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Bridge over Hwy. 169 damaged by wayward truck reopens

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A heavily traveled bridge over Hwy. 169 in Brooklyn Park that was hit from below days ago by a truck driver reopened late Friday morning following repairs, state officials said Friday.

More than 17,000 motorists who use the 77th Avenue/Brooklyn Boulevard/Elm Creek Boulevard bridge were forced to find an alternate route while the serious damage to several concrete beams was fixed, said Minnesota Department of Transportation spokesman Kent Barnard.

Barnard said the bridge was back in business at 11:49 a.m.

While the bridge over the northwest metro highway was closed, Hwy. 169 below remained open in both directions, as did ramps to and from 77th/Brooklyn Boulevard/Elm Creek Boulevard, Barnard said.



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Why does it smell like poop outside? Dry conditions lead to manure smell

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The unpleasant odor is caused by fertilizer and manure that is placed on farms surrounding the metro area, and it is a common occurrence in the fall. According to David Brown, an air quality meteorologist for the state, the manure smell has arrived early this year, potentially stretching out the amount of time it will be here to stay.

Typically, the smell becomes noticeable in November when new fertilizer is put down. But Brown said that the historically dry weather in recent weeks could be causing the smell to arrive earlier.

“It does seem a little bit early this fall, and that may be because of the drought conditions, the drier soils, dust and those soils are more easily lifted into the atmosphere by gusty wind,” Brown said.

He noted that the fertilizer smell does not decrease air quality or make it harmful to participate in outdoor activities.

“It’s more of just a nuisance,” Brown said, adding that the smell is likely to linger until below-freezing temperatures set in.

The air quality has been listed as “moderate” in recent days in the southern half of Minnesota, Brown said, slightly worsened by wildfire smoke coming from Wyoming and Idaho.

Mike Griesinger, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Chanhassen, said manure smell in the Twin Cities is “very common” because of how many farms surround the region.



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She broke a portage marathon record in Ely, Minn., and got her life back

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Minnesotans know that portaging a canoe is all part of a journey, and for a Shakopee woman, it proved a trip to both recovery and a world record at the Ely Marathon in September.

A year ago, Victoria Ranua, then 43, had lost her husband, the father of her two sons, to pulmonary fibrosis and complications of COVID. Then a bout of long COVID herself had left her in a fog that wouldn’t lift. She had been living in Tower, on the Iron Range, but returned to her home in Shakopee last year to find the house she had rented out had sustained thousands of dollars in damages. “It was definitely the lowest point of my life,” she recalls.

She found her path back by going back to her roots. In 1997, Ranua was a state champion in the 3,200-meter who went on to run cross-country and the steeplechase for the University of Minnesota for four years. It was during retreats with the university cross country team at Camp Voyageur, outside Ely, that she first experienced the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, where the canoe portage is part of the experience.

“I loved it the moment I stepped out of the vehicle,” she said of her first visit.

But after college, she married, had children and began a career. In 2017, her husband, Todd, received his terminal diagnosis. Wanting to spend his final years in the north country, they bought a house in Soudan.

There, she started running again and completed the Ely Half Marathon in 2022, several months after Todd’s death.

Back in Shakopee, she saw the offer of a $5,000 cash prize for breaking the world record in the canoe portage, part of the Ely Marathon. She decided to not just run it but also to beat the world record and claim the cash.

Only one other woman had ever finished the canoe portage marathon, running the course in 6 hours, 49 minutes. What’s more, at age 44, Ranua would be the oldest person to ever attempt the grueling contest.



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Firefighters gain on Bogus Lake fire near Grand Marais, Minnesota, but Forest Service warns of possibility for more

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Crews have contained a 53-acre wildlfire near Grand Marais in the Superior National Forest, the Forest Service reported Friday, while they continue to fight two others.

Forest Service and Department of Natural Resources crews in the air and on the ground have fought the fire in a remote and densely wooded area about 20 miles northeast of Grand Marais. The fire was discovered Tuesday. Its cause is unknown.

The wildfire prompted the agency earlier this week to extend its campfire ban to the entire national forest. A fire ban in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness took effect Oct. 1. The DNR reports the current fire danger is “very high” in northern St. Louis and Lake counties. Burning restrictions have expanded, too, covering Cook, Koochiching, Lake, and the northern half of St. Louis County.

A wildfire was detected Monday on the eastern side of Shell Lake, about 4 miles north of Road 116 within the BWCAW, in St. Louis County. Covering three-quarters of an acre, the fire has some potential to spread to the east near Agawato Lake and a portion of the Sioux-Hustler Hiking Trail, the Forest Service reported. The fire’s cause is unknown.

Elsewhere in the Boundary Waters, crews continue to fight a fire at Wood Lake. The fire, discovered Sept. 10, has grown to 45 acres and is 50% contained. Its cause is under investigation.

Forest Service spokesperson Joy Liptak VanDrie said moisture is needed to lessen the harsh drought conditions and to keep fires from sparking, rekindling or spreading. The National Weather Service forecasts a mixed chance of showers across the Arrowhead region Saturday night and into Sunday.

“If weather doesn’t bring moisture, we will have more fires next week,” she said.

Liptak VanDrie said Forest Service staff have found “too many abandoned campfires with warm coals … these will ignite in current conditions.”



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