Thursday, March 22, 2012

Rotten Ice & White Rabbits


Record warm March temperatures across the Northland have certainly affected the view from our living room windows. Instead of a snow covered lake with snow mobile tracks we are looking at black honeycombed rotten ice. By the early afternoon the north shoreline has stretches of open water!

We normally expect ice out to occur around the first of May. Last year the lake opened up on May 10th. which was the same day that it opened in 2008. Lin and I definitely remember the year that we had to cancel reservations for fishing opener because the lake was still frozen. This year it looks like we could have an early ice out and low lake levels. The earliest ice out we have experienced since moving up to the "Trail" occurred in 2010 -- April 4th.

About those "White Rabbits" -- the snowshoe hares are still in their white winter coats and really stand out against the bare ground.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Snow Departing


On Sunday I got a phone call from a neighbor who wanted me to find a snowmobile parked somewhere on the snowmobile trail near the Voyageur Point Road. On Saturday our neighbor had gotten struck on a small lake near the edge of the Boundary Waters and had to leave their snowmobile until Monday when they planned to retrieve it. Some winter campers who were inside the BWCAW fishing for Lake Trout over the weekend had been told that the sled belonged to someone living on Poplar Lake and decided to help. They managed to free the sled using ropes, brought it out to the Gunflint Trail and managed to contact the owners to tell them where it was parked. Sometimes it can pay to leave the keys in a stuck snowmobile.
I took the sled over the snowmobile trail back to its owner. We have had night temperatures above freezing for several days and the snow is going fast. Some spots on the snowmobile trail were bare and my guess is that unless we get some new snow that snowmobiling will be dropping off.
The snow melt is almost a month early this year. The best thing about the early melt is that I can store my repaired snow blower. I won't use a snow blower on our gravel driveway unless we have a packed snow base. What snow we still have is settling fast and the willows near our mailbox are starting to bud -- snow season can't last much longer!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Winter Carpet -- Not Just Snow



We leaned some important lessons about installing new carpets this week. When you live "up north" laying carpet during the winter has some unique challenges and rewards.


The first thing we had to do to get really to prepare for this job was to dig out cabin seven's porch and to blaze a path out to the main driveway. Then we had to get the driveway plowed out to the Gunflint Trail. Of course, after getting the snow cleared it turned around and snowed Monday night. Tuesday, we started heating the cabin for the first time all winter. We were told that carpet has to be warm before it can be stretched. Heating the cabin using a contractor's propane heater created a small problem with water condensing on the fireplace stones and window panes. However, the new carpet is installed and looks great.


A large roll of new carpet for some additional cabins was suppose to have been delivered last week. The trucking firm that was paid to deliver the carpet roll to the Gunflint Trail managed to get the carpet to Duluth then announced that it wouldn't delivery it any farther north. Snow storms, icy roads and our remote location are all being used as excuses for not making the delivery. The roll of material is to large carry in a van without doing multiple trips to Duluth. We hope to be laying some more carpet soon but may have to dig out and restart the insurance on the transport van in order to haul the carpet our self.