It’s Lady Slipper Season

Lady Slippers Warroad

The rare and beautiful orchid, the Showy Lady Slipper, can be seen in many magnificent colors along a segment of Hwy 11 between Greenbush and Baudette along the Waters of the Dancing Sky Scenic Byway.

Showy Lady Slippers are extremely hard to establish or transplant. It not only takes very unique soil conditions to originate the growing of a Showy Lady Slipper, but it also takes seven years of growth for the plant to mature, before it will bloom. The Minnesota DNR and DOT have been working together for several years to help preserve the settings that allow the particularly rare flowers of Minnesota to grow in a natural state along the grasslands adjacent to the highways. With less than 1 percent of the state’s original prairie land remaining, the majority of the original prairie lands are found between highway and railroad right-of-ways.

 

Lady Slippers Warroad

 

Hayes Lake State Park

Hayes Lake State Park

Make this summer unforgettable with a visit to Hayes Lake State Park. Named as one of the “10 Most Beautiful Lakeshores In Minnesota You’ll Definitely Want To Visit”, Hayes Lake State Park offers multiple recreational opportunities with something for everyone. Whether you’re looking for some peace and quiet or just want to visit another MN Lake, add this to your list of day trips from Warroad.

THINGS TO DO:

  • Fish on the pier
  • Rent a boat
  • Canoe or kayak and get out on the lake (rentals available)
  • Go for a relaxing swim
  • Step onto a bog walk
  • Enjoy a picnic along the shore
  • Go Birdwatching
  • Hike along the Pine Ridge, Moose Ridge, or Homestead trails
  • Go camping

Hayes Lake offers 35 drive-in sites, 18 electric, backpack sites, a group site, and 2 camper cabins.

Click here for the Park Map & Guide.

Click here to learn more about our hotels and COVID-19 measures in place.

Lake of the Woods Fishing Report | June 21, 2020

With the weather warming up, True North Guide Service reports the fishing is heating up too.

“Fishing along the south shore was good all week from Springsteel to Willow. Pulling spinners with minnows or crawlers worked best. Target depths were 6-14′ with lots of good eaters being caught.  Jigging north of the blinker 18-21′ was steady with a few slots in the mix for pictures. The south tip of Buffalo turned on later in the week with some quality fish being caught on spinners and jigs. Fishing 12 Mile Reef was also good this week jigging in the mud off the rocks. Out in the mud between Sandy Shores and Zippel Bay 30-32′ jigging was good but slip bobbers and leeches were out producing the jig and caught most of the photo fish.”

Take a charter fully equipped with everything you need to catch that trophy walleye, check out our fishing page to learn more.

Photo credit: True North Guide Service
Melissa and a 24″ – Corey and a 25″

 

Lake of the Woods Fishing Report | June 19, 2020

True North Guide Service reports “I’ve been fishing the west side this week, with strong south winds we stuck to the south shore pulling spinners between Swift Ditch and Willow Creek in 6-9′ with really good results.  9-14′ around the blinker was also productive and we were able to fill the livewell. Just north of the blinker in 18-21′ also produced some quality eaters and some nice slot fish. On whisky flats jigging with shiners out produced minnows and leeches tenfold. You had to sort through some smaller fish but the action was steady and some nice upper slots were caught as well.”

Take a charter fully equipped with everything you need to catch that trophy walleye, check out our fishing page to learn more.

Pictured Brad with a 26.5 from whisky flats
Photo credit: True North Guide Service

Beltrami Island State Forest

Beltrami Island State Forest Hiking

Listen to the sounds of nature and practice social distancing with a day trip to visit Beltrami Island State Forest, the second largest of Minnesota’s 60 state forests. With 25 miles for hikers, 27 miles for horseback riders, and hundreds of miles of trails for gearheads there are endless recreational opportunities for those looking for a day trip from Warroad:

  • ATVing
  • Canoeing
  • Camping at Bemis Hill, Blueberry Hill, or Faunce
  • Birding
  • Hunting
  • Hiking
  • Biking
  • Horseback riding
  • Geocaching
  • Picking berries
  • Paddling
  • And the list goes on and on

With the blueberry season fast approaching, the MN DNR website recommends looking for “blueberry bushes where jack pine grows. Best harvest is around July 4. Berries will ripen continuously until about the first week of August. These forest roads will take you through the heart of blueberry country: Krull, Nelson, Faunce-Butterfield, Hogsback-Obrien forest roads.”

Click here to learn more about our hotels and COVID-19 measures in place.

