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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
 



 

diggin4it

I agree with brass on that one, QM you seem very good at pulling up great bits of history.

Can you find anything on who Tony Schmidt was? It sparked my curiosity Tuesday and I spent 4 hours tring to find out who he is/was. Even if it is not at Tony Schmidt I would like to know the answer. He must have been somebody in Ramsey county to get a regional park named after him. I heard perhaps a commisioner but I couldn't even find that.

Thanks!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:32 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Yes, Tony was just a comish! But I stopped researching him after going on my Como tangent.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:39 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Also known as Burlington Northern Incorporated:Como Shops.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:41 AM Permalink
tom

You know not that it matters, with current events could they be talking about the Snyders drug store closing, and the whole fewed between CVS, Walgreens.

I know over in Highland Village Walgreens can't move.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:42 AM Permalink
Redbear

A FRIENDLY REMINDER:

I just thought of this while chatting with someone. Thought it might be relevant.

ane

The noodle someone posted about the boats anchoring and selling things seems to make the most literal sense here.

9:48amTrygve

and when exactly does literal sense matter to the cluewriter? What year was that?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:49 AM Permalink
green

Allison, ittiz time for your Oscar's razor post...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 7:59 AM Permalink
mystical_muzik

blah clue 6 el suckios!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:00 AM Permalink
green

Bear and Monkey don't slog....

:pbpt: :pbpt:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:01 AM Permalink
mystical_muzik

Greeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenie! Are you going to get out and do some digging? I so need a Green hug! :grin:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:07 AM Permalink
green

Mystical... can't hug you unless I can cry, too. That do-able?

Maybe we could meet after The Hunt, or just get together with a small group. I am no longer comortable hunting [on my own] or attending Cooler gatherings.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:12 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Basics: We should thank her....Harriet E. Bishop

In 1847, Harriet Bishop traveled from Vermont to the small but growing city in the West, St. Paul. As part of a program led by educational reformer Catharine Beecher to send women teachers to help educate and civilize frontier children, Bishop was the first of her class to volunteer to go West. She came to the area that would soon become the Minnesota Territory to both educate the children of St. Paul and to exert her moral influence on the rough frontier town. Convinced that women were capable of teaching morality, Bishop became active in many moral issues such as temperance, educational reform, and women's suffrage. She is credited with starting the first public school in St. Paul and the first Sunday school, which led to the first Baptist church in the area.

Alot more good info:
http://www.mnhs.org/library/tips/history_topics/118bishop.html
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:12 AM Permalink
queenmalley

....to exert her moral influence on the rough frontier town.

So is St Paul moral now!!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:14 AM Permalink
Brassmonkey

Heading out to hunt/look around.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:14 AM Permalink
tom

You know all these customes they are using could be a sign of Highland, seeing they have a Circus there.

They also have Highland Village near by.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:15 AM Permalink
green

Speaking of thanking... Ares yudabest!!!!!!!!! Without you, I'd be huntless.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:15 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Harriet Island Marina where one could tact west and drop anchor; I don't see any beheaded puppets in the photo...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:17 AM Permalink
green

There's also a small marina/boat launchish thighy at Lilydale.

Just sayin'...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:20 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Boat Names from MHS:

Padelford Packet Boat Company fleet in St. Paul harbor: Harriet Bishop, Josiah Snelling, Jonathan Padelford, Betsey Northrup, Anson Northrup
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:20 AM Permalink
mystical_muzik

I'd really like that :smile: You can cry as much as ya want to, I don't mind a bit! I can't remember if you got the chance to meet Kaitlynn or not...my mind hasn't been the greatest the past 2 wks :frown:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:22 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Easter Peeps on the Paddle boat:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:22 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Harriet boats: In addition to three U.S. Coast Guard licensed passenger vessels, the Padelford management company operates the permanently moored Minnesota Centennial Showboat Theater in partnership with the University of Minnesota.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:25 AM Permalink
OT

I had a dream last night where I'd made a map of Ramsey County as it looked when it first became a territory, with a vellum overlay of how it looks now. There sure were a lot of gravel pits back in the day! :sillygrin:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:26 AM Permalink
wolfpac

From clue #5. "Take a westerly tack away from the stack a landmark most uncouth." How about that being a port-a-pottie! They have vent stacks and are most uncouth.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:26 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Ha! Ugh the Tug!

The Betsey Northrup provides great versatility for Padelford Co. in that it can be operated separately when pushed by the towboat Ugh the Tug.

The Brandon Paul, a former car/truck ferry from Tiptonville, KY, was renamed Betsey Northrup.

The Showboat:

Built in 1899.In 2000 a welderÂ’s torch ignited a blaze that burned the old boat to the waterline. The University was unable to replace the Showboat with the available funds and the Padelford Co. volunteered to build the boat within the UniversityÂ’s budget.

King of Fire?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:29 AM Permalink
tim_the_hunter

Good one JW!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:30 AM Permalink
zephyrus

Very clever!

Now that I think about it though, the last time that I used one, I think that I forgot to flush...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:30 AM Permalink
wolfpac

Remind me not to go into that one,lol
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:32 AM Permalink
queenmalley

The St Paul Yacht Club, located at Harriet, has been around for 90 years and publishes a newsletter called:

Anchor and Line
http://www.stpaulyachtclub.org/anchorandline/March%202009.pdf

The Saint Paul Yacht Club was founded in 1912 as the Saint Paul Motor Boat Club for the purpose of fostering a greater interest in

motor boating and the Mississippi River. In 1934 the club adopted its present name, S.P.Y.C., and continues more than 90 years of

service to its members and the community.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:33 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Yacht Club interesting group:

There is scuttlebutt in the harbors and on the docks that my election to an unprecedented third term as

Commodore SPYC could go to my head. Rumors that your Commodore could very well become anoth-

er Lord Nelson or a Bull Halsey....a strict disciplinarian, demanding and uncompromising; leading from

the top down.

