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2021 White Bear Lake Manitou Days Medallion Hunt

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FOLLOW THE CLUES ON THE

Medallion Hunt

A daily treasure hunt taking you on a journey through White Bear Lake, White Bear Township, or Birchwood.

 
 

Medallion Found!

 

Congratulations to Todd Pittman, winner of the Manitou Days medallion hunt, sponsored by Coldwell Banker realty. Todd found the medallion shortly after the eighth clue at Bald Eagle-Otter Lake Regional Park (Benson Prairie) and won $1000 for his discovery.

Thank you to everyone who participated and made this year a fun and successful event!

 

 
 

EXPLANATION OF CLUES

 

Hiding of the Medallion

 
 

Medallion Hunt Rules

  1. The first clue will be given on Thursday, July 1st at 6:00 PM. A new clue will be released daily at 6:00 PM until the medallion is found (for up to 10 days).
  2. Clues can be found on the Manitou Days Facebook page or this website.
  3. The medallion is hidden on public property in White Bear Lake, White Bear Township, or Birchwood.

The Winner

  1. If you find the $1000 medallion, please IMMEDIATELY call the number printed on the medallion. Nobody wants to keep searching for a medallion that has already been found!
  2. Once we have verified that the medallion has been located, we will promptly announce the end of the hunt through our website and social media platforms.

Rules

  1. At no time should the property be damaged. The medallion is hidden in such a way where hunters will not need garden tools, will not need to swim, nor will need to engage in any activity that puts themselves or others in danger. The medallion will never be hidden in a way where ornamental plants or garden beds will need to be trampled upon.
  2. Hunters are encouraged to politely help each other remember these simple rules so that our public spaces can remain safe and fun for all people who enjoy our public spaces.
  3. Hunters can be assured that the medallion will not be hidden at the Fillebrown House, Tamarack Nature Center, or in any construction zone. The medallion will also not be hidden on school property.
  4. Please also be mindful of others during this time of social distancing. The CDC has recommended six feet of distance between you and fellow hunters.
  5. In the event that the medallion is not found within 24 hours of the release of the last clue, Coldwell Banker Realty and its co-sponsors reserve the right to end the hunt and donate the $1000 prize money to a local charity.
 Clue 0, June 30, 2021
 
“On with the show!” demands the spirit of Manitou
So away from prying eyes we did our biddin’.
Ye treasure hunt nerds: time to assemble your herds
For the medallion has officially been hidden.
 
Visual Clue July 1, 2021
 
Tonight, get yourself there — to Washington Square
Find Grainy Brain, our medallion creator’s booth.
Together, circles and squares reveal interesting pairs
This bonus visual may help reveal our truth.
 
The visual clue depicted a pedigree chart of the Benson Family. 
Hunt Information
Dates
Scheduled Dates
Thursday, July 1, 2021
Find Date
Thursday, July 8, 2021
Finders
Name
Johannes
Prize
Maximum Prize
$1000
Awarded Prize
$1000
Location
General Location
Bald Eagle/Otter Lake Park/Benson Prairie
Pinpointed Location
In the Homer Bruggeman-planted stand of White Pines

45.12315, -93.006444

Clues
Clue 1
Published Date
Wednesday, June 30, 2021, 7:00 PM
Sizzlin’ greetings we send (here at pandemic’s end?)
Velkommen to all Bears and faithful visitors alike!
Read all the rules about puck placement and tools
And your odds of winning will exponentially spike.

Wolves voracious and with clues, loquacious
Deserve the most expansive of affair.
Though it may be rough -- and we don’t mean to be gruff:
Leash yourself within good ole White Bear.

