GLOW Holiday Festival Season Opens – St. Paul, MN

GLOW Holiday Festival Season Opens – St. Paul, MN

Photo @sarahdope

Join us this holiday as we make the season merry with over a million lights!

GLOW Holiday Festival is an annual beautiful walk-through holiday event that comes to life at CHS Stadium in St. Paul, MN. Truly a desired destination for couples, singles, and families as they enjoy GLOW’s seasonal entertainment. We provide holiday joy, while giving back to the community with each ticket that was purchased $1 goes back int the community, over $350K we have donated.

Since it’s founding year of 2020 GLOW Holiday Festival  has been a success brining the entire Twin Cities community together. Come play on our Giant Slide, Zipline and visit Santa to make your holiday complete. Don’t forget to cozy up to make some nummy S’mores while adults enjoy a few hot totty’s amongst our GLOWING lights. We know you will enjoy GLOW with our 1,00,000 + Lightshow designed by our NYC/Broadway lighting designer. Each year he brings a whole new level of wow and excitement making it an annual must see event.

Highlights Include

Vixen’s Zip Line* – Guests can experience the thrill of Vixen’s Zip Line* as they soar high above the dazzling display of millions of lights. Two people can simultaneously glide along two separate 300-foot lines, suspended 34 feet in the air above CHS’s outfield.

VIP Opportunities – Heated suites at CHS Field are now available to reserve to host family, friends, clients, or colleagues for an unforgettable holiday party, New Year’s Eve celebration, holiday get-together, or business outing.

More highlights include:

• GLOW Spectacular – Guests can enjoy the GLOW Spectacular, a dazzling synchronized music and light show three times per hour. Witness a breathtaking display where the stadium lights come alive in perfect harmony with the music.

• Tremendous Tree – GLOW’s 60 ft. tall programmable tree serves as the stunning centerpiece for the GLOW Spectacular on-field light and music show.

• Charity Flame – Gorgeous artist-created mosaic flame representing the many regional charities that benefit from GLOW.

• Color Blossoms – 30,000 square feet of ever-changing illuminated blooms surrounding CHS field.

• Santa’s Shed – Visit Santa Claus at his charming shed, where children can share their holiday wishes and take photos with the jolly man himself.

• Enchanted Forest – Follow the trail through the mystical land of larger-than-life mushrooms, whimsical play huts and glowing trees.

• sElfie Plaza – A wonderfully enchanting area especially designed for you to capture your most magical holiday selfies and family photos amidst a backdrop of festive wonder and elfin delight.

• Giant Snowy Slide* – Embark on an epic slide adventure as you glide down a colossal 120-foot snowy slide, where thrill-seekers will be captivated by breathtaking city views during an exhilarating descent.

• Bright Bikes – GLOW’s fabulous bicycle-powered interactive display where every turn of the pedal influences the lighting of the tree.

• Reindeer Run – A fun gathering place to roast s’mores and savor the sweet nostalgia of toasting your delectable treats over a cluster of enchanting brick igloo fire pits, creating a fireside experience like no other.

• Penguin Playground – The ultimate winter children’s playground with light-up seesaws and swings – a great way for children and young adults to burn energy.

• Step onto the Field Level – Put yourself at the center of GLOW! Guests can enjoy an exclusive experience by stepping onto the baseball field as they walk through the GLOW Maze and traverse photo-friendly, arch-lighted tunnels.

• Food and Beverage Delights – CHS offers delicious seasonal fare and warm (or cold!) beverages for adults and kids alike.

• Blitzen’s Lounge – Heated full-beverage bar and gift shop that features goods from local makers and artisans available for purchase.

• Warming Houses – Find cozy comfort in a variety of warming house areas located throughout the event including the Saints Baseball Museum, Blitzen’s Lounge, and children’s warming houses in Reindeer Run.

Lake Superior Löyly Sauna Lounge Opens – Two Harbors, MN

Lake Superior Löyly Sauna Lounge Opens – Two Harbors, MN

Event

Lake Superior Löyly Sauna Lounge

Saturday, November 16th,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Saturday, January 18th,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Saturday, February 22nd,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Saturday, March 22nd,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

 Book Now

Person: $50.00

Location

Grand Superior Lodge

2826 MN-61

Two Harbors, MN

 

The Last Typewriter Restorer in the Twin Cities, MN

The Last Typewriter Restorer in the Twin Cities, MN

Typewriters and adding machines near the front window.

Credit: Wolfie Browender

“Before I started here, I never touched a typewriter in my whole entire life.”

Calvary Cemetery is probably the foremost landmark on Front Avenue between Lexington Parkway and Dale Street. Calvary, established in 1856, is the oldest Catholic cemetery in the Twin Cities. Half Time Rec, a pub and bar with a basement bocce ball court, is another place of note. The mile-long span of Front Avenue is lined with residential properties and a smattering of small businesses.

Spectrum Business Systems, 957 Front Avenue.

Spectrum Business Systems, 957 Front Avenue

One of those establishments is Spectrum Business Systems, at the northwest corner of Front and Kilburn Street. The building’s utilitarian exterior divulges little of the fascinating contraptions a visitor will find within.

