Thursday, September 17, 2020

north shore adventures

Our annual mom and kids road trip this summer was the trip I wanted to do in 2019, but didn't have the guts to do. I've been wanting to visit the state parks up the North Shore of Lake Superior, but most of the parks don't have camper cabins to rent.  

Due to Covid, (1) the state parks weren't renting the cabins out anyway, (2) I wanted to stay in Minnesota, and (3) I wasn't crazy about the idea of staying in a hotel.  Sooo......that left me with camping.  

No more excuses to state park skip up the North Shore.


In total, we visited 10 state parks in 5 days. The detailed descriptions are for the future me to look back at before our next trip: 

Banning State Park: Hiked along the rapids from Teacher's Outlook to Blueberry Slide Rapids. 
Moose Lake State Park: Ate a picnic by the small lake and played at the beach. 
Jay Cooke State Park: Camped, explored the swinging bridge, hiked the East Ridge Trail and River Trail. 
Gooseberry Falls State Park: Explored the upper, middle and lower falls. 
Split Rock Lighthouse State Park: Toured the area around the lighthouse (no access due to Covid) and surrounding trails. Hiked the Little Two Harbors trail and played at Pebble Beach with views of Ellingsen Island. 
Tettegouche State Park: Hiked to Shovel Point and drove to Palisade Head viewpoint. 
Caribou Falls State Wayside: Hiked the trail to the base of Caribou Falls. 
Temperance River State Park: Hiked the trail to the river gorge and played in the waves on the pebble beach of Lake Superior. 
Cascade River State Park: Hiked the Cascade River Lower Loop. 
Kadunce River State Wayside: Played in the mouth of the Kadunce River and the pebble beach. 
Judge CR Magney State Park: Hiked the Devil’s Kettle trail. 
Grand Portage State Park: Hiked the High Falls trail.












Some memories and funny stories from our trip:
  • On our way up the shore, there was a food truck parked by the side of the road.  We were so hungry!  Brett got a gourmet grilled cheese, Lydia had mini donuts drizzled in chocolate and salted caramel, and Reggie and I had yummy gyros!
  • I'm super careful about putting everything away at night when we're camping because I'm afraid of bears.  But one night a package of graham crackers got left by the the campfire.  In the morning, we had a whole family of chipmunks dining on graham crackers all around our campsite.
  • By happenstance, my cousin's son was on a boy scouts camping trip on the North Shore at the same time.  It was fun to get to see him!
  • We stayed at a private campground for part of our trip.  The coffee shop had great coffee, bakery treats, pizzas, calzones, and nachos.
  • The kids dared each other to dunk their heads all the way into the cold water.  Watch the video to see who won the challenge!
  • Lydia was excited to see a caterpiller on the trail and as she was investigating it, Brett came along and stepped on it.  We decided you can't kill creatures who have been named.  For the rest of the trip, Lydia would immediately name any creature we met so no one could kill it.
  • Reggie was being a bit of a pill midway through the trip.  I told him he couldn't instigate trouble for an hour.  He asked, "What do I get?" I sarcastically responded, "A star!"  For the rest of the trip, he behaved for imaginary "stars".
  • Each night we'd have a campfire and s'mores. My favorite part of camping is sitting by the fire and relaxing under the stars at night. It took me 3 nights to figure out that once the the s'mores were eaten, Brett would announce, "Well, I'm getting eaten up, think I'll turn in for the night!" Then he'd go in the tent and play games on his kindle.  I guess relaxing by the fire isn't for everyone!
  • On the last morning, I wanted to pack up our campsite and get an early start.  It was drizzly and I didn't get enough coffee to attack the day before we hit the road.  On the hiking trail of the last state park, I saw a lady with a to-go coffee cup and asked where she got it.  She told me about a place a few miles down the road.  Then her husband chimed in that they also sold ice cream.  And that's how my coffee cost me $13 and the kids got ice cream for breakfast!
  • Brett's speech therapist told us about a place to buy world-famous pies along the highway.  We stopped on our way home and bought two pies.  We met Meemaw and Papa for a picnic and I split both pies so we could each sample some of both!  Betty's pies was worth the hype.


This trip was so much fun.  I can't believe I've lived here so long and never gone all the way up the shore (to the Canadian boarder).  It's a trip that I think I could do every year.

Since March 13th, we have visited 15 state parks in Minnesota and 2 state parks in South Dakota.

Thursday, September 10, 2020

and yet here we are still

Last spring when things started to shut down, people would talk about the crisis extending into fall, and it just seemed inconceivable to me. And, yet, here we are still.  Our daily life is drastically different from normal with only glimmers of hope that a vaccine may be in sight. The initial torrent of panic-driven purchasing and shortages has given way to the mundane of isolation and safety guidelines.

The governor set guidelines for school districts on the last day of July.  It included a formula which calculates the number of new cases per 10,000 county residents in the last 14 days.  Based on that number, districts were advised to do in-person, distance, hybrid or a combination of those (giving priority to special ed, English Language Learners, and younger students for in-person learning).  In addition, all districts in the state were required to provide a distance learning option for any families who prefer it.

We turned the page on the calendar (swiped left on our calendar apps) and it's fall.  Our district happens to land in two counties.  We have one elementary kid, one secondary kid, and one kid who attends an out-of-district charter school while also homeschooling some coursework.  That's a lot of variables, but here's where we landed.  

Brett is attending a hybrid model.  He goes to school two shortened days per week (Mondays and Wednesdays for 3 hours with 7 other 7th graders.) The other 3 days are distance learning days, and I am his math teacher.  He was SO excited to go to school!  He had not seen any of his classmates since the first week in March.  He didn't complain one bit about wearing a mask or social distancing.


Lydia is starting her 6th grade year distance learning.  I love her schedule.  She "attends" classes 7:45-11:45 every day except Wednesdays.  In the afternoons and Wednesdays, she works on assignments independently.  She got to take band this year.  I let her choose whatever instrument she wanted, but I was lobbying for a trumpet or something like it.  She chose the mallets!  Her bedroom door doesn't drowned out the sound at all!




Reggie started 5th grade in distance learning as well.  He has a brand new teacher that got hired the week before school started.  We went to meet him in person.  He seems nice enough.  I'm withholding judgement.  His schedule is 8:50-2:30 every day besides Wednesday (independent work day) with lots of breaks.  That makes it hard for me to get my errands done during the week, but I'll adjust.  He is excited about math.  He made his way through the 4th and 5th grade curriculum last year, so he is doing a self-paced program. We have also been having a neighborhood friend over for "gym" a couple times a week.






I just noticed Brett's mask is on upside down.  I wonder if he wore it that way all day?  Overall, despite the frustration that Covid-19 is still not behind us, the first couple weeks have gone smoothly.  The kids are staying healthy, positive, and being flexible. 

Well, I wanted to get my back-to-school post done before we got too far into fall, but I still have a couple posts in the works left over from summer, so I'm working backward!