Opening Day

Posted on April 9, 2010 at 5:17 pm in
The new home of the Twins, with north towards the top/right

The new home of the Twins, with north towards the top/right.

The start of a new era in baseball in Minnesota is a few days away.  Fans will arrive at the new outdoor stadium in a variety of ways, including by bike.  Many will come via the Cedar Lake Trail from the west.  The trail route, present and the future route through downtown to the Mississippi River, is visible above as the blue line that runs diagonally from upper left to lower right.

The Cedar Lake Trail corridor passes under the stadium for approximately 750 feet.  On the east end, it runs alongside the platforms of the new multimodal transit station, which already serves the Northstar commuter rail line and the Hiawatha LRT.

BT-1472-MinneapolisHR

Memorial Cedar Grove

Posted on January 24, 2010 at 3:31 pm in

cedar grove bench 06.jpeg

In 1996,  six native Red Cedar trees were planted with great ceremony in the Heart of the Park.  The next year, volunteers planted 60 more. The idea of the memorial Cedar Grove was to honor people by allowing their loved ones to purchase a tree.  Each tree represented the honoring or memorial of a cherished individual in the donors’  life.

The plantings were laid out on a double spiral from the center, the heart,  one quarter-turn apart.  Students and faculty from Dunwoody Institute helped with the engineering.  The late nursuryman Clark Batho, a friend of Cedar Lake Park supplied the trees, and dug the holes.

Young people from Hennepin County Sentence to Serve passed many hours of community service time laying a deep 5-feet wide corridor of wood chips along the spiral lines.  This allows for an easier walk.

The spirals of the Cedar Grove are visible from the air. Also, there are lines that can be seen that  represent the solstice sunrise/sunset, and the cardinal points.  These comprise the henge, or astronomical calendar, that has been created in the grove.

aerial3

All are in alignment from the center, the Heart of the Park.  There are GPS  coordinates going out 40 miles, bringing these spirals east into Wisconsin, north through Anoka, west to Cokato, and south into Lakeville.  In the photo above, notice that the grove happens to be in the center of a pyramid.  These lines were service roads when BNSF railroad used the land as a maintenance and switching yard.  Now, these gravel paths are part of the secondary circulation in the park.

An autumn paddle on Cedar Lake

Posted on January 8, 2010 at 9:43 pm in

IMG_1590IMG_1591IMG_1592IMG_1595IMG_1597

muskrat house

muskrat house

nuthatch into the tree

nuthatch into the tree

IMG_1589

snow in cedar lake park

Posted on December 23, 2009 at 8:08 pm in

skiers, snowshoers, and anyone who likes the deep whiteness of a fresh snowfall will be delighted over the next few days when upwards of 20″ of fresh snow will fall onto the land and water of cedar lake park.

Solstice

Posted on December 20, 2009 at 7:56 pm in

The sun will be rising at its southernmost point of the year solstice morning Dec 21. Its path is marked in alignment with the center of the double-spiraled Cedar Grove. This is the Heart of the Park. Here there is a henge, where the cardinal directions and the sunrise and sunset of the solstices are marked.

Celebrate the Return of the Light.

cedar lake trail

Posted on December 5, 2009 at 9:23 am in
Cedar Lake Trail west

Cedar Lake Trail west

prairie flowers

Posted on July 22, 2009 at 11:49 am in

Prairie Update: The gorgeous Orange Butterfly weed is still in bloom, but is just about to go to seed. Other bloomers are Prairie coneflowers (black cone with yellow droopy leaves), Black-eyed Susans (yellow), Monarda or Bee balm or Wild bergamot (lavender pincushion-like flowers), Tufted fleabane (smail white flowers with a yellow center), and Hoary vervain or verbana (purple spike-like flowers).

One of my favorites is a native-species flower that CLPA volunteers have planted over the years: Lead plant. It has small, delicate oval leaves and a spike-like mass of deep-purple flowers along the uper two to seven inches of the plant.

As always, please enjoy them, but leave them in peace for others to enjoy too!

Moving along the invasives

Posted on July 1, 2009 at 7:35 pm in

Yes, we absolutely do.  All you have to do is look into areas where there
is lots of it — and you’ll see that soon there will be NOTHING else!  It is
particularly bad along your street and in the parkland across from the
entrance to Hidden Beach.

What makes invasives “invasive” is that they put out so much seed material
than the native plants  that they can easily outcompete any of the natural
plants.  And much of this seed material is viable in the soil for several
years!

Am more encouraged some days than others.  Was over in the conservation area
near Burnham Bridge this afternoon  with Meredith Montgomery, showing her
the invasives and some of the good stuff that is starting to thrive — many
baby oaks, cedars, much sumac — now that it has been freed from the
buckthorn.

The herbaceous plants — the garlic mustard, motherwort, burdock, European
bell flower — are an even bigger challenge now that the seed material is
being exposed to the sun, something that wasn’t happening when there was
“only buckthorn”!

Yea for all the help you and your neighbors can render!

Ruth

Talked with four young people today at the site who are interested in this
ongoing work and have expressed willingness to help, particularly with the
buckthorn the garlic mustard, which they can now easily identify.  This is
the kind of thing that is really encouraging.

wildflowers

Posted on June 25, 2009 at 11:18 am in
Wildflowers
Among the many flowers visible now, yellow and purple Clover, and white Yarrow, to name a few, none are more spectacular then the orange Butterfly Weed. Clumps of these native-species plants have been lovingly spread throughout the prairie over the last 15 years and the effect is dramatic. Please enjoy, but do not pick.
Neil
Tags:

On the Lake

Posted on June 13, 2009 at 6:47 pm in

It was a wonderful day to be on Cedar Lake. Putting my kayak in at the Isles-Cedar Canal because there is plenty of parking, I paddled north and west through the shady channel. There were quite a few other kayaks and canoes going in both directions. The opening onto Cedar is spectacular, with the lake sparkling spread out before me. The Bryn Mawr Bluffs are visible in the distance. Hidden Beach, or East Cedar Lake Beach, has a large crowd. I will stop there later. For now, I push out into the lake, hard, for 350 strokes. Then I float, looking at the sky as the wind moves me. It is great to be in the park today.

Top