Stepping through the threshold is like entering a time warp of sorts — back to a 1940s-era office, a mid-20th century typing pool or a museum of obsolete office equipment.

Typewriters and adding machines near the front window.
Typewriters and adding machines near the front window. Spectrum Business Systems sits across Front Avenue from Calvary Catholic Cemetery.
Antique typewriters and a record player in and on a display case.
Antique typewriters and a record player in and on a display case.

Typewriters from long-defunct brands — Fox, Olympia, Oliver and Hermes, of myriad designs and ages, spanning more than 100 years — rest on shelves and countertops. Adding machines, forerunners of the calculator, are scattered throughout. Then there are the outliers, like a time punch clock and a pinball machine. Some modern technology is around but is overwhelmed by the museum pieces.

Tori Leksen, left, and Ryan Andrews.
Tori Leksen, left, and Ryan Andrews.

Tori Leksen and Ryan Andrews are the co-owners of Spectrum Business Systems, as well as partners outside of work. Spectrum primarily handles IT needs for small businesses. Regular clients include about 20 small animal hospitals, an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers local and an East Side American Legion Post.

Ryan’s responsibilities range from networking, to software and hardware. Tori is in charge of what she calls the “front-end” work: “intake of the typewriters, printers, computers and laptops. I do all of our billing. I also am in charge of answering the phone.”

The nature of Spectrum’s clients dictates that Ryan often works nights and weekends. “The IT work has to be done after hours when they close because they can’t turn their computers off or [have] their internet down. So there is a lot of that. But, you know, it comes with the territory.”

A couple of walk-in customers stop in per day on average, some with computers and others with typewriters, said Ryan. “It’s actually surprising how much street traffic or foot traffic we get, especially considering we’re not in a downtown area. We’re a little bit off the beaten path.”

A walk-in customer is happy to get her repaired typewriter back.
A walk-in customer is happy to get her repaired typewriter back.

Happenstance and a friend led Ryan to Spectrum in 2019. While attending Dunwoody College of Technology in Minneapolis, Ryan became friends with the son of Spectrum’s then-owner, Dave Hintze. One day his friend mentioned to Ryan that his dad was looking for help at Spectrum. Ryan said he thought, “’OK, cool. I’ll come work on computers and networking.’”

When Ryan began working at Spectrum he still believed the company exclusively provided IT services. “He [Dave] didn’t inform me, or I never asked if ‘you fix typewriters.’” Ryan considered the machines in the lobby nothing more than an exhibit. “I just thought it was a little setup displaying them. ‘No, no,’ Dave explained to Ryan, ‘We repair them and we’re one of the last remaining [typewriter repair businesses] here in Minnesota.’” (Now Spectrum is one of just two shops in the state that revive broken typewriters.)

In 2019, Dave would average at most one typewriter repair a month, but it’s become a notable part of Spectrum’s business. “The typewriter side has definitely exploded.” When we talked, about 30 machines lined the shelves ready for repair. “Some of them,” Ryan said, “I can get them in and out in half an hour, 45 minutes, but sometimes I’m sitting at them for a couple hours.”

The most challenging typewriters for Ryan to restore are electric IBM Selectric models, which were primarily used by businesses. ”It’s such a complicated machine. There is not a single computer board in it, yet you hit one key and it rotates that ball and it types it in the exact key you need the exact time, every single time, and it types as fast as you do.” He added, “It is just minor adjustments that I still haven’t quite mastered.”

IBM Selectric I typewriter. courtesy Steve Lodefink, CC BY 2.0
IBM Selectric I typewriter. Credit: Steve Lodefink, CC BY 2.0
An IBM Selectric typeball. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
An IBM Selectric typeball. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

For the Selectrics, Ryan’s former boss still lends a hand. “Luckily the original owner, Dave, he still comes in once or twice a week to help facilitate those repairs where I’m banging my head against this. He comes and he is like, ‘You’ve just got to adjust this, this, this.’ And walks away 10 minutes later and it’s like I’ve been fighting with this for weeks.“

Broken typewriters and other equipment pack the shelves in one storage room.
Broken typewriters and other equipment pack the shelves in one storage room. Ryan harvests parts from these typewriters to fix others.

Finding replacement parts for typewriters that range in age from 50 to more than 100 years old can be problematic. Ryan pulls many bits from a stash of unrepairable machines in the back room. But often he’ll shop at hardware or auto parts stores and modify the components.

The back room repair bench.
The back room repair bench where Ryan fixes computers, printers and of course, typewriters.

The paper feed roller is one part for which he’s had to come up with a modern-day substitute. “I actually found that the hose line for wiper blade sprayers actually works perfect. It’s the right size, it’s the right softness and stiffness, and it just works perfect.”

Among collectors and other aficionados, manual typewriters are the most popular by far. “The manuals, they have a little bit of a style to them. They’re not like a big beige box so a lot of people like to collect those for the pretty colors and the shapes.”

Ryan barely paused when asked about his preferred typewriter. “My favorite to use is probably the Hermes 3000,” he said. “They’re actually a Swedish-made typewriter. And they just type a little nicer than most of the manuals. They just have a smooth transition and flow to them.”

