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2010 - Lilydale Regional Park

Submitted by ares on

Discuss the 2010 Medallion Hunt Here 

13th Annual Rehash Bash and Other End of the Winter Carnival Festivities 

Sunday, January 31, 2010 
Newell Park Pavilion 
900 N. Fairview Ave. 
Saint Paul, MN 55104 
11:30am-2:30pm 

The 13th Annual Rehash Bash will be held on Sunday, January 31, 2010, at Newell Park, from 11:30am to 2:30pm. As always, its a potluck, and since we\'ve got the building, there will be plenty of power indoors for crock pots. Donations will be accepted to cover the $136 cost for renting the facility. MrMnMikey has some door prizes available. Since this isn\'t Super Bowl Sunday this year, if people want to stick around past the 2:30 closing time, we can start a fire in one of the fire rings. 

In addition, many of us long-time Coolerheads are loyal servants of Vulcanus Rex. Join us for the Vulcan Victory Torchlight Parade, followed by the Vulcan Victory Dance. Information on the Parade Route is from the 2006 Vulcan Krewe. The best places for viewing the parade are going to be at the end of the parade route, as His Majesty, Vulcanus Rex LXXIII, the true King of the Winter Carnival, overthrows that other guy on the steps of the St. Paul Central Library, across from Rice Park 

 

Conference Call Info for Clue 11:

There was no conference call scheduled for clue 10.


 

  • Phone Number: 1-517-417-5000
  • Pass code: 859597 (clue 12 may be different
  • Everyone will be muted initially
  • Lines open at 11pm
  • lilslim will read the clue twice from start to finish
  • After the clue has been read, she will unmute the call
  • 60 ports are available for the teleconference



Line Placeholder Schedule 

1/26/2010- 
5-6 Redbear 
6-7 Jake 
7-8 Jerilyn 
8-9 Kathy 
9-10 Mikey 
10-Clue Steph 

1/27/2010- 
12-1 Redbear 
1-2 Andrea 
2-3 Nimrod 
3-4 jengerm 
4-5 Barefootguy 
5-6 Wicked Nick 
6-7 Chris Digger 
7-8 Art V 
8-9 CM & Me2 
9-Clue Sara 

 

 
First Video - The Deed is Done 

When January’s slanting snow, 
Makes us dream of Mexico 
St. Paul emerges from Wintery sleep 
To search for treasure buried deep 

Notice to every hunting battalion, 
We have hidden the Pioneer Press Medallion 
Where? You ask in husky shout, 
That’s for us to know, and you to find out 

Turn off the tube, leave your hovel 
Grab your walking stick and shovel, 
Whether you be giant or runt, 
The only way is to join the hunt 

For to the hunter belongs the spoil, 
Hunt by day, or Midnight oil, 
Hunt in boot and sturdy glove, 
Hunt with pal, or old true love 

For you who hunt each and every year, 
We raise a lusty St. Paul cheer 
“Good Luck” 

And now, let us be blunt, 
Get off thy duff, and hunt, hunt, hunt
Clue #1 

All hail, O Fire King, of thee we sing 
Thy blast of winter heat scorches 
When ice was like concrete it would\'ve been so sweet 
If the Vulcans plowed with their torches 

Emerge from the den as we once again 
Offer a bodacious bounty 
And this tip to the frozen: bring thick lederhosen 
To public land in Ramsey County 

Clue #1 Video

Hear ye all crews, now come the clues 
For this task I am the Czar 
With each rhyming gift, this shape I will shift 
Listen well to each avatar
Clue #2 

Kissed by a Vulcan, she left him sulkin\' 
\"Sir Soot, I\'ll not forgive these sins!\" 
Her airs Elizabethan, her language, bleepin\' heathen, 
Our mother once blessed us with twins.
Clue #3 

Look high, look low, wherever you go 
Follow a picturesque route 
There are ways to travel away from the gravel 
That keep you in hot pursuit
Clue #4 

Code by Morse should set your course 
To long dashes that dot the landscape. 
You or your avatar should park your car 
On your way to this great escape.
Clue #5 

Take a westerly tack up from the stack, 
A landmark most uncouth. 
Figures grand in scale point to a trail 
Of footprints left by our sleuth.
Clue #6 

You\'ll want to go shopping where things are hopping 
And storeowners once dropped anchor 
Go down the main drag, but be sure not to lag, 
You\'ll have plenty for which to thank her
Clue #7 

