Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Lanesboro Nights
Monday, July 6, 2026
It was a grand stay here for us.
I should mention that Thursday night I awoke and rose to take in the view of the full moon on the new fallen snow. I was surprised to note, traversing the back yard, several, singular apparitions.
They were led by an old and stooped man in a robe with a staff holding the hand of a young girl also wearing a robe with a peaked hood. Then was a gangling joker as one would see spring forth from an old Jack in the Box toy when the crank was rotated sufficient. Then followed a goat and a bear and a tall man, also in a robe,. He surely was some type of Sultan, or Hindu, for he had on his head a large turban which in its center had a large Ruby which glowed red in the night. There was, in the morning, no tracks in the snow which proves the fact that they were specter.
They, I assume, were in no connection to the flying saucers we earlier had witnessed that day near Ashby. We had paused to view the Seven Sisters when they appeared from the SW, just under the low cloud ceilings that draped the sky. They passed on the far side of the largest sister, but did not emerge from the opposite shoulder as expected. This can only mean there is an underground base, a saucer base, on the far side of that moraine.
They were the typical stainless steel in colour but, interestingly, they rotated in an anti-clockwise rotation. And emitted a low hum. Unlike the saucers we see in Duluth which rotate clockwise and whistle. I suspect these new saucers are from a different planet from the latter. I hope this does not mean a saucer war is imminent.
-Jeff Smith 1/3/1/21
Sunday, July 5, 2026
Zumbrota VRBO
Zumbrota VRBO
4/4/21 Easter Sunday 0215
Enjoyed our stay
here very much. Delightful accommodations, a location with attributes, and
friendly people.
Plus, the weather is
outstanding.
Altogether time and
money well spent.
Further, I had a most
remarkable experience tonight, - well, I guess it was last night as, I see now,
it’s 2 in the morning.
It was late and the weather
lovely – a soft breeze infusing the apartment here. We are from Duluth and in a
day or two we will be returning there. If you don’t know that city, well, we
have no reason to expect similar weather for a month, at least. On an impulse I
decided a walk would be nice. The moon was full and the sidewalks inviting.
Naturally I walked
to the covered bridge. In the park I noticed the crows were gathered in the
trees overhead. They murmured and stirred.
I recalled how,
years ago, when I worked in downtown Minneapolis, the crows would assemble in
Elliot Park across from our office.
Out the window I’d
see them, black clouds distant coming from all points of the compass, in the
premature winter dusk. When I took my walks on my evening break there they
would be. Watching.
On my return here I
decided to walk up East Ave take a look at the old Congregational Church in the
moonlight.
Upon ascending the hill,
I was stopped dead in my tracks. A rickety clacking sound caught my attention.
It was not the sound that halted me though. It was its source.
There crossing the
street in front of me was a singular, dare I call it so, apparition.
For ahead of me, on
the street, crossing diagonally, roughly from the hardware store parking lot, was
an old, no, rather, an ancient woman.
Stooped and bent,
she hobbled across the avenue, leaning forward, both hands upon a crooked cane –
hence the sound. She was swaddled in some sort of black robe, or shawl perhaps,
her head covered by a black hood, face obscured within.
Just when I had
regained myself, I saw something fall from the folds of her garments. A black object
laying there in the center of the avenue.
She continued on
oblivious to her loss.
I hurried to the
object and picked it up. It was a piece of black cloth wrapped about some small
heavy objects of various sizes and shapes.
“Excuse me.” I
called after her. “Excuse me! You dropped something!”
She stopped. She did
not turn for a few heartbeats, but then she rotated a bit and turned her head
slightly. From inside the shadows of the hood a small dark eye glittered. I
could, in profile, see a surprisingly large, and sharp, nose.
I approached, and as
I did, she held out a thin, pale, claw of a hand – she cupped her talon-like fingers
into a skeletal cup.
I placed the object
in her hand.
She tilted her head
to the side and down.
She looked at it.
“Aye.” She rasped.
She nodded and turned and continued on her way.
