Firebreaks are just my attempt to do something against wild fire, rather do nothing. I burned off a Blue Grama Native Grass plantation to renew its growth and to kill the volunteer alder brush spreading through it. The evident snow line on the left is a 800-yard long firebreak protecting several thousand trees of many different varieties planted in the last 14 years; on the far right is a township roadbed that acts as a firebreak as well. I carry a couple backpack fire pumps and buckets with me on my ATV to put out spot fires or insure fires are out along the line. Here I have started to burn creek banks nearest the house. (The snowplow is unnecessary; just hadn't removed it.) After last year's many Red Flag warnings, I keep an eye out for the weak links in our own chain of firebreaks I've made. For the last couple years, I've renewed our firebreaks, for stalling the progression of an unexpected grassland wildfire. ...
And here is the Wannaskan Almanac with Word-Wednesday for April 22, 2026, the sixteenth Wednesday of the year, the fifth Wednesday of spring, the fourth Wednesday of April, and the one-hundred-twelfth day of the year, with two-hundred fifty-three days remaining. Wannaska Phenology Update for April 22, 2026 River Otters — Out and About Lontra canadensis , Minnesota's largest aquatic carnivore can be seen now at Hayes Lake. Nigig, in Anishinaabe, can swim and maneuver better than many fish, and swims with only the top of its head out of the water. Adults are about four to five and one-half feet long, including the 18-inch tail. Nigig prey includes a variety of small aquatic organisms such as fish, clams, muskrats, and turtles. They can also catch terrestrial mammals such as chipmunks, mice, and young rabbits. Members of the family Mustelidae , otters have a long period of "delayed implantation". Shortly after adult females have a litter of one to five young, they are bred ...