|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewWisconsin's Ice Age National Scenic Trail is a dream woven in single-track, multi-use, bike trails, and back roads. It's tacked together through shared public spaces, private lands and easements. Volunteers and organizations work together to maintain and grow the trail. Every year the trail gains miles toward the goal of uninterrupted path ribboning off-road over 1,200 miles of Wisconsin's glacial terrain. There are many ways to hike the Ice Age trail. Some people loop segments close to home, perhaps never knowing the trail could take them across the state. Others backpack a through hike from one end to the other. Segment hikers walk a section at a time to complete the trail over a span of years. Local chapters of the Ice Age Trail Alliance organize volunteers who maintain segments of trail. Each trail segment has a name and those over a mile long are catalogued in the Ice Age National Scenic Trail Official Guidebook. The number of segments changes from year to year as road walks are converted to trail. This poetry collection follows the journey of a segment hiker who wrote a poem to honor 124 segments of the Ice Age Trail, one unofficial segment (Murry's Creek) and one memorable road walk. Her thousand-miler journey she describes as poemwalking, shares the experience of the trail in all seasons. These poems, like the glacial grit that inspired them, are an amalgamate of place, life, and experience. The poems in this collection are organized into seven sections. Each section represents a geographical area of the trail: from the eastern terminus of the trail at Potawatomi State Park along Lake Michigan, the Northern Kettle Moraine, the Southern Kettle Moraine, edging the Driftless Area, the Sand Counties, the Northwoods, and the northwest portion of the state to the trail's terminus at Interstate Park. Each geographical section includes a subtitle and presents an ordered collection of poems that follow the poet's experience of the trail and life along with the seasons. A haiga (a haiku with an original photograph on the trail) introduces each section. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Katrina Serwe , Paul RuanePublisher: Wisconsin Writers Association Imprint: Wisconsin Writers Association Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9798349341212Pages: 202 Publication Date: 01 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationKatrina Serwe, PhD, worked as a therapist, professor, and researcher in the field of occupational therapy for over two decades. She started writing poetry after a transcendent midlife crisis brought her back to her love of literature, art, and nature. Her first collection of poetry, First Steps (Brain Mill Press), was published in 2025. Her poems have been featured in a variety of publications such as The Solitary Plover, Blue Heron Review, Bramble, Portage Magazine, and Scrawl Place. Serwe's awards include the Jade Ring in poetry (Wisconsin Writers Association, 2024) and the Muse Prize (Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets, second place, 2025). Her favorite pastime is a made-up hobby she calls poemwalking. You can follow her journey at www.katrinaserwe.com. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||