She walked along the
front side of the Quonset roofed business there (Siding and Window?) her
hunched shadow followed her along the façade. She disappeared around the south
corner of the building, into the dark.
I watched, rooted to
the spot.
Finally, I resolved
to look after her – it was so dark beyond the corner and she seemed so…vulnerable.
I approached the corner,
peered around the edge and…she was gone! There laid her cane, which I saw then
was nothing more than a broken, gnarled branch. There was no place for her to
make an exit, a chain-link fence stretched across the area.
Just then, startling
me severely, something landed at my feet! As I was about to look down a soft ‘Caw”
came from overhead. A shadow passed over me and I quickly looked up. A large
crow, or raven, soared then across the disc of the moon. I followed its glide,
in the general direction of the covered bridge until it disappeared from view
in the darkness.
Again I looked down
and there by my feet was a stone. And not any stone. Being from Duluth, even in
the moonlight I could recognize it as an agate. I picked it up.
It is nearly the
size of a walnut. On all sides, save one, it is unremarkable.
But on the one side,
the flat one, the shiny side, there is revealed a series of concentric bands,
one inside the other stretching, seemingly, into infinity.
Except there, deep
within, they pause, yielding to an open area.
And here, tonight as
I sit here at this kitchen island, under these lamps suspended, I can see,
framed by those white concentric rings, the dark image of a crow.
-Jeff
Smith
Thursday, July 2, 2026
I find myself remembering things now. Details that at first, right after, had slipped my mind. But now are recalled. For instance, it was a nice day when we started out, but, as the events I will try to describe here happened the weather was overcast, colder, dreary, bare. Strange I cannot recall that transition occurring.
But I am getting ahead of myself, or, maybe, behind actually. Foremost I am of 100% Dutch ancestry. My father’s parents were immigrants. My mother’s, second generation. They grew up in, tiny towns that were, almost exclusively, Dutch. My father by Holland MN, near Pipestone. My mother in Pease MN, about 25 miles south of Lake Mille Lacs.
Myself, I grew up
in Milaca, just North of Pease. Attended 8 years of Pease Christian School. The
Christian Reformed Church dominated the community. When my mother was a child
the services where in Dutch. As they were in my father’s case as well. Dutch
language and customs prevailed then. Not unusual for first generation immigrant
communities.
My story here
predates those immigrants by a generation, or two, likely. It is the story of
Pieter DeGroot.
DeGroot was a pious man. Probably a minister back
in the Netherlands but became disenchanted with the ways of The Dutch Reformed Church
there. Apparently their brand of Calvinism was not strict enough for him. He
reported having visitations of The Holy Ghost who instructed him to abandon the
established church. He assembled a group of those equally devout in these
convictions and formed his own sect. Somehow DeGroot made the arrangements,
homesteading or otherwise, to place deposit on a large tract of land northwest
of here. Grand Marais. In the latter quarter of the 19th century he, and his followers,
roughly 6-10 families, and others, made their way here to establish a colony
where they could dairy and enjoy a life with freedom of their religion.
Arriving here in the spring they set to work
building their community. Although they made significant progress, they were
woefully unprepared for the winter.
The majority perished that season. The few survived.
Whispers of cannibalism were heard. (This is not unusual in Minnesota -see the
story of the founders of the town of Rollingstone near Winona.)
DeGroot however would, too, survive – what little
reporting made of the incident indicates an exodus, skeletal and abject,
filtering into town out of the forests. A gathering totally dependent on the
kindness of strangers.
(News reports are minimal. Newspapers at that time
[Fort William. Two Harbors] were rife with tragedy and loss in that era – especially
so in regards to immigrants.)
DeGroot and the other survivors would somehow
find their way to Hull Iowa. The sect would enjoy better fortune there but some
would fall to ignominy. DeGroot would report further visions and visitations by
The Holy Ghost, some of those, apparently, included commandments to adopt practices
including polygamy, incest and so forth. The sect fractured and dissipated.
Hull’s established Reformed Churches, as well as local authorities, persecuted
him. He fades into disgrace.
