since childhood, and for Mike, his vision of moving to the area began when he visited Trout Lake with his father as a third grader. “I remember really vividly we were in the boat, and I looked around and thought ‘I’m going to live up here,’” he said. That dream of living on the North Shore began to fall into place when Mike and Lesa met in the summer of 1999. They visited the North Shore together that autumn, and almost immediately they started talking about finding a place in the area. A year later they purchased 55 acres of land outside of Grand Marais, and began visiting on the weekends as often as they could, leaving the Twin Cities after work on Friday evenings and arriving late in the night at their land. For the first 18 months they owned the land, the Hofers had a six-person tent they would set up, even during the winter. “We really enjoyed that first year and a half, and had a lot of memorable experiences,” Mike said. “One morning we found ourselves in the midst of a pack of wolves that was trying to ambush a herd of deer. It sounded like a stampede. We poked our heads out of the tent and saw the wolves, and then just as quickly as they arrived, they were gone. It was really amazing.” Mike went on to take a timber framing course at North House Folk School, and they built up a timber-framed cabin on their land. The Hofers continued to visit on the weekends and talked about the possibility of moving to their cabin permanently someday. That opportunity came in the summer of 2017, when Lesa was offered a job at Great Expectations School in Grand Marais. While Mike was not quite ready to leave his job yet, Lesa moved to the cabin that August and lived there for two years while Mike finished his job in the Twin Cities. “That was a really special time for me. The cabin is rustic, with no running water and a long driveway, but I got to learn how to do things I had never done before,” Lesa said. “And at Great Expectations I felt like I was finally with my people. I really love the people I work with and really respect them.” Two years after Lesa moved to the cabin, the timing was right for Mike to leave his job, and the two of them have been enjoying the simplicity and deep sense of community they have found in Grand Marais. Mike has been following his passion of making maple syrup, and has formed good connections with other maple syrup makers in the area. “When we wanted to move up here, we moved up for the scenery and beauty and more of a simple life, but now we’ve really found it’s the people and sense of caring that really make this our home,” Lesa said. For Nelson French of Silver Bay, retiring to the North Shore has brought him closer to an area that he has poured much of his time and energy into. French worked on the establishment of Tettegouche State Park in 1979, and as director of The Nature Conservancy oversaw the Palisade Valley addition in the early 1990s. Now as a Silver Bay resident, he gets to enjoy the beauty of the area he spent much of his career improving. Originally from Hibbing, French’s career brought him to the Twin Cities area,
Mike and Lesa Hofer were drawn to living on the North Shore because of a deep love for the outdoors. | SUBMITTED and moving to Silver Bay is a return to his northern Minnesota roots. Building his own home had long been a dream, and when he and his wife Marilyn found their land, they built a log home on the property, where they have been living since 2011. “My wife and I had decided that we wanted to be on the North Shore in our later years, and here we are,” French said. “We were very familiar with the area so we found property that was close to this area that I know and love, and that I feel good about with my work of continuing to make it a nice place.” When the house was complete French spent several years commuting from Silver Bay to Duluth for work. These last three years he has been retired and has been able to fully enjoy becoming part of the Silver Bay community. In addition to outdoor activities like snowshoeing, fishing and canoeing, both Nelson and Marilyn are both actively involved in the community, with Marilyn working at the Veteran’s Home and French lending his knowledge and experience to several committees, including the Silver Bay Economic Development Authority, the Planning and Zoning Commission, and the Silver Bay Business Park Advisory. He was also recently named Vice President of the Friends of Tettegouche State Park. “We’re fitting into the community well and finding it a great place to be,” French said. Moving forward, French sees opportunity for Silver Bay, a region with some of the North Shore’s best ATV and snowmobile trails and an increased interest in activities like hiking, biking, rock climbing and kayaking. The access to high-speed internet also makes the North Shore a potential destination for young professionals who can work from home. “I would encourage anyone who is interested in moving to the area to seriously
Originally from Hibbing, Nelson French’s career brought him to the Twin Cities area, and moving to Silver Bay is a return to his northern Minnesota roots. | SUBMITTED look into the lifestyle and what it’s like to live in such a rural area,” French said. “But if you want to move out of an urban environment to live in a place where you can
walk out your door and go snowshoeing, definitely consider the North Shore.”
NORTHERN WILDS
MARCH 2021
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