In 1854 George Ruble built a dam across the Shellrock River to power a mill. The wandering 521 acre lake was named Fountain Lake. Albert Lea grew up around it and the much larger natural Albert Lea Lake. We live on a back bay of Fountain Lake, which people often refer to as Edgewater Bay after the local park. Residents of Oakwood know that is patent nonsense because it is obviously Oakwood Bay.
Sediment invariable fills in lakes behind dams, it is just a matter of time. There are a number of streams which flow through farmland and feed Fountain Lake. Farming methods have improved, but there is still a lot of farm soil filling the bottom of the lake making it shallower every year. The bottom mud has been dredged out two times in the past, once in the early 40s and then again in the 1960s. This summer begins Dredge III, and three days ago it begans in Oakwood Bay.
We live where we live because it is wooded, friendly and more or less cut off for the rest of the city. And quiet. I said quiet. Not this summer. The floating mud factory runs every day 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM. A continual low rumble. Actually less obstrusive than a train running by because the sound is even and continual. And theoretically could cause insanity.
1 comment:
reminds me of a holiday at a hilltop farm B&B, isolated and quiet. Until midnight when the new fashioned grape harvesting machines started to grind up and down the rows!
You shall just have to get out on the bike and escape.
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