Escape your troubles where the water bubbles 
Or gurgles like a stream. 
You may be chargin\' right up to the margin. 
Look for a productive seam.
Clue #8 

Down on the delta where there\'s no ice to melta 
The purple horde raids a golden legion 
Today before kick off the prize you\'ll pick off 
If you search in just the right region 

To find the seed, energy you need 
In search for your clues to glean 
What once was planted is taken for granted 
Stored in one of fifteen
Clue #9 

Not far from stones and ancient bones 
Lay clues that are fit for Jim 
Lure the egrets to yield all secrets 
And you should satisfy him 

Get your kicks by hitting the bricks 
Admiring the trees and view 
Be ever glad hopping pad to pad 
Like amphibians in\'52
Clue #10 

Stonehenge tumbled down near a crumbled town 
Not far from the lights of the city 
If you would hike away from the pike 
You might stumble on something pretty 

Upstream from the landing lay a place in good standing 
Where people prayed, God willin\' 
Now midst the cocklebur and rusted spur 
Is nothing by murder and killin\' 

This park is a sliver, from ancient beds to a river 
In neither is the prize to be found 
Look for the goods among timber and woods 
Do not dig in the fossil ground
Clue #11 

Go for a lark in Lilydale Park 
Between Water Street and the river 
The city boundary sign and the old rail line 
Define the zone that will deliver 

You\'re outside the pale if you\'re close to the rail 
It\'s not to be found near the tracks 
Be nice and cooperative, respect private property 
On public land launch your attacks 

Within this area lies medallion hysteria 
A tangle near the river - not too close! 
About four dozen paces from the waterline to places 
Where you should tromp, dig and freeze your nose
 



 

zephyrus

You are getting me and my brother confused. Notos is the Prince of the South Wind... I am the Prince of the Blustery West Wind. :wink:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 5:57 AM Permalink
Posen

Grand figures ...Synapses firing at random, here....I thought of prominent people from the Grand business district, then turned my thoughts to large letters like the LANDMARK singage...then I thought of the giant White Bear and Snowman figures ....but I am now thinking I like the sticker-shock of the price tags at a car dealership for "grand numbers"...such as the dealerships on Highway 61.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:03 AM Permalink
zephyrus



It is right under my nose then, they are everywhere!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:04 AM Permalink
zephyrus

Just tying in the smokestack clue:

From 1954 - "At least three miles and perhaps more for measure,

From the Pioneer Press lies the Carnival treasure.

And if you really want a clue,

The river's between a smokestack and you."

These may be the balls you are referring to:

From 1993 - "You can see them

If you look up high.

Some perfect circles

Are in the sky."
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:09 AM Permalink
zephyrus

I haven't thought of it. What do the clues say to you?

And welcome Sue, to the Crew!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:17 AM Permalink
green

Suescrew, Battle Creek has not come to mind for me this year. Now if we get a "take your honey for a ride" clue I'll be thinking Battle Creek!!!!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:24 AM Permalink
OT

Yup, Ian pointed that out earlier. I meant to say it might be Notos, Prince of the South Wind. All those Ole! Ole! Ole!'s you know.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:44 AM Permalink
frostbite

I'm thinking about the 'westerly tack "up" from the stack' and what the word "up" refers to or means. As "tack" is a nautical term, I first thought that it points to being along the river or water. Some are thinking it just points west and doesn't mean along water. If that is the case, what does Up mean?

If you were to tack westerly on the river, you would be going "UP" stream. So say the "stack" refers to Island Station, or even Landmark brewery not too far away, if you tack westerly from IS you run right into Lilydale. The Figures Grand could be the large grain silos on the north side of the river that seem to point in a line toward the island. Maybe its on Lilydale west of the railroad bridge (dashes?) off the trail?

Thoughts?
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:54 AM Permalink
zephyrus

It is alright, I am sure it was just a Freudian slip... Zephyrus is much better looking than Notos, as we all know :wink:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:59 AM Permalink
Posen

"Tack" gives me horses...looking high and low, suggests going up and down...but where would one find a carousel in Ramsey County?!?
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 6:59 AM Permalink
Nimrod

All dressed up and not a FLIPPEN GOOD IDEA where to go...
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:07 AM Permalink
zephyrus

If I were able to enter St Paul right now, I would be looking in the wooded area near the Midway entrance, focusing on that area surrounding the path there.

For now.

