The Gunflint Trail Blog

Words, weather, wit, wild things... and a bit of whatnot. All the latest news from the One-And-Only Gunflint Trail.

Archive for February, 2008

by the light of the fire….

February 10th, 2008 | News | 0 Comments

warmth of the fireWe just had a beautiful day yesterday. The temperatures were in the 20's with no wind, the flakes were falling lightly all day and the sun was warm, well, as warm as the sun gets in February. But around 3 to 4:00 pm the winds started howling. By 4:30 pm the temperature had dropped by 20 degrees to 4 above. Our guests, who had been out snowshoeing most of the day were just heading out to supper when………the power went out in the entire county.
Power outages in the summer are a mild inconvenience, in the winter, they can be really rough and thankfully, I have experienced very few winter power outages. We have enough back up heat to keep the temperatures above freezing in the lodge but in my case, with high winds and dropping temperatures, just above freezing is what I can do with back up propane heat, wood and no electricity.

After an hour with no electricity and the temperatures still dropping, the large propane stove was running at full blast in the dining room, the guests built a large fire in the fire place and I hooked up the emergency heat in the well house to keep the water pressure tanks and pump from freezing. I figured I had still a couple hours before I needed to fire up additional emergency propane heat in the basement of the lodge.
The electricity came back on after about 4 hours (thank you Arrowhead Electric!) and I breathed a sigh of relief. Our guests had settled in for a 'winter campfire' as close as you could get to the fireplace enjoying the warmth and cozy flickering lights. When the lights did come back on, it is such as surprised that we went around the lodge and turned them all off to continue to enjoy the winter evening.
The temperatures continued to drop during the night and it is now 20 below outside. The winds haven't let up yet and continue to move around our snow and beat at our windows. My intrepid guests are strapping on their snow shoes to venture out again.

Snowmobile to your cabin

February 9th, 2008 | News | 0 Comments

If you have a summer cabin and like to visit it during the winter, sometimes the private roads are not cleared enough to get your vehicle back to the cabin. My neighbors on South Clearwater Road will park their cars up near the lodge and transport their gear

and luggage back to their cabin via snowmobile on weekend visits. 

 

The Beargrease – A View from the Gunflint Trail Turn-around

February 2nd, 2008 | News | 0 Comments

The Twenty- fifth running of the Beargrease Sled Dog Race is now history. Jason Barron of Lincoln Montana came in first followed by Duluthian John Stetsen. The only musher from Cook Country finishing the race this year was Rita Wehseler of Tofte who came in ninth.

What this years race will perhaps be most remembered for is the mid race rain. When the race started on Sunday the snow conditions were good and the weather was mild. Monday, the second day into the race, sometime after 9:00 p.m., depending where you were along the race route, it began to rain- correction it poured. According to the crossing- guard stationed at the Lima Grade’s turn onto the Little Ollie road enroute to Trail Center over an inch of rain accumulated in his upright plastic sled. The result was of the twenty-seven mushers that started the race fifteen “scratched” –most, seven, at Trail Center during the thick of the rain. Following the rain the temperature plummeted to below zero. One musher pretty much summed it up, “I had to quit, it wasn’t because the dogs and I were completely wiped-out, it was because I was soaking wet and cold and not sure how in the world I was ever going to warm-up enough to continue the race”.

At the Trail Center, the race “turn-around,” Sarah Hamilton, even with the rain, was up beat about the race. “It was a great boost- financially and emotionally but” according to Hamilton, “ we would be open for the race even if we did not make any money.” Hamilton noted she served over three hundred meals during the race and estimated the turnout of spectators, racers, handlers, Beargrease officials and the media at Trail Center was over six hundred people. Trail Center remained open all Monday night as the musher came in, rested and headed back to Duluth.

Along the Little Ollie Road, the race route just before Trail Center,  Jim Ross spent most of Monday night manning a campfire and watching the musher as they passed by his cabin Further down the road, Joannie Nickols rather then disrupt the race by driving her car from her cabin to Trail Center, skied over. As she approach Trail Center with her headlamp lighting her way she was mistake by the awaiting crowd as one of the dog teams arriving. However the spectators could not figure out why this “team” was traveling so slow. When she shouted at them that she was a skier, the crowd jokingly booed. And at Poplar Creek Guesthouse B&B handlers for one of the mushers waited for his arrival.

Post Scribe by Ted Young, Poplar Creek Guesthouse B&B – We arrived at Trail Center shortly after 8:00 p.m., on Monday several of the teams had already came in. The rain was beginning to fall. There was a great festive crowd including many of our Gunflint Trail neighbors. It is clear that the Beargrease really is an important addition to the Gunflint Trail each winter. We are lucky to have this exciting event and to have Trail Center as the turn-around.Also it should not be forgotten that the historic inspiration and organization of the Beargrease goes back to the Gunflint Trail Mail Run Dog Sled Race held along the Gunflint from 1977 until 1980.