So glad to finally find a fully responsive modern theme for this blog. Gearing up to circle Lake Michigan in August so will start posting plans and opportunities.
Back in the saddle
I am finally settled in my new city and working on my Great Lakes islands book and more clear about future projects. Been a very, very long process that continues.
For now I am sharing an island image from my circling of Lake Superior on the U.S. side with my dog Henry in a small motorhome. This is an island in Minnesota near Grand Portage and within the Grand Portage Indian Reservation. Lake Superior was unusually calm as you can see. I took this the morning right before I headed south to return home to southeastern Michigan. So it was bittersweet.
Two bicyclists finish their 500-mile “Trans Superior Tour”

Molly and Rich Hoeg (source http://www.crazyguyonabike.com)
Just learned from the Lake Superior Binational Forum about the recent nine-day, 500-mile Trans Superior Tour by Molly and Rich Hoeg on bicycle in part to “highlight the importance of Lake Superior to their lives” (Forum). Thought I’d share their information while I continue to process my own photos and narrative from the rest of my own Lake Superior trip.
Click here for the website devoted to their Trans Superior Tour, and click here for their blog that includes this Tour. Note that as I indicate, these two photos are from their Tour website.
I was just a couple days ahead of them and would have loved to meet them on the road! Here is the route they took:

Route that Molly and Rich bicycled August 2012 (source: http://www.crazyguyonabike.com)
Minnesota’s North Shore Part 1
As promised, with this post I’m sharing images and narrative from my trip north from Duluth (after Dean replaced my freshwater tank) to Grand Portage way up near the Canadian border.
The image above is very typical of the drive along the north shore of Lake Superior. Truly lovely, and as you can see I continued to have amazing weather. I’m actually writing this while staying at Straits State Park in St. Ignace, Michigan. I’ve been driving way too many hours each day then poking around the communities and lake area where ever I land to post to this blog. On top of that, WordPress and.or my Mifi have been incredibly SSLLLOOOWWW.
I had a fairly long drive (for driving a motorhome) and had planned to stay in Grand Marais. One of the first things that caught my eye on the drive was this log structure that is Norwegian in type:
I’ve been fascinated with these structures for decades after I saw one on Washington Island. I even corresponded for years with the person who had a small business importing complete cabins directly from Norway that were built there, disassembled, and then put in shipping crates to the United States. This particular structure is actually a business, not a home:
Here are more details of this log structure (except for the teddy bear that is a bonus):
In the parking lot was a station wagon with alot of nice things to say:
I stopped at Grand Marais with the intention of getting settled into my reserved space in the campground. As I posted previously, in the few moments I opened my door to check things out at the extremely small, tight space that I was assigned (and the last one available), I had black-fly issues. One black fly flew into Ecovision right onto my front window while another flew straight to my neck. I was able to squish both before they grabbed a chunk of skin off any part of me. Unfortunately, I strongly attract and strongly react to black-fly bites. I get red lumps the size of a quarter that hurt and persist for over a month. I had about a dozen of these in May while on photo safari in Tobermory, Ontario, so I knew I had to get out of there and did.
I headed further north about 40 miles to the Grand Portage Reservation. The Reservation is very large at over 73,000 square miles. It is 12 miles from the first Reservation sign to the town of Grand Portage. The “town” is mostly a casino complex and the marina and RV park where I stayed. When I arrived several anglers were cleaning their fish:
After I picked my site and paid, I got back into Ecovision and headed further north. I wanted to see where one catches the ferry and half-day tour boat to Isle Royale. It was closed at that time of early evening and I’ve found it difficult to communicate with the company other than through their website where they take (and prefer) on-line reservations. I did see one of their boats at the dock, the Sea Hunter III:
It might of have still been possible for me to get on the next day’s 8:30 a.m. trip to Isle Royale, but I just cannot leave Henry alone for the seven hours I would have to be gone. Next year I’ll have to figure something else out.
On the way back to the campsite I stopped to take a photo of what I believe are wild-rice fields:
I continued south of MN-61 the mile or so back to the campground. I had plenty of freshwater in my new tank so I just plugged in electric for the one-night stay. No black flies or even mosquitoes so Henry and I had a nice long walk before cozying up for the night.
To finish this posting, this is a photo of the peek-a-boo view of Lake Superior’s Grand Portage Bay that Henry and I enjoyed the next morning while eating our breakfast outside:
Next I’ll post Part 2 that will include images of the Grand Portage National Monument, a second and much better visit to Grand Marais, and the iconic Split Rock Lighthouse.
Minnesota’s North Shore Preview
Here’s a lick and a promise of several posts to come on the amazing north shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota. This post is about after the north shore.
I drove from Gooseberry Falls State Park stopping a couple times (details to follow). I landed in Duluth at noon so that Dean O’Brien could discover then rewire a 12-volt outlet that had been wired in backwards by an Indiana RV mechanic last fall. Grrr. Thank you, Dean (I met his son, Jordan, and Jordan’s cute black pug, Connie, too).
I headed next to Ashland, WI, to see Northland College and visit with folks at the Chequamegon Food Co-op. Nice! More murals and two blocks from Lake Superior.
It was very early and I thought I’d find a campground further down Hwy. 2, but Megan, the Co-op marketing and member services manager, told me about Ashland’s Kreher Park right on Lake Superior. That sounded just right and I headed over. Because it was so early, they had quite a few campsites. So I took site #3 with view of lake and near the showers.
I did import and label all of the day’s photos from my iPhone and Nikon onto my laptop, but that’s as far as I got yesterday on this blog :).
I spent the rest of day reading outside with Henry, having leftovers for dinner in my RV, catching up on email and Facebook, and later walking Henry along the lakeshore in the setting sun. Oh and took many more photos:). but that’s a given.
Heading to Rapid River, MI, soon! Below is view from my RV at Kreher Park.
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