These rumors are true.

Let the word be passed up and down this mighty river that there is new management aboard and that

the SPYC is the best, most accommodating, friendliest, safest, most affordable and well managed mari-

na on the river. Be assured that as we go forward your officers and I will maintain this condition.

Stand by to launch boats in April and May...be prepared (all fees must be paid).

As you were,

Peter Kramer, Commodore SPYC
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:36 AM Permalink
OT

I was hunting with a six year old grandson once and he needed to use one of those. I stood outside while he did his business and when he came out he told me, "Grandma, they even have a place to put your mittens". :eek:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:37 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Lilydale Pool and Yacht club: is this the same as the St Paul Yacht Club?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:41 AM Permalink
queenmalley

St Paul Yacht Club:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:43 AM Permalink
Eags

Don't you just love dreams!?!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:43 AM Permalink
queenmalley

Harriet has "Dual Bridges" Twins?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:45 AM Permalink
leelabell

You want another noodle for Como?

Deborah Howell's last name is pronounced Howl, like a wolf
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:48 AM Permalink
queenmalley

I don't even know what to say about this:

Harriet Bishop was a woman of many firsts, all of which dramatically impacted the frontier territory that would become Minnesota. She is perhaps best remembered for her role as the first public schoolteacher in St. Paul in 1847. Charged with a sense of the importance of feminine virtue, Christian duty and divinely inspired education, Harriet Bishop and her school helped to transform the rugged outpost of St. Paul into a flourishing town. Of equal importance was her participation in and support of the First Baptist Church, the St. Paul Circle of Industry, the Baptist Women's Sewing Circle, the Territorial Temperance Society, the Christian Aid Society, the St. Paul Women's Seminary, and the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association. Harriet Bishop pioneered St. Paul's first Protestant Sunday school and joined the Minnesota Historical Society as a founding member. In addition, she acted as the first state organizer of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.

In all of these endeavors, Harriet Bishop sought to enhance the stability and morality of Minnesota, establish a society of like-minded individuals, and improve the lot of Christian women like herself. Harriet's books, including Floral Home and Minnesota Then and Now, also served these purposes. They provided a ladylike appeal for a larger feminine sphere of influence and acted as prime Minnesota booster material. While calling for further settlement of her beloved adopted home, Harriet declared, "If Earth has a paradise, it is here." Indeed, if St. Paul and Minnesota were Harriet Bishop's vision of paradise, it was because of her lifelong struggle to make it so.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:50 AM Permalink
queenmalley

I'll take it!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:50 AM Permalink
queenmalley

On Harriet Island, a small spot on the Mississippi River just across from downtown St. Paul, there is a paddleboat-shaped play area sheltered by a replica of the city's first schoolhouse. It's a lovely setting and a fitting tribute to the island's namesake, Harriet Bishop. As the city's first schoolteacher, Bishop dedicated her life to transforming the rugged outpost she first encountered into a thriving, civilized town.

Bishop moved from Vermont to St. Paul in 1847, fresh from her training with Catharine Beecher, a reformer (and sister of Harriet Beecher Stowe) who believed that women needed to be well educated in order to devote themselves to the moral development and education of their children and their homes. As part of Beecher's program to train women to help educate and civilize frontier children, Bishop answered a call from Minnesota missionary Thomas S. Williamson. In addition to founding a school (her first schoolhouse was a former blacksmith's shop).

Blacksmith: King of Fire?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 8:52 AM Permalink
green

I think I did, meet Kait, at a Re-Hash once. But I tend to keep my distance from babies as when I hold them their ALARMS go off. Though, I must say I'm finding when I treat nekked kids like my furry kids I fair mush betta.

Who'da thunk nekked kids like skritchin' and kisses and all that. (shakes head)

We'll make a date. Ares and Chesty welcome.

But no seedin' with Klondike bar wrappers, etc.
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:08 AM Permalink
green

Dear gods, woman. Are they hard? Be stil my heart!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:12 AM Permalink
treasure chest

:grin:
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:16 AM Permalink
treasure chest

Pounds head on desk.... thought I had it figured out... back to the drawing board... sheesh!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:17 AM Permalink
green

You nut-bucket! They don't flush! LOL!!

Did you wa(r)sh your hands?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:18 AM Permalink
green

OH, SHIT!!!!!

Coughin' up a lung on that one!
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:25 AM Permalink
Artemis The Huntress

I go on archeology digs

That would be soooo much fun, I love archeology! How did you get involved with that?
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:37 AM Permalink
zephyrus

Don't feel bad, I never got near her, and there was this ear-piercing wail... I thought for sure the banshees were coming to get me!

But then Mrs.Zephy comes to visit not too long ago, and she is as sweet as can be...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:38 AM Permalink
zephyrus

That is what I like about the port-o-loo's

While they don't have a lot of room for anything else, they do give you a really nice sized sink. I don't like the way they leave all of the little brown soaps just floating around in the water, they get very soft that way. I think they should switch brands of soap anyway, it doesn't leave me feeling very fresh...
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:41 AM Permalink
queenmalley

The Peep photo is from the Paddleford Captain's blog. Maybe he has a Peep fetish (!).
Fri, 01/22/2010 - 9:52 AM Permalink