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Tuesday, August 21, 2018

The Passing of Ronny Setniker - A Polka Legend

When I was hosting the Polka Time show on WTIP last Sunday, I got some sad news.  Ronny Setniker had passed away.  Even before I got the call, I had been planning on playing some of his music in the next set, as I had in many shows before.

I confirmed the information online at https://www.wdio.com/news/ron-setniker-polka-music-accordion-range/5035057/.  There was a nice tribute to him on the newscast.

There is one thing that set Ronny Setniker apart from the other musicians I play on my my shows.  Every few months, he would call me and thank me for playing his music, and that of his family.  In my 9-years on the air, he was the only musician not in the studio with me to do so.  I always enjoyed our conversations, and will miss hearing from him.

One time, he called me up and said that he had been honored to have a Polka written in his honor by another musician named Bud Hyrczyk.  He said he was very humbled by the honor, and asked for my address, so he could send me the CD.  It was called the Setniker Polka, and I ended my show on Sunday with that song.

According to the news story listed above, and the biography on Ronny's website, he was a Grammy nominee in 1998 and 2007.  On June 24th, 1999, he was inducted into the Ironwood Polka Hall of Fame.  He was also a Vietnam Veteran, and a retired steelworker.

According to his website, his most recent album was called Tradition.  He did the album with his daughters Susan and Shelby, with whom he passed on his love on Polka music.

Ronny had been playing 4-hour shows just weeks before he died.  He passed away on National Polka Day, August 9th, 2018, at age 79.

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Blueberry Picking on the Gunflint Trail

A week ago, I took a day canoe trip on the Pine and Granite Rivers with one of my coworkers.  Those rivers mark the border between the United States of America and Canada.  To find them on a map of Minnesota, look at Cook County (the tip of the Arrowhead over Lake Superior).  Follow the international border from Lake Superior until it takes a sharp turn to the north.  You have then found the Pine and Granite Rivers.  The Pine River is south of Granite Lake, and the Granite River flows north from Granite Lake.

The two rivers are in a large granite formation (Saganaga Batholith).  Both rivers were burned during the Ham Lake Fire of 2007.  The combination of those two factors makes for some great blueberry picking.

We started out the day by paddling far down the river to the Swamp Portage.  Along the way, we stopped to eat blueberries, Saskatoon berries, and raspberries.  Our plan was to pick some berries to save on the way back.

The swamp portage was beautiful.  We had little rain for the previous few weeks, so it was not as wet as I remembered it.  However, there was still some great amphibian life present.
Northern Leopard Frog (Lithobates pipiens)

Swamp Portage

American Toad (Anaxyrus americanus)

Granite River from the Swamp Portage
After the Swamp Portage, we turned around and headed south.  There were blueberries all along the river, and we stopped a few miles to the south to pick our fill.  We also ate out lunches, as well as a lot of Saskatoon berries, raspberries, and pin cherries.

Blueberries (Vaccinium corymbusum)

Saskatoon Berries (Amelanchier alnifolia)

Bucket of Blueberries - I added a few more inches of berries after this picture was taken.
When we were finishing picking our berries, several thunderstorms came into the area.  We had to wait over an hour for the storm to pass, and then we were able to paddle home.

Thunderstorm on the Pine River
Tips of Picking Blueberries on the Gunflint Trail:
  1. Look for the best blueberry patches in the burned areas on the granite hillsides of the upper Gunflint Trail.
  2. Bring a gallon ice cream pail for carrying your berries.  It is a wide top, and carries a lot of berries.
  3. Ask the locals for good picking spots.
  4. Keep your car or boat is sight, as it is easy to get turned around in the burn areas.
  5. Be a clean picker.  Pick only the ripe berries.  It is better to sort the berries in the field instead of when you want to eat them.  Dirty pickers (who rip everything off the berry bush) are very wasteful and inefficient.
  6. Freeze your berries directly in the ice cream bucket.  There is no need to wash them until you are ready to eat them.