I was up in the Minneapolis area on a business trip that got extended over the weekend (like it or not). Having done all of the state highpoints within a day's drive, I decided to find some other worthy point of interest to visit on Saturday. The weather wasn't the best...cloudy and in the low 50s, but I drove out from under the rain in the Twin Cities and up to Lake Itasca, the source of the Mississippi River. Where the Mississippi exits the lake, there is a series of (human-placed) rocks across which you can hop to say you have "walked" across the Mississippi. A hundred feet or so downstream there is a log bridge if you're not quite so adventurous.
I shot this
panorama from the log bridge. The small pan in the primary page requires Java to view. The larger pan linked to near the bottom of that page requires Quicktime and a bit of patience, since it's a 3-meg file.
I would argue that this is the highest point of the Mississippi river, so qualifies as some sort of goal...and, yes, I did hop across the rocks. There is another pan that I shot from partway out on the rocks but it'll require a bit more finagling to make it work right...it was kind of hard to maintain alignment when you're balancing on slick rocks and trying to hold the camera in the series of positions to shoot the pan.
(When we were on our
upper-Midwest highpointing trip back in 1999, we never got that far west in Minnesota, so this was a good excuse to visit another noteworthy spot in the U.S.)