Now, one of those children that emerged from the
woods that spring was my grandmother’s aunt, Johanna. She would lead an
uneventful life, raise a family, be admired.
She was a meticulous keeper of notes – journals,
diaries. She was a writer.
My grandmother was given these notes and, in
turn, my mother would gain possession. I discovered these notes after my mother’s
passing early in this century.
Penned in English, although somewhat broken,
they are a trove of information regarding her everyday life.
And they included vivid details in regards to
that Grand Marais episode. At least the happy times. The leaving of the
Netherlands, the journey, arrival, building of the settlement and so on.
However, there is
no mention of the starving or depravations, - only to refer to it as “The Dark
Days.” (She lost a little brother that winter.)
-------------------------
My wife, Jessica, and I now live in Duluth. We
come to Grand Marais about once a year, engaging various lodgings here. We
always have a good time.
Well almost always.
I brought with us this time one of Johanna’s
journals. Specifically, the one about the failed colony here.
Over the last few months, I had the notion that,
based on her accounts, we might be able to locate the remnants, if any, of the doomed
immigrant project. In fact, by just employing Google Maps I thought I could
already, back in Duluth, locate some of the landmarks: The pond (“pool”) for
instance, the rock outcroppings, the creek, the boulder and so forth.
So, day before yesterday we pulled out. A lovely
day it was then. Just North of town we parked the car and followed the Superior
Hiking Trial east and, sure enough, landmarks as described began to manifest.
We broke from the trial and followed the stream upwards and, there was the pool.
– the going not so difficult, late autumn foliage affording less resistance.
We found the boulder, just as described. We were
there.
We looked about…. nothing. Not a foundation, or
log remnant to be seen. Perhaps some vague depressions that could’ve been natural
or, wrought years ago by the settlers.
As we penetrated deeper, we noticed some stones
that seemed unnatural in their placement; leaning and inserted into the ground…
intentionally placed there.
We looked at each other. A graveyard?
And as we went deeper still into the forest, we
began to notice bones. Lots of them. Bleached. Not human, mind you, animal
bones they were. Deer for sure. Bear? Raccoon? Squirrels? A myriad of mammal
bones and skeletons.
And yet, beyond that, a stench. Here then was a
deer carcass, the author of the stench. It looked to be nearly totally consumed
by some kind of cadaver feeders and, not far away, similar partially consumed
remains of a bald eagle and some crows.
I said, “What the hell?”
Just then Jessica shrieked. She was looking at
the ground. I looked down. A skeletal hand had emerged from the leaves and was
grasping at her ankle! Shaking her ankle wildly would not dislodge the claw.
Calling upon some kind of primal instinct I did
not know I possessed I, somehow, recalled passing by a mound of bones. On some
primitive level I noted then a huge bone, the femur of a moose perhaps, protruding
upwards from the mass. I swung around and there it was. I grasped it and arced
down upon the hand with a savage intensity.
It shattered.
I grabbed Jessica. The earth was boiling now
about us, leaves, grasses, the very dirt itself vibrating with vicious dreadful
intent. Arms, other skeletal hands, legs, all fluttering from the forest floor.
A frenzy. And skulls! Skulls rolling wildly, jaws snapping, eye sockets dark
with malice.
I was as wild as they. I clubbed and smashed and
fractured everything in our path.
Later we were on The Superior Trial again, winded,
gasping. We were sobbing uncontrollably. I looked with disturbed surprise at
that femur still in my grasp and hurled it away from me.
It came to me then. I realized with horror that
the skeletal hand I crushed back there in the forest was the hand of a child.
-----------------------
Now here I sit. How do we push forward after
this? What do we do now?
You might be asking yourself, why am I then writing
this?
Here is the answer:
I am warning you, that’s why.
Don’t go there.
Please don’t go there.
I beg you. Don’t go to the starved cemetery!
