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Author Topic: Something Extraordinary, Take A Hike In The Lost 40  (Read 4364 times)

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Offline HD

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Mama always said, If you ain't got noth'in nice to say, don't say noth'in at all!

Offline glenn57

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That lost forty is 15 miles from the cabin and never been there!!; :censored: :bonk: need to do it.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline Rebel SS

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That lost forty is 15 miles from the cabin and never been there!!; :censored: :bonk: need to do it.

Aren't you kinda lost in yer own world anyway?   :rotflmao:

Offline glenn57

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That lost forty is 15 miles from the cabin and never been there!!; :censored: :bonk: need to do it.

Aren't you kinda lost in yer own world anyway?   :rotflmao:
maybe!!!!!
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline LPS

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Ya I want to see that too.  When I took the detour to Grand Rapids a few weeks ago I went by a sign for the Lost 40.  Now I know where it is. 

Offline glenn57

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So LPS,you must of drive on county road 29 from Dora lake then 4 to talmoon? Is so you drove right past our driveway! :happy1:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline LPS

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Yes I did Glen.  Nice drive too.  Lots of stuff on that road.  I have wanted to camp at Noma Lake and I saw that road too.  I always thought it was blacktop.  Surprised to see it was gravel.  No biggy though.  Someday I will get there. 

Offline glenn57

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Our driveway is about a 1/4 mile north of the junction of 4 and 29.  Then into the Bush! :happy1:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline LPS

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Looked at it on google.  Nice country.

Offline glenn57

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Yea it is. Love it up there. Next 2 weekends!!!!! :happy1: :rocker; :dancinred: :dancinred: :dancinred: :fishing:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline dew2

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 It's really kool to read how the ole time loggers missed that small spot!! Then think of how most of Minnesota was old growth forest like that 40!!
Keeping America clean and beautiful is a one mans job,Mine

Offline Leech~~

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Been there a few times 4 wheeling and snowmobiling with a buddy who has a cabin near by.  Feel kind of bad for old Josiah.  :doah:  Laughing stock then, Hero now oddly.

The Lost 40 – A Minnesota Forest Legacy


In the late 1800’s, Minnesota was one of the largest timber producing States in the country. Timber companies and developers were moving westward as they logged the northern forests of the United States. Minnesota was on their radar during this period of time.

Today, less than two percent of Minnesota’s forested land contains virgin or “old growth” timber. Fortunately, there still exists an easily accessible area in Northern Minnesota that was never touched by loggers or developers. This property is called the “Lost 40” and it is home to one of the last stands of virgin, “old-growth” Red and White Pine in Minnesota. Some of these trees are well over 300 hundred years old.

How This Is Possible?

In 1882, a land surveyor by the name of Josiah A. King, and his three-man crew, traveled 40 miles from the nearest white settlement called “the Grand Rapids of the Mississippi.” For a month, canvas tents were their homes, and flour, pork, beans, and dried apples their rations. Josiah and his crew were finishing the last of three contracted townships in one of the first land surveys of Minnesota’s north woods.

As the November winds blew around the crew, they surveyed a six square mile area between Moose and Coddington Lakes. Perhaps it was the chilling weather, or all of the desolate swamps around them, but the crew became confused, and they ended up plotting Coddington Lake about a half mile further northwest than it was actually located. Josiah’s crew’s error is Minnesota’s great fortune.

As a result, these towering pines were mapped as a body of water, and the virgin pine in this area was overlooked by the hungry logging companies. Afterall, what logging company would want to pay for swamp land. This parcel of land became known as “The Lost Forty” and went untouched by loggers. It is now managed by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources under their Scientific & Natural Areas Program.

Where Is It Located?

It’s located in the Chippewa National Forest in Northern Minnesota and you can actually hike about a mile through the “The Lost Forty” if you’d like. For more information, visit the Lost 40 SNA page on the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources web site
Cooking over a open fire is all fun and games until someone losses a wiener!