Watch: Video and Song Celebrate Responsible Wilderness Recreation
Musicians and organization seek to inspire stewardship of the natural places where people are only visitors.
Musicians and organization seek to inspire stewardship of the natural places where people are only visitors.
Sam Cook debates the pros and cons of finding out your phone has a signal on a remote wilderness lake.
Upcoming opportunities include events in Voyageurs National Park and the Boundary Waters.
NBC reporter travels to the Boundary Waters to interview married adventurers with two months left in their twelve-month trip.
The loon’s famous song, echoing across wilderness lakes, makes solitude audible. It simply sounds like wilderness. Many other bird species also find the habitat they need to breed amid the forests, lakes, rivers, and wetlands of the Boundary Waters, giving unique voice to the wild landscape. Here, a tongue of Canada’s boreal forest creates ideal conditions for an array of bird species—for a few months each year.
In an excerpt from John Pastor’s new book, What Should a Clever Moose Eat? Natural History, Ecology, and the North Woods, the author examines the impact of climate change on the North Woods and the personal responsibility that comes with it.
This summer, thirty years after a pair of trailbuilders first started flagging a hiking route along the ridges overlooking Lake Superior on Minnesota’s North Shore, the Superior Hiking Trail will be finished—mostly. The final section of the trail, connecting it to the Wisconsin border southeast of Duluth, should be completed by Labor Day. Hikers will then be able to travel from that point all the way to the Canadian border on the trail that has been called one of the best in America. But the work is never done. Hundreds of volunteers will continue to put in thousands of hours each year keeping the trail in good condition.
In this issue, we learn about some of the ways that climate change is expected to affect the Boundary Waters region.
Read the new issue of the magazine, with stories covering thousands of square miles and wide-ranging topics.
Former MPCA official writes that White Iron Chain of Lakes have few natural defenses against mine pollution.
Severe storms wreak havoc on wilderness, blocking roads and portages and harming visitors.
Bipartisan partners pen commentary for the New York Times arguing to protect the wilderness watershed.
Company seeks to use water, discharge wastewater, and use dams around its tailings basins.
The opening of the Rainy Lake Recreation Trail means it’s now possible to bike from the town to the park on designated routes.
After Brenda Halter’s recent retirement, former LaCroix District Ranger Connie Cummins has been named the new boss.
Comment period opens up for major decision about the future of Twin Metals – or its end.
Canadian pleads guilty to illegal motorized intrusion last winter.
A high school teacher who was the brother of a Minnesota Congressman died when a tree fell on him.
Forest Service offers chance for public to weigh in whether or not mines should be allowed in the wilderness watershed.
The National Park of Minnesota’s north woods celebrates the Park Service’s Centennial. One hundred years ago this August 25th, President Woodrow Wilson signed into law the National Park Service. For the …