Minnesotans love their cabins. But sometimes, not all family members love them equally.
As a teen, Diane Page wasn't crazy about spending summer weekends at her family's cabin in north central Minnesota. "I wanted to be in the city, with my friends," she recalled.
But the cabin eventually cast its lure.
She came to love being on the water and spending downtime with her family, away from the busy routines of city life and her work as a focus-group moderator. Diane and her brother inherited the cabin after her grandfather died, then she bought out her brother after he built a retirement retreat down the road. "I felt more ownership then," she said.
Her husband of 40 years, Alan, the Minnesota Supreme Court justice and former Vikings football player, was slower to embrace the cabin lifestyle.
"He's from Canton, Ohio," said Diane. "He didn't understand the cabin thing."
"I wasn't enchanted," Alan admitted. He hated the mosquitoes and deerflies, and preferred to spend summer weekends in town, where he could take his runs around the city lakes. "I'd say, 'I've got one of the best lakes in the world three blocks away. Why are we going up there?' "
Then something happened.