Fort Lauderdale the #1 Vacation Destination for People from Minnesota

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January 2018Â - Volume 1 Number 1 Serving the Northern Third of Minnesota

FEATURES: Duluth's Beargrease 2018 -Ice Box Days - SnowmobileTrails in Big Falls - Local Poker Runs - Toasty Winter Cocktails - Concerts & Casino Events - Jackpine Savage Restaurant Review - Bemidji Ice Fishing Contest and MN Ski Report

WINTER GETAWAYS: Fort Lauderdale - San Vito lo Capo Sicilia Cartagena Colombia - Scottsdale, Arizona EXCLUSIVE: How to travel to Italy for under $300. Get more travel bang for your buck by becoming Skyscanner Literate!

PREMIERE ISSUE



Issue 1 /// Jan 2018

Tax Hungry Lawmakers Attack Fisherman MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — If you are not a big ice angler, you have been missing out on fishing a frozen lake in the lap of luxury. Today’s portable ice fishing shelters are things of pure beauty and comfort.

And until this season, there was no need to license them because they are towed off the lakes when not in use and therefore, and are not considered a permanent shelter by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

However, the 2017 Legislature changed the law to now include wheeled shelters under and requiring them to be licensed.

At Clearwater’s Outlet Recreation, Ice Castle-brand wheeled fishing shelters are flying off the lot.

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“This is not your grandpa’s ice fishing house anymore. It’s not that shack out there,” said Joe Erickson of Outlet Recreation. “It’s not just a fish house anymore. It’s a camper, it’s a hunting shack, it’s everything the family wants,

Vikings Superbowl February 4th 2018

not just necessarily only the ice fisher.”

It is like the literal cabin on wheels, with all the comforts of land.

“The electric bed allows for it to stay out of the way,” Erickson said.

Power-assisted bunk beds, TVs and fireplaces, kitchens and cedar-paneled Johns.

But a recent law change now requires the once “portable” shelters be licensed like any other ice house — creating more revenue for the state.

Publisher James Gang james@northwoods.fun Account Executive Dwain Smith dwain@northwoods.fun

Weighing a couple of tons, they will need ample ice thickness to safely tow onto the lake. “It’s the joys of being on the ice, seeing the fish come up the hole,” said an ice angler Logan Klinzman.

So for now, guys like Klinzman will still tug a sled until his newly “licensed” luxury castle becomes his winter retreat.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources redefines portable shelters as ones that fold up, collapse or can be disassembled for transport on and off a lake.


Winter Getaway Spotlight: Fort Lauderdale  The nearly three-decade evolution and rebirth of Greater Fort Lauderdale has transformed the area from a sleepy beach community to a year-round, internationally acclaimed tourism destination.

Where it all began

What started in 1934 with a Colgate College swim coach bringing his swimmers to train and stay in shape in a warm place, grew into a national rite of passage for college students everywhere. In 1960, a big screen adaptation of the novel Where the Boys Are starring "Connie Francis and George Hamilton" depicting innocent sun-drenched fun, put Greater Fort Lauderdale on the map. By the 1980's, the area was inundated with hundreds of thousands of college students on a six-week binge of roaring parties and a rowdy, anything goes attitude.

The party's over

In 1986, the local political leadership yanked out the welcome mat from nearly 400,000 raucous college students and weeks of debauchery in an effort to shed its long-held "Spring Break Capital" title. Tourism and city officials focused on modernizing and improving infrastructure to attract couples, multigenerational families, international visitors, LGBT travelers, business and convention-goers. The move ignited a renaissance that brought new facilities and services such as the newly expanded Broward Center for the Performing Arts, the 600,000-square-foot Broward County Convention Center, the Museum of Art and Museum of Discovery and Science, Sawgrass Mills Mall and expansions at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.

"They say if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Well, it was broke," said Nicki E. Grossman, president of the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau. "It took a very dedicated, forward-thinking effort. Proof we were on the right path, is the very spot where the wet T-shirt contest was invented is now home to a five-diamond luxury resort."

Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL) exemplifies the area's wave of improvements on a billion-dollar scale. From a modest airport to a $2.3 billion expansion that includes terminal improvements and additional gates, further strengthening FLL's role as an International hub for budget-minded travelers and lowcost carriers like Southwest, JetBlue, Spirit and Norwegian Air Shuttle. Beginning July 2014, Norwegian Air Shuttle began non-stop service from London to Fort Lauderdale, adding to the airport's growing list of international destinations.

Slip into something Sunny

From shabby chic, to glitz and glam, shopping in Greater Fort Lauderdale delivers retail therapy at all price points. Las Olas Boulevard remains the region's unofficial "Main Street," with trendy boutiques along a thoroughfare that dates back to the city's founding. Sawgrass Mills, the largest outlet mall in the country with 2.3 million square feet of retail space, recently added 49 new high-end retailers - like Diane von Furstenberg, Jimmy Choo, Versace, Frette Linens, Tory Burch and PRADA - as part of The Colonnade Outlets.


Lavish Boutique to Retro Chic

As the destination distanced itself from its rowdy reputation, more sophisticated hotel brands took notice and soon the area had a boom of new hotel developments. The Lauderdale Luxe Collection showcases the assortment of deluxe category properties, featuring the best in-market hotels and spa resorts. Â

One thing Greater Fort Lauderdale carried over from its post-Spring Break lineage, mom-and-pop-style retro retreats. Superior Small Lodgings offer an intimate authentic Florida vacation. Some of these architectural gems are being restored and given a makeover to create a European-style, North Beach Village resort collection.

Hilton Hotels recently announced its global luxury brand, Conrad Hotel, will soon plant its flag on Fort Lauderdale's beachfront. Expected to open in Summer 2015, the 24-story, 290-room Conrad Fort Lauderdale Resort and Residences, condo-hotel property is undergoing more than $34 million in enhancements and upgrades including a Conrad Spa, swimming pool and exclusive oceanfront dining experience.

On the horizon, a new $147 million, 349-room, Margaritaville Resort, a Jimmy Buffett-themed project stretching five acres along Hollywood's famed Broadwalk and the Intracoastal Waterway, expected to open in July 2015.

Still Fun and Funky

If one category truly embodies the area's transformation, it's the flourishing arts scene that rivals that found in many major markets. Flanking Las Olas Boulevard, the Riverwalk Arts & Entertainment District connects the Museum of Discovery and Science, the Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale and the Broward Center for the Performing Arts, set on the banks of the New River.

Just north of downtown Fort Lauderdale, the emerging FAT Village - or Flagler Arts & Technology - is an evolving four-block creative district, built in the 1950s as industrial warehouses, that now is the only urban arts district in Fort Lauderdale, and one of the largest in Florida. The village is populated with open artists' studios, galleries, live theatre and hundreds of residential units. About Greater Fort Lauderdale

From the seagrass to the sawgrass, Greater Fort Lauderdale boasts more than 34,000 lodging accommodations at a variety of hotels, luxury spa resorts, and Superior Small Lodgings reflecting a "beach chic" vibe. Visitors enjoy 23 miles of Blue Wave certified beaches, discover 300+ miles of inland waterways that run from the Intracoastal Waterway to the Everglades, dine at thousands of restaurants and eateries, get immersed in a thriving arts and culture scene and indulge in top shopping. For more info, contact the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau at (800) 22-SUNNY


Finest Hand Crafted Furniture in Northern MN! www.RiverLogFurniture.com


Advertise here, please send us your news and event photos: james@northwoods.fun


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