Arrowhead State Trail

The Arrowhead State Trail is a recreational trail in the Arrowhead Region of northern Minnesota, USA, geared primarily for winter snowmobile use. It runs 135 miles (217 km) from an intersection with the Taconite State Trail 10 miles (16 km) west of Tower to an intersection with the Blue Ox Trail 3 miles (4.8 km) south of International Falls.[1] In summer about 69 miles (111 km) are suitable for hiking, horseback riding, and mountain biking, while the northern section is blocked by areas of wetness and standing water.[2]

Arrowhead State Trail
Length135 mi (217 km)
LocationArrowhead Region, Minnesota, USA
DesignationMinnesota state trail
TrailheadsTower
International Falls
UseHiking, horseback riding, mountain biking, snowmobiling
Hiking details
SeasonPrimarily winter
SightsSturgeon River State Forest, Kabetogama State Forest, Ash River
HazardsLogging traffic, severe weather, standing water in summer
SurfaceDirt
WebsiteArrowhead State Trail

The Arrowhead State Trail was authorized by the Minnesota Legislature in 1974–75.[1] It is managed by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

Description

The northern section of the trail from International Falls to the Ash River is fairly flat, passing through forests of aspen on higher ground and spruce and ash on lower ground.[1] The southern section is more rugged, featuring rolling hills with large, exposed boulders interspersed with many lakes and streams.[3] This thickly wooded area is part of the Laurentian Mixed Forest Province. There are intersections with numerous local snowmobile trails. The route of the Arrowhead State Trail passes within one mile (1.6 km) of Voyageurs National Park and within 10 miles (16 km) of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.[4] The trail, which very roughly follows U.S. Route 53, offers nine shelters with firepits and restrooms.[3]

Events

Since 2005 the trail has hosted the Arrowhead 135, a 135-mile (217 km) extreme endurance race in which contestants are challenged to carry all of their own gear under their own power via foot, ski, or bicycle, in mid-winter.[5]

gollark: I'm not entirely sure what the aim is - maybe they originally wanted to go for highly concurrent systems or something, but nowadays it seems to mostly be used in trendy cloudy things, servers, command line utilities, that sort of thing.
gollark: I think my use cases are nice usecases, and I think it has flaws even in the domains it seems to be targeted at.
gollark: I think it should at least not, essentially, deliberately cripple itself at some classes of thing.
gollark: I'm not sure exactly what they're targeting - maybe trendy cloud™-type tools, simple webservers, etc - but even *in* that domain it just seems bad to me.
gollark: If they did in fact mean it as a DSL for deploying bees against Google Cloud, they should say so.

References

  1. Arrowhead & Taconite State Trails (PDF) (Map). Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2009. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  2. "Arrowhead State Trail". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  3. "Course Description and Trail Maps". Arrowhead Ultra Sports Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  4. "Arrowhead State Trail". BoundaryWatersCanoeArea.com. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  5. Regenold, Stephen (2008-01-30). "ULTRAFIT - Icy beards, numb digits and derring-do - From one who's been there, a frostbitten glimpse of what's in store for the determined souls entered in next week's 135-mile endurance race through northern Minnesota forests". Star Tribune. Minneapolis, Minn.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.