But, if in a peckish mood: gorge some food
On site, there’s plenty of room for all.
Hear music in the air; summer lovin’ everywhere
Day or night: you’re simply bound to have a ball!
The official meaning of the clue.
In addition to welcoming hunters to another go-around, we want to provide some fuel here at the beginning. “Spike” referred to the method in which the medallion was hidden. We added spikes (long screws) to a section of tree trunk with the medallion attached to the bottom side.“Rough” was in reference to a street sign on Hugo Road stating “Rough Road” while “leash” pointed to the signs indicating that dogs must be leashed in the park.“Wolves”referred to the published story that, at one point, the Benson family took in two wolf pups after they were captured by the DNR. The wolves were said to fit right in with the dogs that they were breeding. Music was an important word in this clue. “Voracious wolves” also hinted at the tune “Hungry Like The Wolf” by Duran Duran as several lines from the song fit this location. They include (A) “give me a sign” as we named two of them in this clue, (B) “In touch with the ground” as the ground would need to touched in order to pull up the medallion from under the dead tree trunk, (C) “juices like wine” as Bald Eagle Liquor Store is in sight, (D) “stalked in the forest” as the medallion was hidden in grove of pine trees in the midst of a prairie, and (E) “Strut on a line” as the medallion was hidden next to the county borderline. Last but not least,“Hear music in the air” and “ lovin’ everywhere” may have struck a bell as it is part of the chorus of George Benson’s 1980 hit Give Me TheNight.
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Clue 2
Published Date
Thursday, July 1, 2021, 7:00 PM
“Lumbago Barb” was said to be a snob
Possibly missing her empathy knob.
After RnR on her quay, she’d seek hilltop chalet
Scouting wood’s edge for a thingamabob.

A house of the sun became a central one
When diplomacy was up for grapplin’.
But times do change and hands rearrange
From sceptres to solstice lights and applin’.
The official meaning of the clue.
In the mood for a limerick, we centered on Barb, which was a nod to the barbed wire fence surrounding our prairie. The rest of the first stanza contained the names of several cottages from the Bald Eagle neighborhood, including Lumbago, Snob Knob, Chalet, Hilltop, and Edgewood. RnR also pointed to the railroad tracks sign on 120th Street at the treasure scene. The word “scout” was also deliberately used (see Clue 4 explanation for more). The second stanza spoke of another property on the lake: Sonheim (translated “House of the Sun”).It was built/owned by Engebreth Hagbart Hobe, a businessman and consulate to Norway and Sweden. Still found at 5590 West Bald Eagle Boulevard, the property hosted a series of dignitaries and members of Scandanavian royal families (hinted with “sceptre”). Today, the estate is owned by Dr. John and Barb (Jacobson) Cretzmeyer. For years, they put on one of the area’s most dazzling holiday (“solstice”) lights displays but declared 2020 their final show. Many local news companies have covered their displays through the years. Barb is also a matriarch of Pine Tree Apple Orchard (and who is not to be confused, of course, with the fictional, unpleasant “Lumbago Barb” of the first stanza...any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental).
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Clue 3
Published Date
Friday, July 2, 2021, 7:00 PM
You’ve heard ‘i before e’ since days elementary
Perhaps forethought advice for a new speller.
But for a lucrative token, sculpted rules are broken
So, risk taker: will you be the next Rockefeller?

There once was a home where bison roam
They say the environ was quite laissez-faire.
With younger crew — seen in a front room of blue
Wilson would later be much worse for wear.
The official meaning of the clue.
Two names near the medallion’s location break the “i before e”rule: Leibel Street and Preisler Roofing. Leibel Street and Preisler Roofing are found across Highway 61.“Sculpted,” and “Rockefeller” also hinted at the bronze Prometheus statue found at Rockefeller Center in New York City. Prometheus is translated to mean forethought, which is why that term was used in the second line. Paul Manship, it’s creator, grew up spending his summers at Bald Eagle. Another individual who spent time on the shores of Bald Eagle was Ma Barker and her boys. Known by her White Bear Lake neighbors as “Mrs. Wilson,” Barker rented a cottage at 5384 East Bald Eagle Boulevard (at the corner of Buffalo Street, hinted at with “bison”). Void of harassment from law enforcement, gangsters of that era could come and go rather freely (“laissez faire”). While hunters are likely familiar with the Plantation Nightclub from previous hunts, there was another favorite hang out joint for Ma Barker and her boys: The Blue Room. They used to travel to this club, which was located on Stillwater Avenue in Willernie. At that time, the string of businesses on that street were referred to as “The Front,” as described on Willernie’s website.
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Clue 4
Published Date
Saturday, July 3, 2021, 7:00 PM
Plan your homer find by first looking behind
It really was one big curveball.
Were you here in full dress? We followed the press
Perhaps, in due time, you’ll recall.

