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The swinging bridge. |
Jay Cooke State Park is a really nice park with excellent facilities. It is known for the swinging bridge that crosses the St. Louis River. There is also a feeder trail to the Willard Munger Trail, a well maintained, very long rails-to-trails.
After arriving early on the 29th, we setup our campsite and headed out onto the bike trail heading toward Duluth. These rails-to-trails paths are fantastic with very little elevation change. There are tons of trees and little streams beside the trail. There are some major drop-offs on either side.
We stopped at Buffalo House at Buffalo Valley Campground for lunch. They do a great job of "advertising" on the Munger Trail to let you know how to get there. Our server suggested we keep going up the trail to see and ride through a tunnel.
We had planned on heading back to camp but couldn't resist such a unique thing, so we kept riding toward Duluth. It was a beautiful section of the trail carved through rock; however, we never found the tunnel but did get caught in a very severe thunderstorm.
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It as a bigger obstruction than this photo implies. |
Once back at camp, we were happy to see that our gear was not too wet though we were soaked.
Day 2 we took the Willard Munger Trail in the other direction, south. There is not much to see or places to stop going in this direction. A good deal of it was fairly close to Highway 61. We made it as far as Mahtowa where we did find a place for lunch, Mahtowa Tavern.
Back at Jay Cooke, my friend Trish and her daughter Lyla visited for a while. Later Bud and I did a short hike into the park before another rainstorm looked like it was coming. This time, the storm went around us!
The State Park Rangers do check that you have a permit. The first night, the ranger gave us the "all good." As we were packing up to leave on July 1, another ranger said my state permit was not "valid" because I didn't have it stuck to my windshield. She revoked the permit and sent us to the ranger office to get a new one. The office was not open, but a ranger did issue me a new permit and seemed kind of ticked off that the other ranger had sited me. There was no charge for the new permit.
If you made it this far, here is the link to the video again.