Category Archives: Panorama

LAKE PEPIN – Foot of the Lake #aerialphotography

LAKE PEPIN – Foot of the Lake

ake Pepin occupies a valley carved by the waters of Glacial River Warren, which drained Lake Agassiz in a catastrophic flood at the end of the last Ice Age, and to a lesser extent from Lake Duluth, a smaller glacial lake which drained through the present valley of the St. Croix River. When the continental glacier's meltwaters found other outlets to the sea, River Warren was succeeded by the more modest Upper Mississippi, which drains a much smaller basin, and the St. Croix spillway became the present river. Over a long period of time, the deep valley was partially filled with sediments, forming a broad floodplain. In this plain Lake Pepin formed behind a delta comprising sediments deposited into the ancient lake bed by the Chippewa River near the present community of Wabasha at the southern end of the lake. The lake backed up behind this sediment dam as far north as the location of Saint Paul. In the 10,000 years since the lake's creation, ongoing sedimentation into Lake Pepin has caused its upper end to migrate downstream some 80km (50mi) to its present location east (river direction south) of Red Wing, Minnesota.[5]

Lake Pepin occupies a valley carved by the waters of Glacial River Warren, which drained Lake Agassiz in a catastrophic flood at the end of the last Ice Age, and to a lesser extent from Lake Duluth, a smaller glacial lake which drained through the present valley of the St. Croix River. When the continental glacier’s meltwaters found other outlets to the sea, River Warren was succeeded by the more modest Upper Mississippi, which drains a much smaller basin, and the St. Croix spillway became the present river. Over a long period of time, the deep valley was partially filled with sediments, forming a broad floodplain. In this plain Lake Pepin formed behind a delta comprising sediments deposited into the ancient lake bed by the Chippewa River near the present community of Wabasha at the southern end of the lake. The lake backed up behind this sediment dam as far north as the location of Saint Paul. In the 10,000 years since the lake’s creation, ongoing sedimentation into Lake Pepin has caused its upper end to migrate downstream some 50 miles to its present location east (river direction south) of Red Wing, Minnesota. ~wikipedia

You can learn more about sediment issues @ Lake Pepin Legacy Alliance.

 LAKE PEPIN – Foot of the Lake
Looking toward MN side of the lake

 

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NELSON, WI – Panoramic Bluff Views #aerialphotography

NELSON, WI – Panoramic Bluff Views

Nelson is located at the junction of the Mississippi River and Chippewa River valleys. The river bottoms surrounding the confluence are home to a large amount of wildlife.   A causeway and bridge across the Mississippi River link Nelson with the city of Wabasha, Minnesota at the junction of Wisconsin Highway 25 and Wisconsin Highway 35. Southbound Highway 25 becomes Minnesota Highway 60 upon crossing the Mississippi River to Wabasha.

Nelson lies on Wisconsin Highway 35, the “Great River Road,” a popular tourist route that runs along the east bank of the Mississippi River.   ~wikipedia

Nelson, WI is home of the 100 year old Nelson Cheese Factory and J & J BBQ & Catering.  Two favorites stops while traveling through this picturesque bluff country.  A little North of town is my favorite wood-fired pizza establishment – The Stone Barn.

A couple different views of the causeway and bridge across the Mississippi River linking Nelson, WI with the city of Wabasha, MN.

360 Vertical Panorama

NELSON, WI

360 Sphere

NELSON, WI
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PRESCOTT, WI – Panoramic River Views #aerialphotography

PRESCOTT, WI – Panoramic River Views

Cyndie and I were in Prescott, WI this a.m. for a late breakfast at The Kitchen Table.  Fantastic breakfast and coffee; fast and friendly service.  Biscuits and Gravy is top-notch.  I’ve never had lunch there, but the lunch menu looks plenty good.

Prescott is situated at the confluence of the St. Croix River and Mississippi River.  You can very easily make out the sediment-laden Mississippi water mixing with the St. Croix down stream from the railroad bridge.  You can learn more about this issue @ Lake Pepin Legacy Alliance.

Here are some panoramas I shot of the Mississippi and St. Croix rivers.

PRESCOTT

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LIGHTHOUSE ISLAND – Sediment | Mississippi River #mudpicnic

LIGHTHOUSE ISLAND – Mississippi River | Wacouta Bay

#mudpicnic
Lighthouse Island

Sediment loads and the growing island

Lighthouse Island has grown about a mile in the last 50 years. The area is notorious for boat groundings. Sediment loads—the size of a city block filled to the height of the Foshay Tower in downtown Minneapolis—accumulate in Lake Pepin every year.  With sedimentation rates 10x above normal, the lake is in a fight for survival. It has two water quality impairments and is expected to prematurely disappear in just a few generations. See the Lake Pepin Legacy Alliance website for more information.