Go yankee doodlin’ tonight — celebrate blue, red and white
The holiday fireworks display will be no baloney.
Socially distant our prize will stay — no accidental finds today
So stick a feather in that cap and call it macaroni.
The official meaning of the clue.
Our hunt was inspired by the large Pioneer Press medallion hunt, held in concert with the St. Paul Winter Carnival. In fact, Jack Moser--former cluewriter-- actually helped write our first couple of hunts in the 1980s. Just this past January, the Pioneer Press medallion was found at West Park in White Bear Lake. But, just five years earlier their medallion was at Bald Eagle Regional Park, not far from our hiding spot this year. Most who participated will remember that as a difficult hunt that brought hunters to the park late in the game and, upon arrival, the north metro got hit with a massive snowstorm.“ Perhaps, in due time, you’ll recall '' hinted that a future stanza would use several words from one clue written by the Pioneer Press in 2016.“Homer,” however, hinted at the grove of pine trees within which the medallion was hidden. Long time residents of the area will tell you that the grove was planted by Homer Bruggeman as part of an Eagle Scout project. Yes, pretty obscure, but a cool story and we’d provide other ways to find our special pine grove. Since this clue was released on the Fourth of July, it was the perfect time to insert the word “holiday” and “blue, red, and white” as a Holiday Station could be seen to the northeast of the medallion’s hiding spot. Less obvious, the medallion was very close to the Washington County line. The song “Yankee Doodle” has a strong tie to General George Washington. However, hunters were told that the medallion was not hidden in any high traffic locations for the yearly fireworks display
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Clue 5
Published Date
Sunday, July 4, 2021, 7:00 PM
Six times eleven will allow your chances to leaven
May the code also remedy any dubiety.
(re)New or repurpose? Shake up the service?
Nein! They’ll punt it over to society.

Bullet, trigger, and a naked waiter figure
Into our dogged little tale.
With license to hunt, t’was a final bachelor stunt
Whiling away time on the joyful trails.
The official meaning of the clue.
Six times eleven is 66. Benson Airport and surrounding public land is a 66 acre plot. A unique stipulation of the Benson family is that if the airport is removed before 2033, the land will be donated to the American Cancer Society. “Code” refers to the Benson airport code (6MN9), which can be found looking at the first word or letter of each line of the stanza. Several notable individuals were guests of the Bensons because of their dog breeding reputation. These celebrities included Roy Rogers and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh. “Bullet” and “Trigger” were animals owned by Roy Rogers and “joyful trails” could be translated into Happy Trails, the popular tune recorded by him and his wife, Dale Evans. “Naked Waiter” was a nickname given to Prince Philip following some wild parties at a lunch club he was part of. The Bensons took the Duke to South Dakota for pheasant hunting and he married then-Princess Elizabeth the day after he returned to Great Britain. He is also said to have left the Bensons his hunting license as a souvenir.
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Clue 6
Published Date
Monday, July 5, 2021, 7:00 PM
For some fun, revisit the constitutional one
Here at the forest’s edge.
Within a short hike, there’s manoomin to strike
Our rules are honored — Scout’s pledge.

Be gay and bold, come pan for gold
No kvetching; there’s too much at stake.
For treasure to seize, listen to the breeze
And own the finest place at the lake.
The official meaning of the clue.
Highway 61,running west of the medallion’s hiding spot, was first named “Constitutional 1.” “Revisit” offered a nod to Bob Dylan’s famous album. After it passes County Road J, Highway 61 is also called Forest Boulevard (“edge of the forest”) Oneka Ridge golf course is very near Benson Park. Oneka, in Ojibwe, means “to strike down” as part of a way to harvest wild rice (“manoomin” in the Ojibwe language).“Scout” referred to the grove of trees hiding the medallion as they were planted as part of an Eagle Scout project. The second half of the clue referred to Chateaugaye (“gay”), which was advertised as “The finest place at the lake” in White Bear’s old newspaper Lake Breeze. The hotel was owned by family patriarch Frederick W. Benson. Several words were also taken from Clue 2 (“kvetch,”“pan,”“gold,”“breeze”) of the 2016 Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt, as promised in our Clue 4. Lastly, the word “stake”--like “spike” in the first clue -- hinted at how the medallion was disguised/hidden
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Clue 7
Published Date
Tuesday, July 6, 2021, 7:00 PM
Howl like randu squared, for when compared
There are several lines there to absorb.
Hunt down your coat, clear out your throat
For when you behold the ruddy orb.

