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The Long Way Home 5.30.25

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Money. We all need it. For millennia, it has been the lubricant that keeps the economy moving.  Talk about indoctrination; Centennial Elementary School in Richfield, MN, hooked us wee grade schoolers up with Richfield State Bank passbook savings accounts. We could stuff allowance there instead of in a mattress or a piggy bank. I don’t remember the logistics of getting money in or out, but I was proud to say I had a bank account. We learned early on that money, which may have been at the root of evil, was something we’d need for the rest of our days.  Our species has functioned quite well as "a trading people." The impulse to exchange goods and services is deeply embedded in human behavior, driven by necessity, efficiency, and the desire for specialized items. Long-distance trade networks have existed for thousands of years.  The beginning of agriculture centuries ago led to more settled communities and food surpluses, freeing people from the direct need to find food. This...

The Long Way Home 6.6.25

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In the prime of life, let’s say when I was in my twenties and thirties, I had little interest in the health issues of peers and seemingly healthy friends. Our kids’ medical problems, especially son Dan’s asthma and chronic pneumonia, used up most of the small amount of empathy I didn’t keep bottled up. By the time I reached the age of majority, three of my four grandparents were dead, struck down by diseases that proved incurable but would today be quite manageable. My mother, who was the most involved relative with their end-of-life care, became, if she wasn’t always, an undiagnosed hypochondriac. Now that I’m on the bottom right side of the longevity bell curve, I can open up my whole inventory of empathy for dear old Mom. It was trying sometimes to be around her and listen to the endless symptoms she was having. In her mind, she always assumed the most dire diagnosis to explain what she was dealing with. I empathize with her doctors, who treated her with patience, if not understandi...

Tettegouche High Falls Bridge Replacement Closes Trails This Summer

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This article was published in The North Shore Journal on May 30, 2025 Work to replace the High Falls pedestrian bridge is underway at Tettegouche State Park, and several trail closures and detours will be visible near the construction site. High Falls is often cited as the highest waterfall entirely within Minnesota. The falls and bridge are a popular attraction on the North Shore. They can be accessed via a hiking trail from the Tettegouche State Park visitor center.  Crews began working on a temporary access trail in late February and will start bridge construction on June 30, 2025. The project is expected to be completed before the end of this year.  The new bridge, spanning over 100 feet, will be made from reinforced fiberglass polymer, a durable material designed to better withstand the elements and future flooding events. Its length and height have increased to ensure the new bridge will be secure in flood situations. Northland Constructors from Duluth is the lead contr...

The Long Way Home 5.23.25

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I try to make sure that what I write is grammatically correct, as correct as a dumb freight broker can make it. So it bugs me when I see or read things that go clunk. In the past, I’ve written about the labels on hamburger and hot dog buns, and store-bought bagels that proudly announce “pre-sliced.” It seems to me that the word pre would indicate it’s not yet sliced. I can’t imagine a frozen food maker labeling its product “pre-frozen.” Like the word sliced, it’s either frozen or not. After doing some research, though, it seems I’m wrong about what’s grammatically correct in the pre-sliced universe, not the marketing types for the food manufacturers I complain about. So what do I know? Not much. On the other hand, while researching the phrase “Happy Belated Birthday,” a grammatical clunker that hits my psyche in the gut when I hear or see it, my aggravation turned out to be “on the money.” While it’s way too common a greeting, the correct phrasing reverses “Belated” and “Happy." B...