Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Long ships of coal and iron
I took a harbor cruise on Lake Superior yesterday afternoon and saw 1000-foot ships hauling the same coal I passed by in the Powder River valley near Gillette in Wyoming. I had wondered where all those hundreds of heaping train cars were headed, and here in Duluth was my answer. The largest of the ships are bound to the Great Lakes and cannot go out to sea. This one was going to carry massive tonnage of coal to a power plant in Detroit.
Some ships carry taconite, a low-grade iron ore that's pulled from the ground in the iron range of northern Minnesota. Others load leftovers from North Dakota sugar beet processing in pellet form, taking it to Europe and North Africa to be used as livestock feed. From the water, I could see a blue rock salt candy mountain, laying in wait for use on icy winter highways. I saw great piles of stone and ore of different shades from light limestone to coal black.
Today, I head south on the Willard Munger State Trail, which starts with 63 miles of paved bicycling infrastructure. Over the next four days, I'll ride through 4 states: Minnesota, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa.
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4 comments:
Jonathan~
Not sure if the previous note I left went through...
It was a pleasure meeting you today~
Thanks for taking the time to stop in at the Buffalo House.
The very best to you on your journey!!
Debbie (Bartender)
Hello, Jonathan!
Glad you took the Munger trail south. Hope you made it to Iowa safe and sound!
Tamara and Eric (the bike people you chatted with on the Vista cruise Monday the 21st).
We're looking forward to seeing you again during your layover at Nordic Fest. The flags have all been hoisted and "No Parking" signs have already been set out. We are doing the Elvelopet and Kanolopet this year (first year back, we thought we would dive right in . . . so to speak).
Hope you make it in time to be in our cheering section!
I'll see if I can talk anyone into starting a Nordic Fest long distance "bikolopet" for you.
Emma, Parker, Kerry and Dan
mmmmmm, taconite.
Nathan
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