples, pine, cedars and incredible views. MLS 6002412 $149,900
1.81A of stunning views with great building sites and 298’ shore.MLS 6002257 $57,900
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McFarland Lake250’ shore with great sand beach, gentle drop off for the kids. 1.52A protected from weather and a large
deck. Much potential here, just needs some elbow grease!
MLS 6002626 $274,900
54 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
54Own a slice of Minnesota’s Favorite ResortsWe bring you closer. To the lake, each other and your vacation property dreams.
The Bluefi n Bay Family of Resorts is unmatched in its intimate proximity to Lake Superior. We off er three distinct ownership opportunities to achieve what you’ve been dreaming of for years.
• Bluefi n Bay on Lake Superior: Award-winning property, Minnesota’s Favorite Resort. One, two and three bedroom condos & townhomes on Lake Superior with access to restaurants, pools, saunas, tennis court, gift shops, & full service spa.
• Surfside on Lake Superior: New, spacious luxury townhomes on Lake Superior. Home to Waves of Superior Spa & Café. Off ering shared ownership opportunities.
• Temperance Landing on Lake Superior: Distinctive log home luxury on ledgerock and cobblestone beach near Temperance River. 3 BR, 3BA custom log homes with access to resort amenities at Surfside.
New townhomes, total coastal luxury right on the shore of Lake Superior. 3,000 s/f, 3BR, 3BA. Quarter-share ownership w/ flexibility for personal use & rental income. Excellent family retreat or investment property. Prices from $179K-$225K, includes furnishings.
Eric FrostSales Agent, Bluefi n Bay Family of Resorts
Let Eric, exclusive sales agent for Bluefi n Bay Family of Resorts, provide the details about each property and guide you through the process. Contact him today to learn more.
218-663-6886 | eric@bluefi nbay.comBluefi n Unit 453BR, 3 BA. Brand new units! Master craftsmanship. Pure elegance.
Bluefi n Unit 45 Bluefi n Unit 663 BR, 3 BA. Largest townhome. $100K in annual income.
Bluefi n Unit 66
SOLD
Bluefi n Unit 162BR, 2 BA. Sweeping views. Rent as one or two units to maximize income.
Bluefi n Unit 16
REDUCED
Bluefi n Bay Condos & Townhomes
Surfside on Lake Superior
Bluefi n Bay | Surfside | Temperance Landing On the shores of Lake Superior in Tofte, Minnesota
This year in Duluth, many ducks seem to be finding enough comfort with the mild winter we are having to stick around rather than going down south. Hundreds of mallards can be seen almost on a daily basis in the Canal Park area. One late January afternoon, I decided to spend some time watching the mallards as they swam around the canal. I watched as small groups of mallards came flying in to join the group and was lucky enough to catch this drake mallard as he made a landing right in front of me. It was a great way to spend the afternoon.—Matt Silverness, Silverness Photography
Mallard
56 MARCH 2015 NORTHERN WILDS
56 Visit our state-of-the-art astronomy centre!The David Thompson Astronomical Observatory is a marvel of modern
space science, and home to one of the largest telescopes
in Central Canada.
Paid for by the Government of Ontario
Experience a Star WalkEvery Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings.
ADMISSION: Adults $10, Students, Seniors & Youths $8, Children 5 and under FREE!
Fort William Historical Park OPEN YEAR-ROUND • 1350 King Road • Thunder Bay • Ontario • Canada • 807-473-2344