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Re: Clue #7
See area from a hill? Or as mentioned streets decending. Highest point in elevation is at the ammunition plant in arden hills unfortunately
Guesses
5 Cono
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
Countdown from 11 - you'll be in heavenSpace Rocket Launch!Space rocket slide someone mentioned - brilliant!What other rocket correlation do we have...?Flippster
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
Park Pick Clue 8
Re: Clue #7
Clue 7 Guess
Re: Clue #7
The parks in White Bear Lake are kind of small parks. It seems a little odd they would point you to those this early. I kind of wonder if it could be on public land not in a park. Like if you were to count the streets down to a theoretical 0, you'd be at the intersection of 96 and 61. The one way Lake Ave also comes out there, and Bald Eagle Parkway dead ends there in a little loop with a little bit of green in the middle of the loop. So maybe something like that or along the railroad tracks there.
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
11=Apollo 11, looking at what I love is the ground,
And of course a Beagle is a mainly a sniffer of ground.
Rocket ship slide maybe?
Re: Clue #7
Part of Lake Ave runs as County Road 96 but a stretch from Memorial Beach/ west pro runs as a one way street starting at 11th and going past 1st.
Parks passed along the way are Memorial Beach/West Park and Matoska. This is actually very informative since it would seemingly tel you to avoid the other large park on the shores of WBL : County Park.
See you all out there
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
Re: Clue #7
Clue #7
Clue #7
Count down from eleven and you’ll be in heaven Flying high as would an eagle. Look down from above to find what you love Then sniff out the prize like a beagle
And here are the previous clues:
Clue #6
Escape the heat, cook and eat
At this playland far from the masses.
A place to recover or even take cover –
Life here was slow as molasses.
Clue #5
Things looked rosy, a pocketful of posey.
We remember it all too well.
We were happy back then but beyond our ken:
It soon would all go to hell.
Clue #4
We’re moving ahead, no oncoming dread.
Our future’s in our hands.
This new term is about what’s firm
Let’s avoid the shifting sands.
Clue #3
No time, old sport, to play and cavort.
Pursue the grail with your schemes!
Out at night? Then follow the light
To cross the way to your dreams.
Clue #2
Stay away from links and risky hijinks.
Disturb not ground, tree or trail.
Don’t wait for last clue to know what to do;
This year you’ll figure or fail.
Clue #1
Be it turmoil endemic or global pandemic
It’s been a tough year for us all.
So rather than punt, we renewed this year’s hunt:
Join us, it’ll be a ball!
Don’t be odd, stay in your pod.
Keep six feet away from strangers.
Wear a mask when on your task
To keep all safe from dangers.
Clue 6 park pic
5 on bald eagle lake
My ideas
I haven't posted in a while. The first couple of clues I thought the clue writer was referring to the present pandemic, or maybe an historical reference to the Spanish flu of 1918/1919. So, I tried to connect parks history with 1918.I started to veer toward Harriet Island, hoping that Harriet Tubman was a math ('figure') teacher. She was a public school teacher, not necessarily math. I thought 'old sport' line could be referring to a dog owner talking to their dog ( a dog park nearby), or 'old sport' might literally mean a very old sport like the Hmong Tuj Lub, which has a field in Phalen-Keller Regional Park, referenced in a previous Treasure Hunt. But then, I googled 'old sport' and got a line from The Great Gatsby, by the St. Paul born F. Scott Fitzgerald. I looked where he was born and found a nondescript park near his birth home in St. Paul. Then, other clues led me back to the river area (shifting sands, etc.) so I read up on F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby and found a connection to boating. Aha!, I thought. The Minnesota Boat Club, on Raspberry Island is close to Harriet Island. And F. Scott and Zelda used to stay at/frequent the White Bear Yacht Club in White Bear Lake. There is the St. Paul Yacht Club at Harriet Island, if the Fitzgerald link is just to imply a St. Paul park. Then a clue about 'shifting sands' again told me a park on the Mississippi River, the clue about not 'punting' (a punt is a type of flat-bottomed boat) means going for it, or full steam ahead, which led me to think of the steamboats/riverboats at Harriet Island. When you are on the river you want to avoid the 'shifting sand bars' or you'll run aground. Then clue 5 came out and I thought maybe the clue writer(s) were harking back to the time(s) they had egg on their faces in 2004 (putting the medallion in a real donut, only to have some animal transport it to a different hiding place, not referred to in the clues) or 2007, when it was found at Hidden Falls Park after only 3 clues because the hider forgot about their footprints in the snow being discovered leading to the hiding spot. so, I looked up the clues to these hunts of 2004 and 2007. I found out that the word 'level' led to the Cleveland Street name that led the finders to the medallion. So, I looked on google maps for Hidden Falls Park and I find a Kenneth Street down from Cleveland (ave/st) leading to Hidden Falls. The 'beyond our ken' clue made me think it was at Hidden Falls, beyond/down from Kenneth St. So, the river was still in play. The 'it'll be a ball' clue was a reference again to the red balls on the power lines that cross the river near Hidden Falls. There's a dog park in Minnehaha Park across from Hidden Falls. Then, Clue 6 comes out and, to me, it screams COMO Park. So, I searched some more on google for history, and I couldn't connect everything in the clue(s) to Como. The 'life as slow as molasses' still made me think of a Mark Twain quote or something about life on the Mississippi River, something maybe Tom Sawyer or Huck Finn would have said. So, I searched some more on Mark Twin, and in his book 'Life On the Mississippi', there is a chapter on White Bear Lake (talking about the legend of how the name came about form Indian ( Native American) lore. Then I looked up history of White Bear Lake and found that some of the gangsters of the '30's would hide out here and how there are some drug/alcohol rehabilitation centers here ('a place to cover and recover'), how the Native Americans had/made maple sugar ( the 'slow as molasses' maybe referring to the 1919 Boston Molasses Flood disaster) in the area, and how it was a summer resort for people escaping the life of the cities, etc. So, now, I think, White Bear Lake park is the spot, as long as it's in Ramsey County.
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