GUNFLINT TRAIL – Michael Valentini rarely picks up his cell phone. The fact that he did last summer, inside the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn., of all places, is something of an anomaly.
“I see the phone ringing and it’s a number from Kansas that I don’t know and for some reason I stepped into the corner of the room and said hello,” Valentini recently said from inside his large garage at the end of the Gunflint Trail. “I’m standing there in the Country Music Hall of Fame and the person on the phone says, ‘I want to buy your business.’”
The person on the phone was Shawn Wood. He was calling from his home near Topeka, Kan. Less than a year after that phone call was made, Wood and his brother Luke are indeed running Valentini’s business. In fact, they now own it.
Valentini Property Services, a handyman enterprise widely recognized for installation and upkeep on sprinkler systems that protect homes during wildfires, is now operating under the name Wood Brothers Property Services. The sale and transfer of the business name started last fall and was completed over the winter. Valentini sold the business to the Wood brothers for approximately $150,000.
Michael and his wife, Sally, first arrived to the Gunflint Trail in May 1999. In the 26 years that have followed, Michael and Sally have impacted the Gunflint Trail in the way people who leave a mark here do: By embracing it. They’re both dedicated volunteers, serving for many years with organizations like the Gunflint Trail Historical Society and the Gunflint Trail Volunteer Fire Department.
For his part, Michael became what current residents of the Trail described as “the go-to person” for anything that needs to get accomplished up the Gunflint. He installs docks for home and cabin owners with lakeshore property. He builds structures. He repairs water lines. For Valentini, there’s no task too small, and seemingly few too large. This business model is being transferred to Shawn and Luke as they take over operations. And they’ve literally hit the ground running.
“We’re working 15 hours days most days,” Shawn said recently from the end of the Gunflint Trail.
Shawn, 30, and Luke, 24, along with their partners Emily (who is now working as a nurse at the hospital in Grand Marais) and Aspen, and another acquaintance who traveled north from Kansas, are residing at a property on the north side of Loon Lake. The Wood family has owned the property since the early 1970s. Shawn and Luke’s great-grandfather, Ernest Schmidt, was a longtime friend of the Kerfoot family on nearby Gunflint Lake. Schmidt was also friends with the likes of conservationist and writer Sigurd Olson over on the Ely side of the Boundary Waters. In fact, the family cabin the Wood brothers occupy on Loon Lake is a replica of Olson’s iconic cabin at Listening Point on Burntside Lake near Ely.
“From what we hear about him, our great-grandpa was really well known around here and involved in a lot of things back in his time,” Shawn said.
Similarly, and much like Valentini did, the Wood brothers are getting involved in many aspects of Trail life. They recently signed up to join the Gunflint Trail Volunteer Fire Department. They attended the canoe races on Gunflint Lake July 16 helping to raise money for the fire department. They’re meeting new people every day, Luke said, and they’re busy getting their Loon Lake property ready for what will be their first winter up the Gunflint.
As they navigate a whirlwind of change, including moving some 800 miles from Kansas to the Gunflint Trail, the Wood brothers are also grieving. In early June, their other brother, 25-year-old Tyler, lost his battle with depression, Shawn said. Tyler spent time up the Gunflint Trail last fall learning some of the ins and outs of the work they’d be doing if they bought Valentini’s business. Tyler met several people who live on the Gunflint during that time, and the loss of their brother has added a layer of unexpected sadness to their first summer on the Trail.
“We’re doing our best,” Shawn said of the emotions involved with losing their brother.
Just down the road from Loon Lake, where the brothers are residing, is Shari Baker at Gunflint Pines Resort. Shari met Tyler last fall and has become a friend and patron of the Wood brothers and their business.
“It’s nice to see the younger generation with history in the area move here to set up a livelihood,” she said. “I appreciate that they enjoy the North Woods as it is, rather than bring the city with them.”
Shari said the Wood brothers seem to have a wide array of knowledge, abilities, and “the desire to be part of the community.”

“In my experiences with them so far,” she said, “they’re good, honest, hardworking North Woods type people.”
Luke said the people they’ve met working on the Gunflint Trail this summer, and the way they’ve been embraced by the local residents, has been a welcome complement to all the labor they’ve been doing in recent months.
“This community is unlike anything we’ve ever experienced,” he said. “It’s a fantastic place.”
To contact the Wood Brothers for handyman services, dock installation, sprinkler system maintenance, or plumbing, or other assistance you might need with a property in Cook County, visit their website: https://www.woodbrothersps.com/.