What’s in a Name?

My son Aaron and I took a little cruise around the area today; it was so nice out, we thought we’d take the cameras and visit a few spots we haven’t seen for almost three years. It wasn’t until we got home that I realized what strange names some of these places had.

First we went to a spot out in the middle of nowhere called Skibo. It’s a huge hill with boreal forest extending to the horizon in every direction. Great for astronomy. There are a few shacks somewhere around here without electricity; we drove by them once, and I was surprised not to see any cars.

While we were up on the hill, a couple of jets roared by, and I managed to capture one. When I was fueling jets in the Air Force, we only had some f-4s, f-15s, and mostly f-16s, so I have no idea what these are, but they look pretty cool.

Next, we headed down to Frying Pan Lake. Usually there are ducks and geese here (with goslings this time of year), but we got skunked today. It’s a beautiful, somewhat remote lake with two houses and an old Finnish cemetery on its verdant shores.

We started back, but had to make a stop at the Embarrass River. Every river north of the Laurentian Divide flows north to Hudson Bay, and every river south of it flows south to the Gulf of Mexico or Lake Superior–except this one. Somehow, it winds its way through the hills and heads south. Embarrass River. I wonder how it came by that name.

Finally, we headed back home to our humble little village of Aurora. It’s not much to look at, as you may have deduced from our sign, but it has a name I can live with.

–Photos by me

10 thoughts on “What’s in a Name?

  1. Michael, nice stories and pix! 😎

    There’s a book you might enjoy…”The Years of the Forest,” by Helen Hoover, with pen-and-ink
    sketches by her husband. It documents their lives off the Gunflint Trail in Northern MN throughout their time there in the 1950s and 60s. Wonderfully written and nicely illustrated.

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    1. I don’t know if you’re a Star Trek fan, but when Aaron and I go looking for photos, we like to think we’re the away team on a mission in the Galileo, a shuttle in StarTrek that kinda looks like Aaron’s van. When we encounter a dusty dirt road,it’s “shields up!” Thanks!

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      1. oh yes indeed! My daughter and I often say Shields up! Red alert! It’s usually about people though. lol! So glad you have the Galileo. My son has self published three scifi stories with unusual theories. I go back in time with my car, a 2002 Honda Accord and call it my ‘golden chariot’! Imagination is fun especially when something is seen as ordinary or uninteresting.

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