But what do I know, I can't even choose a good vacation spot :wink:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:09 AM Permalink
frostbite

Then again, tack could mean the path tacks back and forth (what boats do when tacking) and "Up" means uphill..I kind of like that better because it fits with other parks that other clues seem to fit better.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:10 AM Permalink
green

I think it's more like "westerly tack {tack meaning direction} (COMMA) up from..." the stack that's at a lower level than where we should be. Go in a westerly direcrtion, up above the stack.

Though, in typing that I realized if one stayed on the same level, the river, and tacked up river to the western side, you'd come to an ilandish area.

So now I'm not so sure...

Guess I'm still torn between to parks.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:11 AM Permalink
Brassmonkey

Heading out to dig at Noon!!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:13 AM Permalink
zephyrus

I have never heard of Noon. Is it a park, or a rec?

:pbpt:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:18 AM Permalink
frostbite

As this is my 2nd year hunting, I have not been on Lilydale or the parks in that region. I also don't know how to fit the earlier clues to that location. They seem to point to como to me, with the possible exception of the "twins" being the two rivers that come together, which I don't know if that is right (the whole mother nature, two rivers, once, etc.). If you take that, then the latest clues seem to me to be stronger in that area. I wish I had time off to get down there!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:18 AM Permalink
Nimrod

don't anagram "most uncouth" with your children behind you....there WILL be giggling...
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:20 AM Permalink
Brassmonkey

Lol.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:24 AM Permalink
OT

Could be this place, but it's in Douglas County.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:34 AM Permalink
leelabell

So I figured this out last night and thought I was so cool, but AW pointed out that someone on his board figured it out days ago. So, I'm not so cool. Anyway, I'm sure I've figured out the last two lines of Clue Two and I don't know what to do with it. I can't make it fit a park. Maybe you can. Or, maybe, it has to do with what it is wrapped in.

Anyway, the previous editor of the PP, Deborah Howell, was a tiny, Elizabethan woman who swore like a sailor. She was nicknamed mother and oversaw the PP's two Pulitzers.

Our mother (her) once blessed us (the PP) with twins (the Pulitzers)

I'm sure this noodle is right. But, so what? There are like 6 parks that are near Howell in St. Paul but it doesn't intersect any of them. So, maybe it is something else. She left the PP in 1990 (a Como hunt, by the way). She was well-regarded. There are lots of obits and memories about her you can find online.

She was stepmom to the Coleman bros.

She died in New Zealand after being hit by a car

She was going to start a drawing class in her retirement

She left the PP to go to Newhouse and then to the WA Post, where she was ombudsman

Blah blah blah
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:36 AM Permalink
green

That is a stunning figuring out. I agree that it's right on - so easy now that someone did all the hard work for me. Fabulous, Lela.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:41 AM Permalink
leelabell

Oh, she was also called Dragonlady, so maybe that means it is at Phalen, where the dragon boat races are.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:44 AM Permalink
KC0GRN

Is there a hidden meaning in that the clue reads "Figures grand in scale point to a trail" but when it's read by the person says "Pictures grand in scale point to a trail"
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:48 AM Permalink
green

Does the first part pf the clue refer to any article(s) that led to the Pulitizers? Or the lawsuit ocurred in the year of one of the Pulitizers? Or Howell wrote a lot about the lawsuit?
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:51 AM Permalink
wolfpac

"Numbers grand in scale point to a trail" Could that mean house numbers between 1000-1099 that are next to a park with a trail in the vicinity?
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 7:59 AM Permalink
queenmalley

good noodle.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:00 AM Permalink
OT

In 1986, the Pioneer Press won a Pulitzer for feature writing for "Life on the Land," John Camp's five-part series examining the life of an American farm family amid the agricultural crisis. Camp now writes best-selling mystery novels under the name John Sandford. In 1988, it won another feature writing Pulitzer for "AIDS in the Heartland."
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:04 AM Permalink
leelabell

The Pulitzers were about farmers and AIDS, so no. I'll see what I can figure out about the Vulcs decision to stop the greasepaint thing. It wasn't a lawsuit. But NOW was saber rattling. I doubt Howell got involved with it. She was an editor. She had to remain dispassionate.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:05 AM Permalink
green

How about the spire of the church her memorial was at being seen from the park, ala Boxmeyer? Central Presbyterian Church.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:10 AM Permalink
Downtown Dave

and she was married to C. Peter McGrath, who preceded Ken Keller as University of Minnesota President. And Phalen precedes Keller.....

