Monday, August 28, 2017

Sault Ste. Marie to Mackinaw City


Weather delays seem to be the name of the game as we continue on our way back to Muskegon.  Unrelenting winds lead to two full days of small craft advisories between Sault Ste. Marie and De Tour Village, our next stop.  Obviously these advisories do not deter the upbound and downbound freighter traffic transiting the Soo Locks – 17 vessels arrived on Monday, 16 on Tuesday.   Pearl Mist, a 210-passenger cruise ship and Lake Guardian, a Great Lakes monitoring and research vessel owned by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, docked along the sea wall on Tuesday.



Boat traffic along the St. Marys River as seen from our slip in George Kemp Marina – the cruise ship Pearl Mist is docked along the sea wall forward of the stern of the museum ship Valley Camp  as a Canada Steamship Line freighter makes its way upbound to the nearby American Soo Lock.  In addition to Lazy W, there are two other boats in the marina flying the AGLCA burgee - Sandrobber and Act III.
 
We were relieved to wake up to gentle breezes rather than gusty winds and by 7:30 AM on a chilly August 24th we were leaving Sault Ste. Marie behind.  As we left the marina we noticed that there was one upbound laker waiting to enter the American Soo Lock and one downbound waiting to exit the same lock.  For now, we would be comfortably ahead of that laker.  And as we traveled along the St. Marys River and through the rock cut at West Neebish Channel we were cruising at 10.9 knots!  Catch us if you can, downbound laker!

As we passed Paradise Point we noticed what appeared to be an abandoned freighter with a rusty wheelhouse close to the shore.  We both remembered seeing a freighter in this same spot as we transited this area last year and again last month.  We were curious as to what was going on over there at DeTour Dock Company and decided to investigate.

We arrived at DeTour Harbor Marina around lunch time.  After securing Lazy W in her slip we proceeded to the dock master’s office to register.  Frank inquired about the abandoned freighter and was told by the Michigan DNR personnel that while it may look like the same ship from our last visit it wasn’t!  It was a different freighter recently in for repairs at DeTour Dock Company.  I was not convinced and, after some online research, discovered that the Interlake Steamship Company’s John Sherwin has been out of service since 1981 and has been at DeTour for at least three years!!  So much for local knowledge…

The weather forecast for tonight and tomorrow night calls for patchy frost!?!?  This is summer in Upper Michigan!

Next stop - Cheboygan, the southern gateway to the Straits of Mackinac, was an important 19th century lumber town on Lake Huron.  We docked at Walstrom Marine which was already operating under winter business hours!?!? 

Sculpture depicting Lake Huron at Cheboygan's Ottawa Park

You can get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant - on Main Street In Cheboygan
 
A short fourteen-mile cruise northwest of Cheboygan brought us to Mackinaw City.  Its roots go back to the 1600’s when it was a French fur trading post and to the 1700’s when it was a British fortress.  Today it is a bustling summer resort serving as a gateway to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and the ever popular Mackinac Island.  We hadn’t seen this many people in one place since we were docked in Milwaukee over two months ago!

The 136 slips of the Straits State Harbor Marina were occupied by less than a dozen boats when we arrived on Saturday morning.  Billed as Michigan’s most eco-friendly harbor, it features eight power-producing windmills that supposedly generate all the power needs of the marina.  The windmills are a good visual for finding this harbor entrance since our charts seem to have omitted this marina’s location. 

The Conkling Heritage Waterfront Park was hosting the Premier Arts and Crafts Show.  In addition to all manner of crafts in the mitten-shape of the state of Michigan (Petoskey stone pendants, cribbage boards, cutting boards, pillows and mirrors), there were authors whose works were “Written in the Mitten.”  Frank was disappointed that Michael Carrier was sold out of copies of his thriller Murder at Whitefish Point only because we had been to Whitefish Point.



On Saturday hundreds of Corvette enthusiasts and their cars congregated at the Mackinaw Crossings Mall for the 28th Annual Corvette Crossroads Auto Show.  It was a delight to mingle among the shiny sports cars that spanned the years from the mid-1950’s to 2017.  The grand finale of the show was the 7 PM parade of Corvettes down Huron Street as the cars made their way to a mass crossing of the Mackinac Bridge.


