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Mill Pond Park
N Munsterman
Appleton, MN 56208 Phone: 320-289-1363
Bathroom, grill, shelter, picnic facilities, fishing dump station, electricity, water, 12 sites. |
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Monson Lake State Park
County Rd 31
Kerkhoven, MN 56216 Phone: 320.354.2055
8 mi. north of Kerkhoven on Cty Rd 35. Located on Monson Lake. |
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Montevideo Country Club/ The Crossings
West Hwy. 212,
Montevideo, MN Phone: 320.269.6828
Located on 212 west of town. This is an 18-hole course, par 72. Tee time reservations are taken up to one week in advance. 6,154 yards with a slope rating of 116 for men; 5,063 yards, with a slope rating of 118 for women. Club and cart rental available. Tuesdays and Wednesdays are league days. |
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Native Virgin Prairie
Little remains of the once common tall grass prairies of Minnesota. These seas of grass once covered 18-20 million acres of our state, where today less than 1% (180,000 acres) remain. Tall grass prairies are comprised of an abundance of grasses that typically grow three or more feet tall. Including Big and Little Bluestem, Grama Grass, Indian Grass, Switch Grass and Prairie Cord Grass. Shorter grasses and sedges are common, as are many flowering plants.
1. Bonanza Prairie Scientific and Natural Area
Little remains of the once common tall grass prairies of Minnesota. These seas of grass once covered 18-20 million acres of our state, where today less than 1% (180,000 acres) remain. Tall grass prairies are comprised of an abundance of grasses that typically grow three or more feet tall. Including Big and Little Bluestem, Grama Grass, Indian Grass, Switch Grass and Prairie Cord Grass. Shorter grasses and sedges are common, as are many flowering plants.
Settlers found seas of grasses taller than a horse and rider, carpets of wildflowers boasting vivid colors and black fertile soil that seemed endless. This prairie was once home to elk, bison, and wolves. Many species of birds and insects made the tallgrass prairie their home.
Prairies are typically thought to be treeless, but do maintain close biological relationships with open woodland communities, often called savannas. Early inhabitants of the prairie depended on the prairie for their survival and managed it according to their needs and activities.
Modern prairie management includes regular prescribed fires. These fires although man-made, simulate the occasional lightening strike, an escaped campfire or a deliberately set fire from years gone by. Fires stimulate root growth in plants and suppress invasive weeds.
Today Minnesota\'s landscape has greatly changed since pioneer time. Millions of acres have been lost through conversion to agriculture, interstate grading or to development. Large areas of prairie that have not been overtly destroyed have been degraded through fill suppression, drainage or other alterations jeopardizing their survival.
In western Minnesota we are fortunate to have many publicly owned sites that contain native prairie tracts.
Nowhere on the planet was there a grassland complex like the Midwestern tall grass prairie. Today only small examples of its diversity remain for humans to view and understand. Take time to visit one of these irreplaceable resources of western Minnesota.
Source: Tallgrass Prairie Wildflowers @ 1995 Falcon Press |
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North Park
15th Ave East
Clarkfield, MN 56223 Phone: 320.669.4435
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