Off a quiet rural route on the Wisconsin side of the Mississippi River, curious road-trippers find themselves lingering much longer than expected at Kinstone — a Midwestern homage to Great Britain’s ancient stone circles such as Stonehenge.
Visitors study interpretive signs as they curve through the spirals of a labyrinth, search for the natural question mark on a rock in the Circle of Mystery, pause and reflect in the shaded space beneath a dolmen, and stand in the long shadows cast by the columns of the Great Stone Circle.
Kinstone today goes above and beyond that singular rock circle originally envisioned by creator Kristine Beck. As she did research with her sisters in England and connected with experts, their efforts filled the 30-acre property with more than a dozen megalithic-style rock installations.
This tract of Driftless Area land near the village of Fountain City, Wis., 5 miles from Winona, Minn., used to be her family’s small dairy farm. Beck, who later founded and sold a software technology business, remembers needing to pick rocks that sprung up from the soil each spring and thinking they were almost like plants emerging from the earth.
She also remembers her father pulling out a large rock with his tractor and discovering remnants of fossilized coral.
“My father was very in tune to nature. He knew so many things about trees and rocks, flowers and plants,” said Beck, who purchased the 30 acres of her family’s farm in 1994 to preserve a steep, north-facing hillside.
“Stones and I have had a relationship since I was little,” she said. “There’s something here I feel very connected to.”
Her idea to create a stone circle was sparked by longtime fascination with stone structures worldwide, including European stone circles and dolmens, Middle Eastern pyramids, South American temples and Asian shrines. They’re all places so ancient with rocks so large that no one can fully explain how they were quarried and moved by early civilizations. They’re often aligned to astrological events, as well.