Press Publications 4779 Bloom Avenue White Bear Lake, MN 55110 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED
PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 640 STILLWATER, MN
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
VOL. 04 NO. 24 www.presspubs.com $1.00
OUTHOUSE ARCHAEOLOGY: Bottle-seekers dig up history PAGE 3
Birds of a weather migrate together
JACKIE BUSSJAEGER | PRESS PUBLICATIONS
Bald eagles are one of many species whose habitats will be shifting as a result of worldwide climate change. JACKIE BUSSJAEGER | PRESS PUBLICATIONS
BY JACKIE BUSSJAEGER STAFF WRITER
MARINE ON ST. CROIX — We may not be able to see the levels of CO2 in our atmosphere, but we can see the birds in our backyard. A presentation at the Marine Community Library on March 17 took a close look at the ways that bird behavior indicates changes in the climate, changes that aren’t always obvious in our day-to-day lives. Don Arnosti is the conservation policy director for the Izaak Walton League, which promotes conservation of the natural world. His presentation began with a demystification of climate change and the results of the U.N. Climate Change Conference that took place in Paris in 2015, and moved on to the ways that birds have been indicating the changes in global climate in your own backyard. “They’re everywhere, and they are sensitive indicators to what is going on the earth,” Arnosti said. For birds, survival is all in the timing. Arnosti said that the gradual changes won’t be too tough on short-distance migrants, such as chickadees, cardinals, waterfowl and other birds. The most alarming change is to the lifestyle of the long-distance birds, which spend their winters in tropical climates and rely on the length of the day to tell them when to return north. Unlike the short-range migrants, these birds have no idea that spring has come early, and they may return to find that some of their major food sources are no longer available. For example, neotropical warblers depend on a large caterpillar population to feed themselves and their young. “One pair of evening grosbeaks can eat up to 50,000 caterpillars during breeding season,” Arnosti said. But since the weather has warmed up sooner than these birds were expecting, those caterpillars have already retreated into cocoons, which is not a food source for the birds. SEE BIRD BEHAVIOR, PAGE 12
The interior tasting hall of Chateau St. Croix, which is based on a French castle that once belonged to a musketeer.
Winery savors Steinbeck with ‘Grapes of Wrath’ event BY JACKIE BUSSJAEGER STAFF WRITER
ST. CROIX FALLS, Wisconsin — While there are many stately homes and buildings in the St. Croix Valley, only one of them is actually a castle—Chateau St. Croix Winery in St. Croix Falls. Chateau St. Croix frequently holds free music festivals and art shows. This month it will host a “Grapes of Wrath” reading and actors from Festival Theatre as part of the St. Croix Valley’s Big Read—and where better than a vineyard? The castle is based on the actual home of a French musketeer, whose flag is displayed in the main hall. The tasting hall depicts a 14th century style, with suits of armor, carved wooden chairs and reclaimed beams from farms around the area. “We’ve brought the Midwest into the Old World idea,” said Matthew Scott, the winery’s general manager. Scott oversees the winemaking process at Chateau St. Croix. Scott worked as the curator of the Bell Museum of Natural History for
JACKIE BUSSJAEGER | PRESS PUBLICATIONS
Winemaker Matthew Scott samples a glass of a Cabernet/Marquette blend in the tasting hall of Chateau St. Croix.
awhile before he set out to do “something totally different.” Wine was something in which he’d always been interested, so it made sense for
him to pursue winemaking in the St. Croix Valley. SEE CHATEAU WINERY, PAGE 12
877-672-2259 Serving MN & WI www.mybackyardparadise.com e.com NEWS 651-407-1229 lowdownnews@presspubs.com
ADVERTISING 651-407-1200 marketing@presspubs.com
CIRCULATION 651-407-1234 ppcirc@presspubs.com
CLASSIFIED 651-407-1250 classified@presspubs.com
PRODUCTION 651-407-1239 ppcomp@presspubs.com