:litesmile:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:12 AM Permalink
zephyrus

Great minds think alike :smile:

We should have done this the first time I posted this link :wink:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:18 AM Permalink
leelabell

It is because of you, I found the link. :smile:
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:19 AM Permalink
Eags

There was the Yoerg (spelling) brewery near the base of the Ohio hill, too. Haven't slogged all, so don't know if that has been mentioned before.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:24 AM Permalink
Eags

Great noodle!!
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:27 AM Permalink
zephyrus

Well... I am going to look for a medallion or something. I need a break from clues.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:27 AM Permalink
Posen

Debra Street runs into two parks in White Bear lake...
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:30 AM Permalink
Eags

Can't find the post, but responding to someone's post about Baker Street - does anything else fit Baker Playground?
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:37 AM Permalink
l and a mommy

Howell is one block from Merriam

Debra St. Runs into Podvin Park in White Bear Lake
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:42 AM Permalink
queenmalley

I'm still thinking "Tack" refers to horse tack as that video avatar said "whoa pony."
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:44 AM Permalink
Posen

or perhaps the pony ride is to throw off people who don't know sailing terms...
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:47 AM Permalink
green

But the clue use tack as a verb not as a noun. Plus the direction in which to tack is given. So that gets me thinking it's not horse tack which is a noun, and is tack as in move as that's a verb.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:51 AM Permalink
green

Eags, I know nothing about Baker Playground.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:55 AM Permalink
GreenTeam

Maybe this helps?

Tack

–noun

1. a short, sharp-pointed nail, usually with a flat, broad head.

2. Nautical.

a. a rope for extending the lower forward corner of a course.

b. the lower forward corner of a course or fore-and-aft sail.

c. the heading of a sailing vessel, when sailing close-hauled, with reference to the wind direction.

d. a course run obliquely against the wind.

e. one of the series of straight runs that make up the zigzag course of a ship proceeding to windward.

3. a course of action or conduct, esp. one differing from some preceding or other course.

4. one of the movements of a zigzag course on land.

5. a stitch, esp. a long stitch used in fastening seams, preparatory to a more thorough sewing.

6. a fastening, esp. of a temporary kind.

7. stickiness, as of nearly dry paint or glue or of a printing ink or gummed tape; adhesiveness.

8. the gear used in equipping a horse, including saddle, bridle, martingale, etc.

–verb (used with object)

9. to fasten by a tack or tacks: to tack a rug to the floor.

10. to secure by some slight or temporary fastening.

11. to join together; unite; combine.

12. to attach as something supplementary; append; annex (often fol. by on or onto).

13. Nautical.

a. to change the course of (a sailing vessel) to the opposite tack.

b. to navigate (a sailing vessel) by a series of tacks.

14. to equip (a horse) with tack.

–verb (used without object)

15. Nautical.

a. to change the course of a sailing vessel by bringing the head into the wind and then causing it to fall off on the other side: He ordered us to tack at once.

b. (of a sailing vessel) to change course in this way.

c. to proceed to windward by a series of courses as close to the wind as the vessel will sail.

16. to take or follow a zigzag course or route.

17. to change one's course of action, conduct, ideas, etc.

18. to equip a horse with tack (usually fol. by up): Please tack up quickly.

—Idiom

19. on the wrong tack, under a misapprehension; in error; astray: His line of questioning began on the wrong tack.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 8:58 AM Permalink
Tatergirl

Most of Lillydale is in Dakota county... check your maps for the county line. The only part of Lillydale regional the lies in Ramsey county is the fossel grounds area and I don't think they want anyone digging there.
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 9:01 AM Permalink
queenmalley

I will try to keep an open mind on this uncouth sculpture located at North High Bridge Park near Cherokee.

The Watcher, a sculpture by Zoran Mojsilov

 In 1994, the neighbors of the North High Bridge Park were faced with the quandary of what to do with the remaining rock from the construction of the garden walls in the park. Joe Landsberger, project coordinator, knew of a sculptor, Zoran Mojsilov, who worked in stone. Zoran was born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia.

The Watcher

a poem by Joe Landsberger

My park is alive with stone,

bone of earth,

structure of life

Native blood course below

Spirit wind glide above

Images! Ancestors!

guide my hand

mold the walls

fill the earth

plant the seed

make the gardens
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 9:01 AM Permalink
tim_the_hunter

joe
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 9:03 AM Permalink
Brassmonkey

Nice one
Thu, 01/21/2010 - 9:05 AM Permalink