 

Warroad Hotels are Open & Taking Precautions

Taking a week vacation or a quick weekend getaway doesn’t mean you have to be around a lot of people. Warroad, MN on Lake of the Woods is an ideal getaway for those looking for a relaxing vacation away from the hustle and bustle. Explore our website and you’ll find lots of outdoor activities to keep you busy for a week or long weekend.

If you are looking to get away, Warroad hotels are open and ready to welcome you with a clean room and COVID-19 measures. Here is what your hotel stay may look like:

CAN AM INN

Locally owned & operated, Can Am Inn is located in downtown Warroad close to Lake of the Woods, shopping & restaurants.
To ensure guests experience a pleasant and comfortable stay, each room offers a flat-screen TV, refrigerator, microwave, air conditioner, iron, ironing board, hairdryer, and complimentary Wi-Fi.  All rooms are non-smoking.

COVID-19 Measures in Place:

  1. No public bathrooms
  2. No gatherings in lobby or hallways
  3. No continental breakfast
  4. Limited services during stay….no cleaning towels or sheets
  5. Hand sanitizer available
  6. Rotating rooms used; not consecutive reservations
  7. Washing key cards between uses

Make your reservation online at Can Am Inn and receive a 10% discount!


 

Super 8 by Wyndham Warroad

Super 8 by Wyndham Warroad

Count on value and convenience when you stay at our Super 8 Warroad hotel. We are located on U.S. Route 11 near Seven Clans Casino and Lake of the Woods. Soak up the picturesque scenery with outdoor activities on the lake or just enjoy the view from your spacious room.

All rooms include en suite bathrooms and cable/satellite TV, plus air-conditioning and minifridges. There’s free WiFi in every room and kids 17 and under stay free with an adult.

COVID-19 Measures in Place:

  1. Limited services during the stay
  2. No breakfast
  3. Coffee 24 hours
  4. Face masks available
  5. Divider over their reception desk
  6. Hand sanitizer in public spaces and each room
  7. Washing key cards between uses

 

DOC’S HARBOR INN

Doc’s Harbor Inn is an elegant 100 + year old home that offers a river view.

Guests enjoy: FREE WiFi, FREE cable tv, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, fully stocked kitchen.

Non-motorized boat rentals and bikes by the hour, 1/2 day, or full-day. Doc’s has kayaks, paddleboards, canoes, and paddleboats for rent. Lifejackets and paddles are included. Also tandem bikes, 3-wheel bike, single-speed bikes, and a few kids mountain bikes.

COVID-19 Measures in Place:

  • Renting water toys & disinfecting after each use
  • They are not combining strangers in the house; if you rent a room, you get the whole house
  • After checks-out, they do a deep cleaning of the whole house

 

COVID-19 Forces Minnesota Factories to Pivot

Article credit: Dee DePass, Star Tribune

In Warroad, a few miles south of Canada, window and door maker Marvin is now making a specialized ventilator box for use in ICUs and surgery after working with the University of Minnesota to develop it.

Polaris, at its Roseau plant 25 minutes away, is helping out.

The ventilator-box project started a few weeks ago when a robotics high school teacher in Warroad connected Marvin with M Health physician Hai-Thien Phu and Chris Hogan, a mechanical engineer professor at the University of Minnesota.

“The U had a prototype, but they didn’t know how [to] make this in volume and how you can make it easy to manufacture and lightweight,” said Christine Marvin, vice president of design for the window and door company.

This week, after receiving emergency clearance from the Food and Drug Administration, production began.

It is one example of how Minnesota companies are pivoting to meet personalized protective equipment (PPE) needs and saving jobs in the process.

Alexandria Industries has now increased its medical manufacturing by 58%, and Summit Medical has met ambitious goals for selling a face shield it developed from open-source material.

Wyoming Machine in Stacy and Ajax Metal Forming in Fridley are newly making ventilator parts.

And, as of last week, Maple Plain-based Protolabs shipped 7.5 million 3-D-printed nasal swabs, molded ventilator parts and COVID-19 test kit cases to medical-device manufacturers, Harvard and Cornell university research labs and to medical centers battling the coronavirus pandemic.

At Marvin, the U worked with the company to develop a box that protects health care workers in intensive-care units and surgeries from any saliva spray from ventilated patients.

Marvin brought in Polaris to help because, as window makers, the company did not have experience or expertise to bend polycarbonate plastic.

“This opportunity came up, and we said let us use our skills to see what we can do,” said Randy Larson, the Polaris research-and-development supervisor in Roseau. “We sort of stumbled over each other to help out.”

Four Polaris workers used press brakes to bend the thick plastic, as the two companies came up with prototypes.

“This is really cool of them,” said Hogan from the U.“Hundreds of health care workers will be helped by this because its reusable.”

