Even now, years after her duties as a fire lookout for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources have ended and years, too, after most Minnesota fire towers have been abandoned or torn down — yielding to modern fire detection by airplane or cellphone — Karoline Monson can sense the dryness in the air this early fall, the lack of rain, the danger.
And she sometimes misses the days when she climbed the 130 steps of the fire tower that soared 100 feet over Pequot Lakes, Minn., and scanned the forest in all directions, looking for smoke.
Today, the state's best-known fire tower stands next to the DNR Building at the State Fair, rising atop the midway like a refurbished relic, a curio for fairgoers who frolic on it as if it were a back-yard play set.
But for Monson and the hundreds of other lookouts who once stood guard atop these North Country perches, ever alert for budding infernos, theirs were serious jobs.
"I did it for 15 years,'' she said.
Remarkably, enveloped in a 7-foot-by-7-foot box for hours on end, Monson never was bored.
Particularly not that day.
"It was the late '80s, and one morning I climbed the tower steps like I always did, one after another, 130 of them,'' she said. "When I got to the last four steps, where you open the door to get up into the tower, I laid down my equipment and prepared to climb up …''