Leave your cellphone behind.
Grab a paddle, a fishing pole or even just a sturdy pair of hiking shoes and discover a wild and scenic stretch of Anoka County.
Float down the Rum River, or hike or fish along its banks, and you almost forget you're in suburbia.
The Rum is one of six rivers designated "Wild and Scenic" in the state. It's one of 33 rivers that are part of Minnesota's innovative water trails program. Each year, crews with chain saws clear the channel for canoers, kayakers and boaters. The state owns more scenic easements along the Rum than any other river in Minnesota. There are 53 scenic easements purchased from more than 100 landowners, who have agreed to limit development, building and tree removal to keep the Rum's banks as pristine as possible.
The Rum River has unprecedented public access with multiple public put-in sites and parks along its banks. Anoka County has campsites exclusively for canoers and kayakers. And Anoka County has purchased land on its banks and created a conservation area open to hikers, birders and hunters.
The best part: You don't have to drive for hours to get there. The Rum, which connects Lake Mille Lacs with the Mississippi River, is 20 miles from downtown Minneapolis. It stretches 150 miles through Onamia, Milaca, Princeton, Cambridge and Isanti before draining into the Mississippi at Anoka.
"Just being able to be within a couple hours of a paddling experience where you can shed all that technical baggage and reconnect with family and friends is great," said Erik Wrede, Minnesota's water trails coordinator. "Being on a river provides a great opportunity. It's kind of soulful. You feel like you are reconnecting with nature. With a family, it's a great way to get rid of the schedule and just be with your family and goof around and wonder what's around the next bend."
The Rum River was originally called the Spirit River by native tribes. Something got lost in translation. Spirit was interpreted as spirits and European settlers called it the Rum River. The name could also be derived from the river's tea-colored water, which is caused by native plants. There's now a movement afoot to have the river renamed Spirit.