Marvin and Polaris plan to make and donate dozens to the U. They already donated a few to Life Care Medical Center in Roseau to help its coronavirus nursing staff.

“At the beginning of the year, if you had asked me if we were going to be making medical devices, most people would have looked at us like we were crazy,” said Paul Marvin, the company’s CEO. “But now, we are finding a way to do what needs to be done.”

The Marvin company has done it before. During World War II, Marvin stopped making windows to can peas for Campbell’s Soup and to make ammunition boxes for soldiers.

And the ventilator boxes aren’t the only thing the company has started making. Since March, Marvin has teamed with Lake of the Woods Brewing Co. to make 1,200 bottles of hand sanitizer and worked with the local high school robotics team to make face shields for Life Care hospital.

Last month, it converted its visitors center in Warroad into a drive-through COVID-19 testing site staffed by Sanford Medical Center nurses.

The changes came at a critical time. When the pandemic hit the United States, “there was an immediate decline in business — life falling off a cliff,” Paul Marvin said.

By late April, the company began furloughing some of its 6,000 workers for up to two weeks across 14 plants.

Marvin spent “hundreds of thousands” on coronavirus leave policies, its new virus testing site and on masks, face shields and disinfectants for workers. It set up community billboards and printed factory posters and floor stickers with health alerts and social-distancing reminders for itself and other businesses.

“It’s what you do when you are in a small town,” Paul Marvin said, adding that big companies in other small Minnesota towns are doing the same.

Read the full article here.

 


Dee DePass is a business reporter for the Star Tribune. She spent the last four years covering Minnesota’s manufacturing and mining industries. She previously covered the economy, workplace issues and banking.

“The Corner of Minnesota That’s There by Mistake”

Northwest Angle

Article by: Porter Fox, author of Northland: A 4,000-mile Journey Along America’s Forgotten Border

The horizon was a shifting channel of light. Cornfields grew between stands of cottonwood trees, and harvesters cruised down the double-yellow line spewing golden dust. Signs advertised gifts from Minnesota’s northland: moccasins, wild rice, dreamcatchers, canoes. The radio station I’d been listening to had played an entire Bruce Springsteen live concert: Rutherford, New Jersey, 1984.

I was heading to the Northwest Angle – the northernmost point of the continental US – to research a book about the country’s northern border. The Angle is a blip on the boundary – an isolated pocket in Minnesota set 100 miles north of the line of the main border. It is the northland of the northland – surrounded by Lake of the Woods on three sides and Canada on the other. To get there by road, you have to drive through Manitoba.

It wasn’t supposed to be that way. The Angle was a mistake, made at the time of the Treaty of Paris, the accord that ended the American Revolution in 1783. The map that the delegates used, made by a London physician-botanist and amateur mapmaker named John Mitchell, marked the source of the Mississippi, a key landmark on the proposed northern boundary, as 150 miles north of where it actually is.

Negotiations continued nonetheless, and the line was drawn. When the Treaty of Paris was signed on 3 September 1783, US sovereignty was acknowledged by Britain; all British influence was abolished; British protection of American interests around the world was lifted; confiscated Loyalist property was to be reinstated; and the US’s northern border was set from the north-west corner of Lake of the Woods to … nowhere.

Five miles north of Warroad, Minnesota, I pulled up to the Canadian border. A stern, blue-eyed agent asked where I was going, if I’d been there before and how I’d heard about it. I said I was going to Angle Inlet, and he handed me a piece of paper that read, “Phone Reporting from the Northwest Angle”. A map at the top of the page showed the Angle’s north–south boundary. Three bubble quotes with telephone icons on them read Carlson’s, Jim’s Corner, and Young’s Bay.

I was to report in from Jim’s Corner, he told me.

I followed Route 12 – known as Mom’s Way – through Manitoba to an abandoned gas station where the agent had said to take a right. I did and fishtailed onto a dirt road. Thirty minutes later, the road crossed back into US territory, and I spotted four older men huddled next to a phone booth at an intersection.

“Is this Jim’s Corner?” I asked.

The men looked at me, then at each other. “We’re wondering the same thing,” one said.

The group watched as I picked up the phone and pushed a button with an American-flag sticker on it. After a couple of rings a voice answered, “US Customs and Border Patrol.” The agent ticked off a list of ambiguous and prying questions. “What are you doing? Where are you going? Why are you going there? What kind of fish are you fishing for? Have you ever caught one of those before? How do you cook it? What does it taste like?” Satisfied, the agent said I was checked in, and I left the old men, still huddled by the booth.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

All photographs: Sara Fox/Rutherford Studios