CHILL OF THE HUNT
By Stephanie Simon
LA Times Staff Writer
January 31, 2003
ST. PAUL, Minn. -- It's long past midnight, three degrees below zero,
and two guys in camouflage parkas are scrambling through a tangle of
frozen brambles on a hill in a pitch-black park. Down by the river,
young lovers so bundled only their eyes show rake dead leaves in a stinging
wind.
Two men sift through the sand of a gloomy playground. Two others pace
off a soccer field. Across the park, yellow circles bob and waver -
flashlights picking out clods of mud and crumpled candy wrappers. It's
silent, except for the scrape of hoes.
The great treasure hunt is on.
Thousands of men, women and children, many with headlamps strapped
around wool hats, drive themselves into a frostbitten frenzy each January
in search of a blue plastic medallion. The medallion is worth $10,000,
plus a trip for two to Hawaii. That's incentive to get out and dig.
But the prize money doesn't begin to explain the medallion mania that
grips this city.
A rite of winter since 1952, the treasure hunt has become a civic institution
in the Twin Cities. Parents give 3-year-olds spoons to poke through
snowdrifts. Whole families - sometimes three generations - abandon work
and school to scour parks. Some take a week's vacation so they'll have
more time to search.
"I break from reality completely," said Tami Cormier, 36,
a mother of three. "I don't cook. I don't do laundry. I don't sleep.
My kids survive on frozen pizza and fish sticks."
The most obsessive, wrapped in so many layers they can barely bend
their knees, search 12, 16, 20 hours a day, their teeth unbrushed, their
hair matted. They give themselves nicknames like "Excavator Stud"
and form teams, like the "Maidallions" - three women who own
a housecleaning service.
They pore over worn copies of the Treasure Hunter's Guide, a book that
maps every tree, every dumpster, every memorial bench in every park
in St. Paul. (Steve Worthman, an avid hunter who wrote the guide, spent
five years on it. "I'm not normally the kind of guy who engages
in obsessive behavior. Except for this," he said, shortly after
putting out his second edition in 1999. )
The hunt is sponsored by the St. Paul Pioneer Press, and the newspaper
prints a cryptic clue to the treasure's location daily until the medallion
is found - which can take anywhere from five to 12 days.
As they close in on the medallion, hunters line up by the hundreds
outside the Pioneer Press lobby, standing for hours in brutal cold to
grab the first edition when it comes off the press at 11 p.m. rather
than wait for the clue to appear online at midnight. On walkie-talkies
or cell phones, they bark the clue to buddies positioned in the field,
then race to join them. They know it's nutty. They cannot stop.
"The medallion is so elusive, it's like a mythical object. It
would be just a transcendental experience to find it, to get to hold
it," said Randy Skjerly, a 50-year-old proofreader who has been
hunting for a decade, without luck.
"I'm exhausted. I'm so sore, I can barely move. I hate this. But
I'm hooked," Dale Coski said earlier this week, after a long night
of searching.
Tiny icicles glinted on his eyelashes. Burrs clung to his blue ski
mask. Coski's nose was scratched from branches that had lashed his face
as he hunted in the dark. It was noon now, on a cheerless gray day,
and he was scratching through the grassy median in a parking lot. He
had told his boss at the post office that he had a bug. "I got
medallion fever," said Coski, 38.
The medallion is hidden on public property in St. Paul or in the surrounding
county by a top-secret team at the Pioneer Press - in recent years,
two reporters, who also write the rhyming clues, laced with puns and
anagrams and local history.
Even publisher Harold Higgins claims not to know who hides the treasure,
much less where it is. He does know that the paper's circulation of
190,000 jumps by a few thousand during the hunt. And that the secrecy
makes the game of deciphering clues "a whole lot more fun."
"My typical answer, when people ask, is that there are leprechauns
involved," he said.
For their part, the clue writers are not about to spill the beans.
Don Boxmeyer, a retired Pioneer Press columnist, hid the treasure under
cover of night for seven years in the 1990s - and watched with secret
pleasure as some of his best friends puzzled for hours over his clues,
attaching enormous significance to words he had thrown in just to make
a rhyme.
If they were getting too close, he revised the next clue to throw them
off course. If they were hopelessly confused, he took pity, loading
the next day's verse with hints.
Unraveling the clues is only the first challenge. Over the years, the
medallion has been hidden in a sock, in a fast-food burger box and in
a discarded (but mercifully, clean) diaper. It's been taped to a broken
record and an Oreo cookie, even stuck into the crevice of a boulder.
One year it was wrapped in green-and-brown Play-Doh, making it look
like dog droppings.
Often, medallion seekers must dig through chest-high snowdrifts to
find the prize. This year, with the snow a disappointing no-show, they
toted rakes, potato hoes, even leaf-blowers from park to park instead
of shovels. The medallion may be hidden under feet of debris, but it's
never buried underground.