In many ways, Lake Pepin is the poster child for the larger problems facing the Mississippi River all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. ~LPLA

Mud Picnic

Last weekend, LPLA hosted its first Mud Picnic to help visualize this problem. The event was a powerful experience for attendees and took place at the head of Lake Pepin in the shallow waters just downstream of Lighthouse Island. ~LPLA

Lake Pepin is a natural lake on the Upper Mississippi River that is disappearing due to excess sediment from upstream sources. Lake Pepin Legacy Alliance (LPLA) is a grassroots organization working to save the lake for future generations.  ~LPLA

If you care about Lake Pepin, please attend the LPLA open-house about upstream pollution affecting Lake Pepin THIS Thursday, August 29th from 4-7 PM at the Lake City Sportsman’s Club. Free food, Cash bar.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency will be giving a presentation about recent studies affecting Lake Pepin at 5:30 PM.

Join the over 600 LPLA members and help move the effort to restore water quality, fish and wildlife habitat and recreational access in upper Lake Pepin.  Become a member | Donate

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MISSISSIPPI RIVER – Head of Lake Pepin | Wacouta Bay #aerialphotography #mudpicnic

MISSISSIPPI RIVER
Head of Lake Pepin | Wacouta Bay

MISSISSIPPI RIVER

I shot this panorama while attending the Mud Picnic organized by Lake Pepin Legacy Alliance on 2019-08-24.  Wonderful cause and beautiful evening for the event.  Most of the event took place off the point of the island just right of center in the image above where a massive sand bar has been forming due to sediment from up river.

MISSISSIPPI RIVER

MISSISSIPPI RIVER

MISSISSIPPI RIVER

 

Views: 444

MISSISSIPPI RIVER – Pool #4, Everts Resort #aerialphotography”

MISSISSIPPI RIVER – Pool #4, Everts Resort

Pool 4 extends from Lock & Dam 4 located near Alma, Wisconsin upstream to Lock & Dam 3 located near Hager City, Wisconsin.

Unlike the Lower Mississippi, much of the upper river is a series of pools created by a system of 29 locks and dams. The structures were authorized by Congress in the 1930s, and most were completed by 1940. A primary reason for damming the river is to facilitate barge transportation. The dams regulate water levels for the Upper River and play a major part in regulating levels on the Lower Mississippi.

Navigation locks allow towboats, barges, and other vessels to transit the dams. Approximately 1350 kilometers (850 mi), from the head of navigation in Mile 858, Minneapolis, Minnesota down to Cairo, has been made suitable for commercial navigation with a depth of 2.75 meters (9 ft) The agriculture and barge transportation industries have lobbied in the late 20th and early 21st centuries for a multi-billion-dollar project to upgrade the aging lock and dam system. Some environmental groups and advocates of budgetary restraint argue that the project lacks economic justification.

Each lock and dam complex creates a pool upstream of it. There are 29 locks on the Upper Mississippi maintained by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers—from Upper St. Anthony Falls upstream to Chain of Rocks downstream. The locks provide a collective 123 meters (404 ft) of lift. ~wikipedia

These photos were taken just downriver from Lock & Dam 3 at Everts Resort.  The sunset and clouds were fantastic this last Friday.

Mississippi River Map

Looking downstream towards Everts Resort

Mississippi River Pool 4

Everts Resort

Mississippi River Pool 4

Looking upstream at Lock & Dam 3 off in the distance.  You can see the steam rising from the cooling towers at Prairie Island Nuclear Plant right below the sun.

Mississippi River Pool 4

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Sunset | Vasa, MN | 2019-07-20

Sunset | Vasa, MN | 2019-07-20

Vasa, MN Sunset

Vasa, MN Sunset

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Streamscapes – Wonderland Road #Rush River

Wonderland Road

Rush River @ Wonderland Road

In the western part of the state in Pierce County lies the Rush River. Over 33 miles long this river snakes its way through the county and into Lake Pepin on the Mississippi River. The trout fishing begins at the county line and goes all the way down to a half a mile above where it dumps into the Mississippi. No one road parallels the stream. South of Wonderland Road there is no intersecting road for nearly two miles. The same is true out of Stonehammer Road downstream to the town of El Paso. The stream is full of native brook trout, stocked and native browns, and stocked rainbows. It is classified as a class II stream, but with over 28 miles of stocked water it is anything but marginal water. Fish #18 black stone flies, #16 BH Prince, and #18 black copper john during the early season. Expect to see #16-18 baetis hatching. Crane flies, #22 Hendrickson, and #22 Blue Winged Olives work well as the season progresses. In the larger water around the Hwy 10 bridge expect to catch fish in the 12 to 14 inch range with the occasional 12 in. brookie and 18 in. brown. Lost Creek is a tributary to the Rush and also full of trout. A road parallels the stream giving ample places to pull over. 