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Briggs Lake Guestbook
Briggs Lake Cottage Guestbook
2/21/21
2330
We are greatly enjoying our stay here at the Briggs Lake Cottage. Our hosts have spared nothing in the ways of comfort and convenience. The full moon, moderate temperature, and the silhouettes of the trumpeting swans above and across that same moon would make this visit unforgettable…save for the fact that something so astonishing happened to us out there on the ice today…so remarkable that I am convinced few human beings have ever experienced such a revelation.
But
first I must include some background. Years ago, in the late 1970’s, I was a
Nurses Aide in the nearby town of Milaca’s community hospital. (We preferred
“Nurses Aide.” (N.A.) “Orderly” seemed to Jerry Lewis.)
At
any rate, a patient there, an elderly fellow, was speaking of fishing. Many of
them did. Somewhere in the narrative he mentioned that he would never again
fish Mayhew Lake, a lake in Benton County north of this place.
When
I inquired further, he shrugged it off but did allow that he felt it dangerous
for some reason of which he did not care to elaborate upon. Being young and
impressionable, I found this intriguing.
And then another time, another patient, another old-timer, told me, completely unsolicited on my part, that he would never fish Mayhew Lake again. Immediately I enthusiastically asked him why. He became distant, withdrawn – he turned to the window and shrugged. His bright and engaging demeanor replaced by a grimace. He shuddered then.
Naturally my interest was accelerated thereafter. I did, on occasion, stop at Mayhew Lake and just look. I sat there in my Pinto and watched. Never once was the surface disturbed by unusual currents, roiling springs or any troublesome phenomena whatsoever. If Mayhew Lake held secrets – she never revealed them to me.
Now what I am to describe
next is, as I have alluded to already, singular. I, too, have gratitude for the
fact that all FOUR of us witnessed this manifestation. If it had only been one
- well, perhaps he or she could be forgiven for keeping it – let he be thought
mad by the rest. And two? Well, that claim would surely most certainly be met
with ridicule. But four? That does not accommodate any of us to question
our own faculties, or sanity for that matter.
The entire
incident could’ve lasted no more that fifteen seconds. – surely not longer than
twenty. And as with any startling event, each of us, the witnesses, were
resulted with differing perceptions, impressions and conclusions as to what we
had borne witness to out there on the ice.
So this evening
we assembled, at this very table, to distill our separate realities – a
post-incident debrief so to speak. Now to the precipitate of that review – and
although there were some disagreements, sometimes sharp, what follows is a reasonable
accounting of our experience on Briggs Lake earlier today.
As I said before
we were out skating in the sun. We had just made note of those fishes below
when suddenly, and without warning, bearing down upon us, from the northeast, there
came, under the ice at a great velocity, an immense shadow.
Surprisingly we
all saw this at the same exact instant, nobody needed shout “LOOK!”
It was then there
passed below our feet a most miraculous creature that will certainly surpass my
puny powers of description.
But I will try.
Here will follow
a brief head to tail description of the creature:
Its head was
about this size of, perhaps, a picnic cooler and shaped like a missile. Eyes
forward. Clearly a hunter. The entire thing, it seemed to us, gave the
impression of a bird rather than fish or reptile, not least because there
extended forward a long cutlass of a beak, pale ivory, or slightly yellow in color.
We feel there was an aperture at the nape which was employed when skimming
along the undersurface of the ice to consume the oxygen trapped under there as
a result of wintertime plant photosynthesis. The water-swept head was suspended
upon a long and elegant neck which arced the head to and fro gracefully. The
large body followed and was teardrop in shape and from alongside there sprouted
not fins, or flippers, but rather vestigial (or nascent?) wings. It employed these
with impressive alacrity to the ends of navigation, course adjustment. Then after
followed a huge powerful fan-shaped tail which could produce incredible thrust
and, likewise, braking.
The entirety of
the beast was not adorned with a solitary feather or scale but, rather, was
sealed in a black, or dark navy blue, seamless hide. Overall we figured its
entire length to be slightly longer than a GM Suburban or a large modern-day
pick-up truck.