A pachyderm with ties to fruity pies
Into a crystal she would denture.
Beau of hog; friend of boy and dog
Now’s the time for adventure.
The official meaning of the clue.
As hinted in the first clue, several lines from Duran Duran’s “Hungry Like the Wolf” fit the treasure scene. But, even without the song, it provided key information about the placement of the medallion. One of the most prominent visuals at the site is Red Luna Tacos (“ruddy orb”). You probably don’t need a coat during this summer, but coat is an anagram for taco. “Adventure” and “time” pointed to the cartoon Adventure Time, which was a popular cartoon that ran on HBO for 10 years. The show follows the many adventures of Finn (“boy”) and Jake (“dog”) and includes many lovable side characters. One of the side characters is an elephant (“pachyderm”) named Tree Trunks.In the series, Tree Trunks marries Mr. Pig (“beau to a hog”), makes apple pies, and in her debut episode ventures with Jake and Finn to taste the elusive crystal apple. To hide the medallion, we took a rotted tree stump from the grove, added spikes, and brought it back in. Furthermore,“boy” and “dog” were also names used to describe Bald Eagle Island, southwest of the scene.
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Clue 8
Published Date
Wednesday, July 7, 2021, 7:00 PM
Problems are nary here on the prairie
Let purple clover frame your way.
Weeds show pride for the hometown side
Lu and white will never betray.

So, without delay, let the otters play
And hobby where raptors fly.
From main path, 91 is the math
Step your way to break the tie.
The official meaning of the clue.
The first stanza, crucial for pinpointing the location within the expansive Benson prairie, was fit for a botanist. The short footpath leading from the main trail to the grove of pine trees was flanked on either side -- sort of like a gate -- by blooming purple clover. From the hiding spot, blazing orange (“show pride for hometown side”) butterfly weeds can be seen to the east. Finally, the missing root word for “lu” and “white” is PINE. Wild lupine bordered the short foot trail to the treasure location and the pine trees were specifically white pines. Since Bald Eagle-Otter Lake is one large regional park, we found it necessary to rule out the Otter Lake side (“let the otters play”) and focus on the Bald Eagle side (“soar where raptors fly”).“Hobby” is also the name of a subspecies of falcon. Falcon Avenue is the name of a street in sight from the medallion’s hiding spot and was meant to pull hunters to the northern end of the park.
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Clue 9
Consider a hero whose fear-meter was zero
Sacrificial love was one of his traits.
He survived the crash but in a flash
Was inferno-bound to save his mates.

Where he did his growing is where we did our sowing
On this truth we wouldn’t feign.
Hope sprouts amid Homer’s project for Scouts
Most are now gone -- but scores do remain.
The official meaning of the clue.
Roger Benson, pilot and war hero, is remembered in this clue.In 1944, he survived a plane crash only to run back into the burning wreckage to save others. He would later die of his burns. Benson Airport was once named Roger Field in his honor. Our medallion, however, was back at the Benson family farm (“growing” and “sowing”). While hinted at earlier in the clues, it is now explicitly stated that hunters should seek out the stand of white pines planted by Homer Bruggeman for his Eagle Scout project. During restoration of the prairie, many of the other pines were removed but this small stand remains.
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Clue 10
We did drop a brand new crop
Up there at Benson’s farm.
Toward a grove of pine you must beeline
Let a taco be your lucky charm.

They did shift and drift but you needn’t sift
Through needles on the floor of the woods.
Find a rotted stump that we did dump
Just pull it up and there hides the goods!
The official meaning of the clue.
Final directions to our 2021 treasure.
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