 Well, with all the holiday season coming to a close last night, many people are not preparing to take down their decorations on this week's Northwoods adventure. Anthony Scott brings us to Adina, where one man has his work cut out for him when it comes to taking down the Christmas lights. People always ask me what my electrical bill is. I haven't even told my wife. And it's probably a good thing that GP Anderson's wife does not know the electrical bill, as Christmas lights illuminate Southwest Third Street in Wadena every year. Anderson got the idea for his Christmas in Wadena while watching a Super Bowl commercial in 2006, and the lights have just gotten bigger and bigger each year. Two years it took to create it, and first I had upwards of 15 minutes of songs, and now I'm up to two hours of songs, and I'm just creating with more and more morphs and more technology. During the last few weeks of December, cars park outside 414 3rd Street Southwest in Wadena and tune their radios to 88.1 FM to listen to the music that goes along with the show. They can listen to all the music in the warm comfort of the car, so you don't hear any music outside. All you hear is cars running. People don't parallel park. They all come in and they're back in because we need that for the amount of people that can park here, so we can get upwards of about 75 people around here. The finished product at Christmas in Wadena is a sight to behold, but the work that goes into it is not taken for granted. Three miles of extension cars, there's 47 computers, there's a mile of catfly cable all here drawing it, so it's called an animated display because you can see it's quite animated. You don't buy any of this stuff. Everything you see I have to make and I have to program. And they have to bring out the heavy machinery for the centerpiece of the display. This big mega reef behind me, it's 1,100 pounds, has 22,000 feet of garland on it, 27,000 lights, we get a crane to lift it in an hour. So what do the neighbors think about all the lights on their street? My neighbors have been all receptive to it because, you know, this is the 11th year, raised $14,000 for Project Chair of Wadena County, upwards of 4,000 pounds, so you and I are worrying about eating tonight afternoon, but there's people that certainly have a genuine need. Southwest 3rd Street in Wadena is transformed into a movie scene every Christmas, and it doesn't matter how many times you come, you always notice something new. There's just cute little elements throughout there that's not full-blowned. If you watch the full entire show, you see things come up that always catch your eye. Reporting from Wadena for this week's Northwoods Adventure, Anthony Scott, Lakeland News. The final show of the season was tonight, but Christmas in Wadena will be back next December. If you enjoyed this segment of Lakeland News, please consider making a tax-deductible contribution to Lakeland PBS.