~ Forgotten WI trout streams | Judy Nugent – November 1, 2006

Rush River @ Wonderland Road

This is where my love for fly fishing ignited.  Before I knew much about fly fishing, I had tossed a Panther Martin #6 spinner thousands of times at trout in most every local stream within 50-60 miles of Red Wing.  Spinner fishing is fun, productive, but it isn’t much of a challenge.

I knew a few people that fly fished, but mostly sub-surface with nymphs.  I absorbed all that I could with this method and enjoyed catching lots of fish as a result.  This method is fun, but it is nothing like matching the hatch coming off the water.  Having a trout sip up your dry fly on a drift in the surface film is pretty spectacular.

Wonderland Road

It was in this very location, just upstream from the bridge on Wonderland Road where I was trying to fish with a dry fly for the first time.  It must have been very apparent to the fly fisherman on the bridge that I had no clue what I was doing.  This was twenty-plus years ago; before youtube and google.  I didn’t have an instructional VHS.  I’d seen A River Runs Through It…how hard could it be?  I had a fair bit of success nymphing, could this be all that different.  YES, it is very different.

I have since forgotten that fisherman’s name, but not the lesson he gave me that day.  He took time out of his day, his fishing time, to explain all about the nuances associated with fishing with a dry fly.  He even offered up a few fly patterns having seen the atrocities residing in my fly box.

New Knowledge

BWOWith that newly gained knowledge, I spent the rest of the summer wading  that stretch of Rush River practicing presenting a dry fly in the pocket water and various currents.  It didn’t take too long after that chance encounter before I landed my first trout on a dry.  Things just sort of came together once I understood how the drift worked and how the size was more important than the color or even the pattern at times.

I was almost ready to give up fly fishing that day having tossed my crappy fly rod into the creek at one point.  I was completely frustrated and ready to resume spinner fishing.  That rod toss was the cue that spawned the intervention by a complete stranger that ended up providing the help to make fly fishing a life-long passion.  Never underestimate the impact of helping someone out when they are in need.  I’ve met and fished with a lot of great people since that day and have enjoyed many years of fly fishing.  That passion continues on today and I am grateful for the lesson.

 

 

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INDIANHEAD MOTORCYCLE CLUB HILLCLIMB – Red Wing, MN #hillclimb

INDIANHEAD MOTORCYCLE CLUB
HILLCLIMB

A couple of photos from Mother’s Day Weekend Hill Climb 2019.  Next event 2019-09-21 Dist. 16/23 Hillclimb.  See Indianhead Motorcycle Club fb page for more details.  Indianhead MC is celebration their 70th anniversary by hosting grass drags at GAS-LITE Bar & Grill on 2019-09-28.

Other hill climb events in the area: see Valley Springs Hill Climb fb page.  Their next event is 2019-07-13.

INDIAN HEAD MOTOR CYCLE CLUB HILL CLIMB
Vertical Panorama
INDIAN HEAD MOTOR CYCLE CLUB  HILL CLIMB
Horizontal Panorama

Views: 999

SERENITY LINGERS – Esdaile, WI #aerialphotography

SERENITY LINGERS

SERENITY LINGERS
Esdaile, WI Circa 1918

In a March 28, 1985 edition of the Leader Telegram, the story of Esdaile, WI, entitled Serenity Lingers, featured in Section C, The Road Less Traveled by Chuck Rupnow.  Esdaile is no longer what it once was back in the late 1800s/early 1900s.  Back in its hay day, there may have been upwards of 500 resident in this small village nestled in between the bluff land along  either side of the Isabelle River.  Today, there are no more mills, general stores, hotels, or much else.  All that remains are individual residences along with Eidsvold Lutheran Church and the Rally Bat Company.

SERENITY LINGERS
West View – Eidsvold Lutheran Church in the foreground
SERENITY LINGERS
East View of Esdaile Village
SERENITY LINGERS
South View of the Isabelle River meandering through the valley; Bay City Water Tower on the horizon
North View, the Isabelle River meandering through the valley

In the photo above you can see a small parking lot at the bottom of the image.  There is a public park right along the river.  A great place to wander, fish for trout, have a picnic or simply relax in the serenity of Esdaile, Wisconsin.

Esdaile is also home to the 500 Feet of Mean!  Valley Springs, a trout farm, also has motorcycle hill climbs.  There are three events on the 2019 calendar.  If you have never been, check it out.

Views: 440