Lake Superior Reserves hosts 14th St. Louis River Summit

Feb. 18—SUPERIOR — The Lake Superior National Estuarine Research Reserve is holding its 14th annual St. Louis River Summit with in-person sessions at the University of Wisconsin-Superior Yellowjacket Union March 6 and 7 and field trip options on March 8.

The theme for the summit, "Braiding Visions for an Enduring Future," celebrates long-term stewardship of the St. Louis River. The goal of the summit is to bring together people who care about and work on the St. Louis River and to encourage coordination of activities, programs and projects.

"We wanted to honor what it takes to care for land and water in a multigenerational sense," said Deanna Erickson, Lake Superior Reserve director. "To steward the St. Louis River from past degradation into a thriving future takes many visions from scientists, community members, Ojibwe elders and stewards, to engineers, state agencies and elected officials. The summit braids those perspectives together."

The keynote session, "Visions: Stories for an Enduring Future," will be hosted by Mary Fox and Blake Thomas of the live Duluth radio broadcast "Take it With You," and Zeitgeist Arts. The St. Louis River has seen some wild tales — historic, ecological, adventurous and personal. In this session, community storytellers are invited to share short personal stories connected to the river on the theme of visions in the format of a non-competitive story slam (think a local version of "The Moth" podcast).

In-person events include informational presentations, networking sessions, a poster and art session and field trips. The poster and art session takes place at 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 6, in UW-Superior's Swenson Hall atrium. It will feature light refreshments.

During the morning of March 8, field trips will be held. Options include touring the Western Lake Superior Sanitary District, snowshoeing in the Superior Municipal Forest, visiting the Grassy Point Restoration site and viewing art history murals inside West Duluth's Kom-on-Inn with interpretation by an art historian and arts enthusiast.

Students from local schools and institutions are invited to attend the summit to learn about land and participate in water stewardship efforts, the research community and river restoration projects. Students attend for free but need to register.

Attending the entire summit (virtual and in-person sessions) costs $60 and includes lunches and appetizers at the poster and art session. Online registration closes Feb. 28. The cost for same-day walk-in registration is $90. To register and view the agenda, visit

lakesuperiornerr.org/summit.