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Grandparents Minnesota Style. Mike Link
Читать онлайн.Название Grandparents Minnesota Style
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isbn 9781591936053
Автор произведения Mike Link
Жанр Книги о Путешествиях
Серия Grandparents with Style
Издательство Ingram
Minnesota Transportation Museum, St. Paul; (651) 228-0263; www.mtmuseum.org
Museum of Lake Minnetonka, Excelsior; (952) 474-2115; www.steamboatminnehaha.org
Perfect love sometimes does not come until grandchildren are born. WELSH PROVERB
Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory
Some wonders are worth traveling any distance to behold, and the Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory offers one of those natural wonders. There aren’t many places a person can go to see thousands of animals in a short amount of time. Who would believe that it’s possible to do so here in Minnesota? Each autumn, kettles of hawks migrate directly over Hawk Ridge, above Duluth.
Hawk Ridge is the site of a natural event that every Minnesotan should see; doing so with a grandchild makes it all the more special. Some hawks tend to soar high in the air and can look like black specks against the clouds, but many others fly close enough that you don’t even need binoculars. Plenty of these winged creatures will only travel as far as Iowa or Missouri, but some will reach Central and South America.
Hawk migration begins in mid-August and lasts into mid-December, but the best viewing tends to be in mid-September when the largest concentrations of birds are seen. On a sunny day with a west or northwest wind, you may see tens of thousands of birds. (One September day in 2003 topped all previous records when 102,321 raptors were tallied.)
You and your grandchild are likely to encounter up to seventeen species of hawks. Fourteen are seen regularly, while the other three are found less often. Broad-winged Hawks and Sharp-shinned Hawks rank as the most common.
Bring binoculars and beverages with you, since there are no services atop the ridge. Join the other spectators along the edge of the dirt road near the counting station, and note the displays set up by Friends of Hawk Ridge—a non-profit group that helps maintain and support the ridge’s programs and research. A naturalist is also on hand every day, to answer questions and to introduce folks to some of the hawks.
Be sure to pay attention to the smaller fliers in the area too. Since this is a nature reserve there is an abundance of shrubs and trees, which are often filled with songbirds on their way south. You may also be surprised to find dragonflies, mostly blue and green darners, drifting and zigzagging overhead. They too migrate along the ridge.
Bonding and bridging:
Where are those hawks going? That’s a question that will likely be on your grandchild’s mind. At Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory, it’s easy to day-dream about far off places. Your grandchild sees the hawks flying overhead, and he can imagine them soaring to entirely different continents.
This is a chance to help foster your grandchild’s curiosity about the world. Encourage his eagerness to explore. Ask questions like, “If you could go anywhere, where would it be?” After all, a healthy appetite for visiting new and distant places is key to becoming a well-rounded adult. There’s no better way to learn about different places and cultures than by visiting them.
A word to the wise:
Watch for the excitement when a live bird is brought to the counting area from the bird banders. The educators do live bird education demos and have volunteers from the crowd help with the release. So there is the chance that a lucky visitor may have an opportunity to help release a bird (passerine or raptor).
Age of grandchild: 6 and up
Best season: Autumn (September)
Contact: Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory, PO Box 3006, Duluth, MN 55803 • (218) 428-6209 • [email protected] • www.hawkridge.org
Also check out:
Winter Eagle Concentrations on the Mississippi River with the National Eagle Center, Wabasha; (651) 565-4989 or (877) 332-4537
Winter Trumpeter Swans Concentration on the Mississippi River, Monticello; (763) 295-2700 (Monticello Area Chamber of Commerce); www.monticellochamber.com/Swans.cfm
Grandchildren are God’s way of compensating us for growing old. MARY H. WALDRIP
Willard Munger State Trail
Minnesota is lucky to have the most paved bicycle trails in the U.S.—trails that give you wonderful choices of places to go and terrains to cover. The Willard Munger State Trail spans seventy-four miles of eastern Minnesota’s beautiful landscapes, between Hinckley and Duluth. If you and your grandchild enjoy biking, the Munger Trail is well worth checking out.
With sixteen access points (eight with parking lots), the trail has plenty of places to jump on or stop off. For instance, you’ll come across the Alex Laveau spur, Moose Lake State Park and Jay Cooke State Park. Plus, there’s a big attraction that’s waiting for you and your grandchild at trail’s end: the Lake Superior Zoo!
The flatness of the trail allows bicyclers young and old to enjoy themselves. The section from Hinckley to Finlayson is very easy to bike, and the land around the trails is a mix of wetlands and forest, while incorporating the famous James Root railroad route that saved so many lives during the Hinckley fire of 1894.
Between Finlayson and Rutledge, you’ll find the most rolling part of the trail. As you enter the Rutledge area, you’ll notice that the trail is bordered by sand plain prairie, not to mention a beautiful bloom during the summer months. This is also the section of the trail that covers the 1918 fire, commemorated at the old depot in Moose Lake.
Perhaps the most impressive and enjoyable section of the trail is found between Carlton and Duluth. The trail crosses the St. Louis River and a dark rock canyon before passing through Jay Cooke State Park. Deep gullies and dark woods give way to the volcanic rocks that overlook the Duluth harbor. Best of all, it’s downhill most of the way.
The Munger Trail was named the fiftieth trail of the month by the Rails to Trails Conservancy in 2000. Its breathtaking scenery and its many beautiful access points make this trail an incomparable place to bicycle with your grandchild. A trip down the Munger Trail is a trip through some of the most amazing spots that Minnesota has to offer.
Bonding and bridging:
Some activities naturally put safety at the forefront of our thoughts. Bicycling is one such activity. We can tell our grandchildren time and again, “Safety first.” But they notice what we do far more than they hear what we say.
When you’re bicycling with your grandchild, always wear a helmet, and use the stop and turn signals taught in elementary school. If you do these things, your grandchild will follow suit. Hopefully, the safety habits that she learns from you will