As her heart thumped and her mind raced, Monique Weinandt couldn't convince herself otherwise: She thought she and her husband, Mark, were graveyard dead.
It was last August, on an advanced hiking trail at George H. Crosby Manitou State Park in Finland, Minn., when the Weinandts of Shakopee stared down a charging black bear.
Monique Weinandt recounted the moment in vivid detail, right down to how her body involuntarily shook from the adrenaline surge and how she frantically talked to a 911 operator on a cellphone that didn't have service at the trailhead. How they had no weapon or bear spray. How the sound of rustling leaves and breaking sticks was quickly drowned out by the bear's huffing and snorting. How Mark, 57, yelled to reveal their presence. How she finally saw the bear on its hind legs, standing, and towering, tall. How, when it charged, it closed the distance between them faster than the Weinandts could have ever imagined. And how the bear finally peeled off and disappeared like a ghost into the park's dense foliage.
"I really thought we were goners," she said. "We heard the bear for the longest time before we saw it. It probably got as close as 10 to 12 feet from us. Too close. Its eyes were huge and it was super shinny black. Honestly, it was gorgeous."
The Weinandts' too-close-for-comfort encounter occurred on the final day of the couple's eight-month odyssey visiting all 76 (there's now 75) Minnesota state parks and recreation areas — an ambitious goal inspired by a motorcycle trip to Glacier National Park in Montana.
Their journey, which began last November at Fort Snelling State Park, was part adventure, part history lesson, part nature-appreciation seminar and part endurance test. Along the way, they experienced all of Minnesota in every "glorious" season, Monique Weinandt, 45, said. Over 40 individual days, they hiked more than 200 miles (96 hours total) and all 67 state park Hiking Club trails. They traveled 8,000 miles by truck and 1,000 miles by motorcycle. They spent two nights in state park cabins and 14 in their truck. They took roughly 10,000 digital photos to chronicle their visits.
"I really didn't know a great deal about our state parks before we started," said Weinandt. "We learned about Minnesota and how diverse the landscape is … going from steep climbs to thick woods, flat prairie, rushing rivers, springs, hardwood forests, peat bogs and volcanic rock. There is so much in Minnesota to experience. It's more than just the Land of 10,000 Lakes."
Reflecting on their accomplishment, Weinandt said it's less about them and more about the parks themselves. Each, she said, provides a window into state history, a potential adventure waiting to happen. "Many were here before us," said Weinandt. "Unlike today, Native Americans, explorers, fur traders and missionaries used rivers to move goods and people. Those days are obviously long gone, but it's neat to think about the old days."