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They call this the Driftless Area, this southwestern corner of Wisconsin. While much of the rest of the state was scraped pretty flat by glaciers, the massive ice bulldozers never made it this far south and west. Here, the countryside rises and falls in an almost rhythmic ripple of ridges and valleys. It is beautiful country. Across this landscape the rail line wove its way from valley to valley, bridging scores of streams that flowed down the valley floors. The Cheese Country Trail follows that line. Built on an abandoned railbed, the trail swings south and east 47 miles from Mineral Point in Iowa County, across Lafayette County, to Monroe in Green County. A highlight of the trail is the 440-foot trestle that spans the Pecatonica River just west of Browntown. Many ATVers begin their journey in historic Mineral Point. One of the oldest communities in Wisconsin, it was founded in 1827 by coal miners from Cornwall, England sent to mine lead for bullets and musket balls. This corner of Wisconsin, where it meets Iowa and Illinois, was lousy with surface lead deposits. The miners dug shallow mines, often living in their holes leading to Wisconsin’s nickname as the “Badger State.” For more mining history, visit Pendarvis, a Wisconsin Historical Society site that preserves many of the homes of the city’s original Cornish miners (608/987-2122, www.wisconsinhistory.org). Leaving Mineral Point, you’ll follow Brewery Creek south about three miles to the county line, then jump a valley to Furnace Creek and the Pecatonica River at Slateford. For the next 35 miles, you’ll trace the Pecatonica’s tortured route through Lafayette County, all the way to Browntown. Calamine is an old mining town. Like many in the area, its name reflects its mining past; towns like Swindlers Ridge, New Diggings, and Lead Mine. About halfway between Calamine and Darlington you have the option to check out some club trails that spur to the east. On those trails, you can head to Fayette, Blanchardville, Lamont or Wiota. Next comes Darlington, the county seat. Darlington was once known as the “Pearl of the Pecatonica” because people harvested clams from the river to produce pearl button blanks. Here you can refuel, eat and check out the historic downtown. The county courthouse is an architectural treasure. Built in 1905, this sandstone beauty includes marble walls, tiled floors and a Tiffany glass rotunda. Monroe, of course, put the cheese in the Cheese Country Trail. The art and business of making cheese has kept the city thriving for more than a century. Downtown, the Historic Cheesemaking Center tells that story (608/325-4636, www.greencounty.org). The city is also the home of the Minhas Craft Brewery (608/325-3191, www.minhasbrewery.com). Founded in 1845, it is the oldest continually operated brewery in the Midwest producing the award-winning lagers, ales and bock beers of the Berghoff label as well as Blumer’s old-fashioned sodas. Tours and tastings are offered.
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| Last Updated on Friday, 23 October 2009 15:34 |













