The Halloween Capital of the World: Attending the Anoka Halloween Parade

This is Halloween, this is Halloween. Halloween! Halloween! Halloween! Halloween! Halloween Town is real … and it is in suburban Minneapolis. Anoka, a community near Coon Rapids north of the city, calls itself the Halloween Capital of the World. For one month of the year, the town is transformed. Over those 31 days, there are …

Touring Minneapolis: Exploring the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden and Mill City Museum

It is strange and exciting to show off where you live to visitors when you are living in a new area because, after all, you are still basically a visitor yourself. We know that this will soon be true of us as we move later this summer, but for now we finally feel at home …

Large Piles of Dirt: Seeing Effigy Mounds

National parks and monuments mean a lot to Katie and I, so we make a point to see as many as we can. They have been responsible for some of the best adventures we have ever had and they are also responsible for why we found ourselves last fall in the middle of Northeastern Iowa …

Autumn in Minnesota: Our Apple Picking Adventure

There is nothing that makes me more at home than the feel of a cool autumn breeze as it brings smells of apple cider and pumpkin pie. I love the fall! I missed fall in Colorado where eight months of warmth and sun immediately transition to four months of cold and snow…and sun. Later this …

Pickerel Lake, Try 1: Hiking the Mississippi National River and Recreational Area

One of the goals of our Adventures in Gopherland was see as much natural wonder in Minnesota as possible, particularly visiting National and State Park sites. Much of the year in Minnesota, however, is unfavorable for such excursions due to the climate. Before the summer turned to autumn last year, then, we attempted to visit …

Little House in the Quarry: Visiting Western Minnesota

Last October, Katie and I visited western Minnesota, where evidence remains of three people groups who had been there: the Native peoples who congregated in Pipestone, the German immigrants who established a settlement in New Ulm and a little girl who lived on a prairie. There are fascinating places to visit that visitors can only …

I’m Greek, dat’s fer shore: The Minnesota Greek Festival

I am Greek. I wasn’t born in Greece, nor was my mother nor my grandparents, but I am proudly Greek American by my heritage. Whenever we are in a new area, then, we seek out the inevitable Greek Festival hosted by the local Greek Orthodox church. The festivals are a staple of many Greek American …

It’s a Wonderful Day for Baseball: Watching the Minnesota Twins

We now live in a world without sports, where instead of basketball or hockey games, ESPN has been forced to air old college football games. The opening day of baseball came and went with no one throwing out the first pitch. I miss sports, even though I am well aware that people are wisely not …

Three for One: Exploring the Chain of Lakes

This weekend the world has opened up enough where we live for us to go paddling for the first time this calendar year. As we prepare for this, my mind wanders back to last summer and our first times paddling the waters of Minnesota. Our very first trip was with Katie’s parents (see this post), …

Deep-Fried Hot Dish on a Stick: The Minnesota State Fair

Long time ago, in an era that is slowly fading from memory into legend, people used to congregate together in groups without the fear of widespread infection. Weird, I know. If we turn our attention back a year to last summer, we were initially acquainted to Minnesota through one of these mass gatherings: The Minnesota …

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started