As they search, hunters often swap interpretations of the clues. "Noodling,"
they call it.
"You're out in a park in the middle of the night, in a wooded
area and you're talking to a total stranger. Where else in America could
you do that?" said Terry Knapp, 56, who has been a fanatical hunter
since his mother dragged him out to dig in the snow when he was 4.
This year, he turned down a free trip to the Super Bowl in a private
jet to rake through leaves in a wind-chill of 15 below. "I mean,
c'mon. I'm going to be sitting out there in San Diego when the medallion
hunt is going on?" he said.
A self-employed salesman, he's lost more income over the years than
he could hope to make up by finding the medallion. The hunt, he insists,
is not about money. It's about community. Officials cannot recall any
fights during the hunt although police patrol the parks more frequently
just in case.
"You'd think it would be a battle royal out there," Knapp
said, "but it's amazing how much you start sharing."
Hunters stumble home at 3 a.m. only to spend hours dissecting the latest
clue in Internet chat rooms.
Friends think nothing of calling each other in the middle of the night
to suggest searching a particular drainpipe.
"You can't keep your mind off it," said Betty Jo Ward, 34,
who hunts with her mom and her sister.
This year's clues offered plenty to noodle over.
No one could get a bead on Clue 3, which read: "Wide as Triple
E, our door will always be, open to all who enter." Was Triple
E a shoe size? An allusion to Cherokee Park? A tip to search near the
boat docks on the Mississippi River, which are shaped a bit like the
letter E? The clue actually referred to a stone entrance to Como Park
donated by E. E. Englebert.
"The coldest star will guide you far", Clue 4, spurred Rus
Meyers, 53, to pry up rocks by the riverbank, on the theory that the
coldest star was a meteor fallen to earth. He wore out three pairs of
gloves by dawn.
A line in Clue 8 - "lure me precious to your soul" - had
Ward hunting near a bait shop. A reference in Clue 9 to the "search
for truth" sent Knapp to the intersection of Plato Street and an
avenue named for a local judge.
Maddeningly ambiguous, the clues in the first week directed many hunters
to Harriet Island, a vast park by the Mississippi. When Clue 11 came
out Tuesday night, they realized they had been wasting their blisters.
That verse made it clear the medallion was hidden in Como Park, several
miles north of the river.
It took Clue 12 - which suggested a search 40 paces north of the fire
pit - to solve the mystery. Three young men found the medallion, encased
in ice, just before midnight Wednesday.
Disappointed hunters are already longing for next year.
"I will be doing this for the rest of my life. I guarantee it,"
said Shaun Fleming, 18.
"There's nothing like this in the world," said Jake Ingebrigtson,
24, a college student who skipped two weeks of classes to roam the streets
in a van he has dubbed the "Medallionator."
(It pulls up to the Pioneer Press lobby in the evenings blaring the
theme from "Rocky.")
Ingebrigtson has memorized clues going back decades and is prone to
saying things like: "This might be a reference to Phalen Park '83."
To which a stranger in line behind him for the newspaper is apt to
respond: "Yeah, it reminds me of Clue 11."
To the intense irritation of guys like Ingebrigtson, such devotion
to the hunt does not guarantee success. Many casual treasure seekers
don't bother with the clues; they just wait until they hear on the radio
that throngs have invaded a particular park, and head over to join the
digging. Sometimes, they stumble across the medallion by chance.
Last year, a 16-year-old kicking at leaves by a baseball field found
the treasure after six clues. He had been hunting, somewhat aimlessly,
for just 20 minutes. That abrupt end to the hunt so infuriated a group
of die-hard treasure fans that they staged their own medallion quest
a few weeks later, putting up $500 from their own wallets for a prize.
Those who have found the real medallion are regarded with awe bordering
on reverence.
When Ingebrigtson dared refer to a longtime hunter, Bill Gralish, as
"wrong-park Bill," two people standing nearby interrupted
to remind him that Gralish found the puck in '69. They prefer to call
him Winnebago Bill, because he camps out in an RV during the hunt.
"He let me stand in his RV when I was hunting on my birthday,
and it was the best birthday present I ever had," Cathi Hogan said.
That same day, during the '01 search, another past winner showed her
the white sock that held the medallion in '98. "He let me hold
it! It was like, 'Oh, my God!' " Hogan squealed. It apparently
brought her luck: She found the medallion the next day.
A kindergarten teacher, Hogan, 45, buries pennies in snow in her classroom
so her students can experience the thrill of the hunt.
Intrigued by that level of obsession, New York filmmaker Trent Tooley
has come to St. Paul three years running to shoot a documentary on the
chase for the medallion.
The working title: "No Time for Cold Feet."
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