Showing posts with label March 1st. Show all posts
Showing posts with label March 1st. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 01, 2023

Welcome to March Madness Mud

I never think of March as any other type of month except mud month. In fact, I think March can be more dreary than November in so many ways. The grass is brown, the mud is brown, and nothing really looks appealing to my eyes.

This is a photo of the mud pasture a few years ago:


In the low part of the driveway, it can get like this depending on the melt and how the frost comes out of the ground.
Now that we are not running the skid steer daily up and down the lower part of the driveway, it isn't quite as bad.


The Spring Thaw is always a wonder around here. I am amused at all of the times hubby got a tractor stuck when it sank into the ground while he was going up hill with a round bale to a pasture. Eventually we got a skid steer and put on tracks. And yes, it is possible to get one of those stuck too. 

Me? I put hay on sleds and pull them out to areas where I have feeders that are up on a hillside and not sitting in water. I keep a big feed tub next to the porch to rinse my muddy boots off before I step onto the porch.

Even those who live on the ridge have Mud Madness. This is one of the most amusing signs I've ever seen.

He not only has mud, it is Muddey.



During this time of the year, I generally park just a bit up on the hill. Anyone wishing to come down our driveway will see its blocked from the top of the hill.

I am hoping that the fella who does our plowing will be able to build a nice rock base and gravel on top of that. It has been 10 years since the hill has been done and probably 30 years since the lower driveway has been done.

If this mud season is extended, it will suck for us getting our heater fixed. I wouldn't allow anyone to come right now down to the house in a vehicle that doesn't have 4 wheel/all wheel drive. 

Until the ground settles, or until we get some more cold nights...


It is too

Muddey....

Wednesday, March 02, 2022

KVR Trail Challenge Old 131 & Robin


Bill had a schedule to maintain, he greets two of his grandsons at the bus stop by the intersection near his house. I had a late start to my day so we decided to take a short easy route.

We thought we'd hike point to point from Gate 12 and the canoe landing south to County P. Any of the trails in the woods would be slushy with ice under the snow, so we opted for the old road.

We've always biked this part of the trail in the summer and thought it would be fun to see in the winter.

Here is the sign at gate 12:


So many people just use a photo of the map to Navigate the Reserve, but that is ill advised. Often, you will lose cell service. I'm an advocate of carrying a map. Some intersections can get tricky and the landscape is such that getting turned around is easy unless you are familiar with it.

We thought the blacktop would be melted off. Well, we were wrong. It was slushy and in some places the snow topped ice and under the ice water was moving. 

This part of the trail is called section 11 on the Challenge paperwork. On one side there are rock formations and little bluffs, on the other side the Kickapoo River flows.

During hard rains or spring floods this section usually gets partially or fully covered by the river.




We found several places were the snow had melted from above and created tiny little waterfalls. If I'd had time I would probably explored some of these rocks. There were little caves that we could see without all the summer foliage hiding it.

So enticing! But we had a schedule to maintain.

The hike was only just short of two miles but the March sun was bright and cheery with a promise of spring soon to come.

We took a break at Bridge 13. This is one of the few remaining Truss Bridges in the State of Wisconsin. At one time every crossing over the Kickapoo between LaFarge and Ontario was constructed this way.
The original highway was built in 1926.

Old 131 trail is the original road between LaFarge, was moved and rebuilt to make way for the Dam Project that never happened in the early 1970's.


Bridge 13 looking north towards Rockton.


Looking west from the bridge. The ice is melting and the river was flowing above and below the ice. 


Here Bill is on the bridge giving Charlie a dog cookie. So far this tiny dog has done all the trails with us. I told Bill I would try and make sure that Charlie made the whole 59+ miles with us even if he needed to be carried part of the time.
Charlie must be our mascot!


After the break we headed south to County P. Here is a shot of Black Hawk Rock from old 131, section 11.

This is zoomed in of course so the outcrop looks closer. In the summer it is harder to pick out this formation due to all the greenery.


And the best surprise of all was the chirping we heard of a Robin!



Lucky us that he/she landed in a oak tree just above the trail. The orange surrounding him Bittersweet.


And that was our really enjoyable hike.

To date we have covered 15 sections and 12 miles. I don't know if that is impressive or not, but coordinating two schedules and working around the weather is pretty impressive.