In an instant we
were off and giving chase. It moved with a studied deliberateness, but it also performed
with a grace and dignity not expected given the size of the thing, its swift undulating
motions defying its apparent mass. Overall the entirety the entirety of the thing
was very essence of hydrodynamic streamlining.
Understandably we
could not keep pace. Soon we approached an area of crusty snow that impeded our
forward progress. But just prior to passing from our sight, we saw it impale
one of those big fishes I spoke of earlier, pinioning on its rapier bill.
And there we
stood watching its shadow against the snow diminishing, fading, and finally, disappearing
entirely.
Now to return to
those fishermen and their shared revulsion for Mayhew Lake.
Not less than 10
years ago we went one night to a roadhouse in nearby hamlet of Santiago. We
were dancing to the Lamont Cranston Blues Band there when, between sets, I wandered
over to a bulletin board affair on the wall. Glassed in, it contained clippings,
some colorful, some quaint, garnered from a long defunct local country
newspaper.
Suddenly my attention
was fixed upon two words: MAYHEW LAKE. The article reported that a man’s
severed arm had been found at nearby Lake Julia. This was in 1936 or
thereabouts. The story continued noting that the arm had before belonged to an
unfortunate ice fisherman who had recently perished when he had plunged though
the ice one early spring day while in pursuit of “Crappies that were really
biting that day.” Through the ice on Mayhew Lake!
The arm had been
identified by the remnants of his shirt and his wristwatch which, remarkably had
stopped running “At about the same time his fishing companions saw him go under
for the last time. About 3:30 in the afternoon.”
Local authorities
were still trying to locate the rest of his remains. Naturally the fact that
his arm was so far removed from Mayhew Lake was the cause of much speculation.
A local game warden had fairly put that concern to rest when he had opined that
the arm was probably delivered to Lake Julia by an eagle or other large raptor.
I found that explanation
dubious and lacking in the rationalization for how the extremity had been severed
in the first place but, maybe it was thought that an eagle could do that too.
These events reverberated
here in my mind tonight along with another, perhaps related realization.
Within the last
year or two, while idly perusing the web, I came upon some research done in
1966 by the institute for Great Lakes Research, now part of the EPA. It is
located in Duluth MN where we now reside.
At any rate, what
caught me eye was a monograph by Adkins et al regarding some basic readings
done on a selection of anomalous lakes in the upper Midwest – curious lakes
that have very little similarity to those predominating nearby.
One of those
grouped into the study was the cluster of tiny – surface area wise – “pothole”
lakes just to the west of Lake Mille Lacs. Southwest of Garrison to be more
precise.
This piqued my interest
because my grandfather, fifty or more years ago, would icefish on those very same
“potholes,” as he called them too. He mentioned that they were “Bottomless.”
The paper
confirmed the same: Lakes of little surface area but of considerable volume due
to incredible depth.
The research also
recorded scientific measurements of temperature, clarity, pH, and other
numerous details.
However, and this
may be germane to today’s event, the author hinted as worthy of further consideration/investigation,
the fact that they had noted unexpected currents and wide temperature deviations,
and strange tidal effects which, just as a cast-off observation, might suggest
deep subterranean communication between the bodies.
Now couple that
with the fact that in Santiago that night there was another article from the
same extinct newspaper, dated the early 1950’s, describing the discovery, by
some children at play – on the shores of Briggs Lake no less - of an old boot
which had entombed therein the skeletal remains of a human foot, ankle, etc.
This story
included wild speculation upon the source of these remains. Apparently the
editors had forgotten their own story of 20 years prior, that of the fisherman’s
severed arm…at least at the time of the publishing the above.
But someone had speculated upon the link though, since there was drawn, with a red marker, a two-headed arrow linking the clippings. There also was a large red question mark above that arrow.
And there is a figurative bright red question mark over this story I am penning here late tonight. Is there an extensive network of underground waterways frequented by the creature we saw today?
What had those
fishermen witnessed on Mayhew Lake?
Like I said, we are having a fine time here at Briggs Lake Cottage.
-Jeff
Smith