The favorite typewriter of Tori and Ryan, the first generation of the Hermes 3000
The favorite typewriter of Tori and Ryan, the first generation of the Hermes 3000, was made in Switzerland from 1958 until 1965 or ’66.

Tori is also partial to the same typewriter. “I like the Hermes 3000 because they come in the prettiest little aqua color,” she said, laughing. She went on to say, “My second favorite would be the Oliver ’cause those are the oldest ones we have in here. And they type so unique ’cause they actually type down from the top.”

The unique keyboard of the Oliver No. 5.
The unique keyboard of the Oliver No. 5, Tori’s second favorite typewriter.
The purple Royal typewriter entered Spectrum’s museum because it was unrepairable.
The purple Royal typewriter entered Spectrum’s museum because it was unrepairable. A customer purchased it new from a television shopping channel, but it arrived broken and there are no parts to fix it.

Ryan’s discovered a couple of reasons that people shun computers for the click-clack of typewriters. “We have artists who use them for making art with the typewriter. They’ll take an old manual [typewriter] and actually type in spaces over and over again to give that depth of field to make portraits and pictures.”

Lovers of these mechanical wonders are not just Baby Boomers who grew up using them. Another motivation behind the resurgence is ancestry, he explained. “It’s exploded to people who’ve taken interest in not only typewriters but their family history. ‘This is my great-grandpa’s typewriter, or this has been in my family for generations.’”

 

 

 

 

 

Then Tori shared a story about a young woman who brought a typewriter to Spectrum. “She came all the way up from Nebraska; brought her great-grandfather’s typewriter up here. She wanted to restore it to the original state and get it up and working so that she could actually use it on a day-to-day basis. She made that journey all the way up here to drop it off and all the way up here to pick it up again. And to see the joy it brought her.”

Our conversation finished with Tori’s effusive praise for being a co-owner of Spectrum Business Systems. “It’s the most enjoyable job I’ve ever had because every customer who walks in, they’ve got their own story, their own personality, and they’re just some of the kindest people you’ll ever meet. So you get to learn a little bit more about everything each and every day and the history behind their typewriters, and about what they use them for, so that’s wonderful.”

By Wolfie Browender

Editor’s Note: A version of this story originally appeared in Saint Paul By Bike on July 24th, 2024 and is reprinted with permission.

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Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Scarecrows in the Gardens – Chaska, MN

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Scarecrows in the Gardens – Chaska, MN

Scarecrows in the Gardens

Join us for a fall walk on Scarecrow Hill and see the sites at the Arb!

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Scarecrows in the Gardens adds a festive note to the Dahlberg Terrace and Scarecrow Hill. Check out the artistry of the experts from Bachman’s, Arboretum staff and members of the community and vote for your favorites. Plenty of photo opportunities and all included in your gate admission. Visitors will also spot a variety of pumpkins mixed into the displays.

Assorted scarecrows

Events

Scarecrows in the Gardens

On view now through Thursday, October 31st.

All day

Included with general daily admission, which is free for members and ages 15 and younger and $20-$25 for non-members ages 16 and older.

Tickets must be reserved in advance of your visit to guarantee admission.

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Shadows & Spirits of the State Capitol final tours – St. Paul, MN

Shadows & Spirits of the State Capitol final tours – St. Paul, MN

Shadows & Spirits of the State Capitol

Along the way, visitors encounter historical “spirits” who tell stories of the Capitol’s past.

The dome of the rotunda. The restored paintings are brilliant!

Event

Shadows & Spirits of the State Capitol

Final tours Thursday, October 24th through Saturday, October 26th

Tours leave every half-hour at 6:30, 7:00, 7:30, and 8:00 pm.

Adult admission: $15.00

Senior admission: $13.00

Children ages 5-17: $11.00

Children under 5: FREE

Location

Minnesota State Capital

75 Rev. Drive Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

St. Paul, MN

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The Fall Flower Show is now open in the Sunken Garden! – St. Paul, MN

The Fall Flower Show is now open in the Sunken Garden! – St. Paul, MN

While most Minnesota gardens are winding down, the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory is just getting started!

 Come experience a blooming burst of color with vibrant yellows, whites, oranges, and purples from gorgeous chrysanthemums! You’ll also find fun accents like dwarf sunflowers, swiss chard, and even ornamental peppers – adding that perfect autumn touch!

Sunken Garden

The Sunken Garden offers beautiful floral shows, updated seasonally. This ever-changing display is as artful as it is fragrant. Perfect for a romantic walk or a curious exploration.

Enjoy amazing azaleas and festive poinsettias in winter, multicolored tulips in spring, prized roses and geraniums in summer and cheery chrysanthemums in autumn.

Event

The Fall Flower Show in the Sunken Garden

 Open daily 10:00 am – 4:00 pm through October 27th and November 1st through November 16th

(Sunken Garden will be closed for the mid-show change October 28th – October 30th)

 

Location

Marjorie McNeely Conservatory

1225 Estabrook Drive

Saint Paul, MN

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