Showing posts with label Lake Maria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake Maria. Show all posts

Monday, November 10, 2014

Lake Maria State Park: Volunteering, November 1st, 2014

After a spooky and fun Halloween night, Joe and I decided to start off November with a bit of volunteering.  He had heard about Fall Volunteer Clean-up Day at Lake Maria, and that sounded like a good time.  Lake Maria State Park is our "backyard park" now that I've left Two Harbors...better get to know it!


Joe and I arrived early, and spent a little time checking out the displays in the Trail Interpretive Center.

We were joined by two regular Lake Maria volunteers, Steve and Nan.  Our job was to assemble and install a foot brush station next to the trailhead, like those we have seen at other State Parks.  The DNR is installing these at all parks - good idea, and a good volunteer project.  There was also a crowd of Cub Scouts present to volunteer: they were put on Buckthorn-pulling duty.

First we assembled the sign.  Nan had to tend to their dog, so it was just Steve, Joe and I working on this project.  The instructions were for a completely different kind of sign, so we just winged it.  I think that it turned out okay.  The picture was facing upright, the brush was facing towards the front, easy peasy.


Joe with the assembled sign

Our next task was to dig two holes in the ground for the posts to set in.  As you can see from the above picture, the brush is well off the ground!  We had to sink the posts so that the brush was right on the dirt.  That meant digging two holes, about 18 inches to 24 inches deep.  See that shovel and post hole digger on the left?  We got to know them well.

Most of the time, Steve and Joe dealt with the shovels.  I helped the Cub Scouts with the Buckthorn project.  November is a good time of year to pull Buckthorn: it's one of the few bushes left that still has green leaves.  So if it's green, it can be pulled up.  Every once in a while I saw a Cub Scout walk by with what looked like small Aspen trees.  Oh well...if they pulled 10 Buckthorns for every Aspen, we'd still be doing good.


Begone, Buckthorn!

After a while, Joe and Steve started to tire out and we rotated digging duties.  I had never used a post-hole digger before, but I got the hang of it fairly quickly.


Hi-YA!

Once the holes had been dug and all of the rocks had been pried out of them we had to mix concrete to hold the sign in place.  The closest water was at a spigot about 100 yards away, so there was a bit of a rest while we dragged a few buckets back to the wheelbarrow and sign.  We mixed up the concrete, held the sign upright, and filled in those holes.  Every once in a while a curious Cub Scout would wander out of the woods to see what we were doing.


Mmmm, concrete mixer

It took four bags of concrete to fill the holes.  We made sure that the sign was upright by holding it into position with some framing boards and C-clamps, and we were done!  Once the concrete was dry, the ground would built up a bit so that the brush rested on the dirt, instead of an inch above it.


Joe and the completed project

Now people can brush their feet off before hiking at Lake Maria...people like me that may have brought invasive Tansy from the North Shore, or Buckthorn from across the state.  Every effort helps.


Brush off those boots, buddy

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Lake Maria State Park: August 12, 2012

I have been slowly recovering from a nasty summer head cold.  It's been so bad that I haven't gone on anything resembling a hike in about two weeks.  Of course, I'm still taking Thunderdog out for about an hours worth of walks a day...but they're slow, boring, and not worth blogging about.

I visited Joe in St. Cloud last weekend. I was feeling pretty good, so we went to a "easy" park to get back in the swing of things: Lake Maria State Park; where we did the relatively short Hiking Club Trail.  It was raining lightly and (gasp!) actually kind of chilly outside.  We left Thunderdog behind because she'd had a wild weekend at Doggie Daycare and was quite exhausted.

Lake Maria (Ma-rye-ah) is about halfway between St. Cloud and the Cities.  It's a pretty nice little park: mostly deciduous, a handful of beautiful lakes, and fourteen miles of hiking trails that pretty much all become XC Ski trails in the winter.  Additionally, there are 17 campsites at Lake Maria: all backcountry hike-in sites.  I have camped at Lake Maria many times in the last decade - both when I was living in St. Cloud and when I was in the Cities for Grad School.  It's definitely not the wilderness, but it's a pretty darn nice park for being so close to civilization.

Joe finds the Hiking Club Trail.

The Hiking Club Trail is only two miles long, and it's extremely easy.  Flat and well-groomed, signs everywhere to let you know where you're going.  Lake Maria is one of the few parks that I can say I know like the back of my hand.  We ambled along happily, safe from the rain thanks to Joe's umbrella.  I think that it would be fun to come back in the winter and do the Hiking Club Trail on skis...let's see if we get ambitious enough to do that.  Neither Joe nor I have been on skis in a couple of years.


Follow the path to the tunnel through the trees


We didn't seem much in the way of wildlife.  I figure they were all hiding in their holes and thickets, waiting out the rain.  We did find a couple of daddy longlegs, lounging on the underside of a tree fungus.  I am not a fan of spiders (neither is Joe), but we don't really have a problem with daddy longlegs.  Perhaps it's because they don't even attempt to be sneaky, and they don't move quickly like other spiders.



Rain, rain, go away.  Little spiders want to play.


Although we didn't want to linger too much in the rain, I did want to show Joe one interesting thing I know about Lake Maria State Park.  I know where the secret campsite is located - or, more specifically, the campsite with the secret.  My pants wound up soaked in the front from breaking a seldom-used trail through the weeds to get to the secret, but was glad when we got there.  I mean, it's not like we found Smaug's Treasure...but secrets are cool!  Especially when you can share them with friends.


Secret campsite!


So!  Two miles plus, oh, lets say another mile to get to the secret campsite.  We had a good time, even though I still had the pathetic little cough and it was raining.  It's good to be back in the swing of things.  The next month or so is going to be very exciting hiking-wise...stay tuned!



Total miles hiked today: 3
Total miles hiked (in 2012): 97.8

Total ticks today: Joe - 0; Thunderdog - n/a; Elly - 0
Total ticks (in 2012): 48