Site Map News & Press Home

  Search:
  Choose Bedrooms:
     to

Choose Price (per night):
  to
 
 Advanced Search

Special Offers
Waterfront & Beach Rentals
Golf Properties
Snow Skiing Properties
Pet Friendly Lodging

 



 
 
 
 
 
Vacation Guides


MINNESOTA

Though MINNESOTA is more than a thousand miles from either coast, it's virtually a seaboard state, thanks to Lake Superior, connected to the Atlantic via the St Lawrence Seaway. The glaciers that, millions of years ago, flattened all but its southeast corner gouged out more than 15,000 lakes, and major rivers run along the eastern and western borders.

Ninety-five percent of the population lives within ten minutes of a body of water, and the very name Minnesota is a Sioux word meaning "land of sky-tinted water." French explorers in the sixteenth century encountered prairies to the south and, in the north, dense forests whose abundant waterways were an ideal breeding ground for beavers and muskrats. Fur trading, fishing and lumbering flourished, and the Ojibway and Sioux were eased out by waves of French, British and American immigrants.

Admitted to the Union in 1858, the new state of Minnesota was at first settled by Germans and Scandinavians, who farmed in the west and south. Other ethnic groups followed, many drawn by the massive iron ore deposits of north central Minnesota, which are expected to hold out for two more centuries. Minnesota still thrives on its natural resources and on a progressive social outlook typified by such Democratic heavyweights as Hubert Humphrey, Walter Mondale and Eugene McCarthy.

Current governor Jesse Ventura, a former professional wrestler, has garnered attention nationally and beyond for his unconventional and outspoken approach to politics. More than half of Minnesota's hardy inhabitants, who endure some of the fiercest winters in the nation, live in the southeast, around the so-called Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St Paul.

These attractive and basically friendly rivals together rank as the Midwest's great civic double act for their combined cultural, recreational and business opportunities. Smaller cities include the northern shipping port of Duluth, the gateway to the Scenic Hwy-61 lakeshore drive, and Rochester, near pretty river towns like Red Wing and Winona. The tranquil waters of Voyageurs National Park lie halfway along the state's boundary with Canada.

In recent years, the state has earned a reputation as the "Hollywood of the North," thanks to its increased use as an affordable, talent-rich filmmaking locale. Internationally acclaimed fraternal filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen, responsible for the Oscar-winning, Minnesota-set Fargo, were raised in the Twin Cities' suburb of St Louis Park.

Northern Minnesota
Minnesota's substantial northern half, covered with forested lakes, remains much as it was when the Europeans first traded with the Indians. The northeast - the Arrowhead, poking into Lake Superior - holds the greatest charm: most visitors choose secluded outdoor vacations centered on fishing, canoeing and snowmobiling, but there's infinite potential for driving tours in a wilderness comparable to the Alaskan interior. The Arrowhead is anchored by busy Duluth. From here, Scenic Hwy-61 skirts the clifftops around Lake Superior, passing waterfalls, state parks and neat little towns on the way northeast to the Canadian border. Sleepy little Grand Marais is poised at the edge of the wild Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and the Gunflint Trail. Inland, the Iron Range makes a scenic route north to the idyllic Voyageurs National Park. To the southwest, in Itasca State Park, the Mississippi River begins its great roll down to the Gulf of Mexico; you can cross the headwaters on stepping-stones. Everywhere you'll find campgrounds and Ma and Pa lakeside resorts, havens of homely simplicity dedicated to soothing urban-ravaged souls.

Southern Minnesota

Southern Minnesota is split between high plains, timbered ravines and slow-flowing Mississippi tributaries in the east, and the drier, flatter prairie and checkerboard farmland of the west. In the scenic southeast, spared a filing down by the last glacial advance, attractive small towns sit along the Mississippi, or on bluffs above it, in the ninety-mile Hiawatha Valley. Mississippi shipping helped sustain easygoing communities like Winona, Red Wing, Lake City (where water skiing was invented about 1922) and Wabasha, all of which share well-preserved old homes and hotels. The agricultural and college center of Northfield, off I-35 thirty miles south of the Twin Cities, annually commemorates the Jesse James gang's foiled attempt to rob the town bank in September 1876. Harmony, almost in Iowa and near Minnesota's largest Amish colony; Lanesboro, with a storybook setting on the hillsides of the Root River; and Mantorville have all kept at least one foot in the nineteenth century. Further west, New Prague and New Ulm were prime targets for the beleaguered Sioux during a six-week war with the US government in 1862.

To view Vacation Rental Homes in MINNESOTA click here.

Return to Vacation Guides






 


 About us | Contact us | Privacy Policy & Security | Terms and Conditions © 2006 Direct Vacation Rentals. All rights Reserved.