Not only do I now want a Corvette to take to next year’s parade, I also want to practice my princess wave with one of these hands!


 
A wine tasting at Michigan Trails Wine Store and another at Mackinaw Island Wine Store plus a concert in Conkling Heritage Waterfront Park topped off a great weekend in Mackinaw City.
Wine and beer tasting at Mackinaw Island Wine Store


Dan Fogelberg Tribute Band performs in Conkling Park.  It was a chilly night and many in the crowd were bundled in their heaviest fleece as well as blankets!
 
Intimidating wave action forecast along our projected route west kept us in Mackinaw City for a third day.  If you have to weather a delay, Mackinaw City is not a bad place to be.  Hoping that the sun would reappear after a long absence, we donned our rain gear and headed off down Huron Street to Michilimackinac State Park.  Along the way, we were awed by the landlubber perspective of the Mackinac Bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac and connecting the two peninsulas of Michigan.  Millions of cars cross this bridge each year.  Pedestrians have an opportunity to walk across the five-mile bridge this Saturday during the 60th Annual Labor Day Mackinac Bridge Walk.  Fifty-thousand people are expected to participate and preparations to deal with the crowd have already begun at Conkling Park as city workers erect what look like holding pens on the grassy lawn.





Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse was completed in 1892 to guide mariners through the treacherous Straits of Mackinac. Its flashing red light was visible for sixteen miles.  The lighthouse was decommissioned in 1957 when it was replaced by the navigation aids atop the newly built Mackinac Bridge.

Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse at Michilimackinac State Park


 And who could pass up lunch at Wienerlicious!?!
Wienerlicious boasts a 60-foot 7-ton hot dog with all the fixings on its roof



 

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Lake Superior - eastbound


 

Duluth is the westernmost point on Lake Superior and the turn-around point on our cruise of the lake.  Howling wind and a constant rain kept us at the dock on Thursday – it was a cold day as well, with a wind-chill of 49 on August 3rd!!!  Wanting to give the waves on the big lake ample time to settle down from that storm, we did not venture out on Friday either. 

Saturday proved to be a great travel day.  It was time to start retracing  our route back to Sault Ste. Marie. As we were ready to exit through  the Superior entry at 6:30AM, we were greeted by the freighter CSL Assinboine making its way to the Superior ore docks.  Good morning, Assinboine!!



 
Nine l-o-o-n-g hours and 75 miles later, we dropped the hook off the beach at Big Bay on Madeline Island.  This was our longest cruising day of the season.  (One big drawback of cruising on Lake Superior is the long distances between safe harbors/anchorages.  In a slow boat like Lazy W it makes us very aware of weather, wind and wave conditions on the lake. We must pick our travel days carefully.)  After dining al fresco, we were rewarded with a sighting of a bald eagle soaring overhead and the call of the loons out on the lake.

We made a return trip to Madeline Island Yacht Club to feed and water Lazy W and then cruised across the channel to a slip at Bayfield’s Apostle Island Marina.  Out on the water there were dozens of sailboats taking advantage of the breezy day and the Madeline Island ferries were busy shuttling funseekers between the docks of La Pointe and Bayfield.

Barfield, Wisconsin


The Chicago Tribune once dubbed Bayfield “Best Little Town in the Midwest.”  It is the smallest incorporated city in the state of Wisconsin with a year-round population of 487 and a total area of just one square mile.  Rittenhouse Avenue is lined with shops selling locally crafted art, jewelry and clothing and on Sunday afternoon there were plenty of tourists perusing the wares and noshing at the restaurants and pubs.

Frank enjoying happy hour at a rooftop bar in Bayfield

Docked next to us in Bayfield was a sailboat belonging to a sailing club from Hamburg, Germany.  A new crew was boarding for a sail along the northern shore of Lake Superior.  From there their plan was to sail south as far as Chicago before heading back north to winter in Toronto.

We left Bayfield early on August 7th.  The only other activity on the water at that time was the Madeline Island ferry making its first crossing of the day.  Sixty-six miles and eight hours later we arrived at the entrance to Ontonagon and had our first rare boat sighting of the cruise - a small fishing boat!  We saw more loons than boats today!  Lake Superior is a lonely, lonely lake for cruising.

The marina in Ontonagon was even less busy than it had been on our westbound stop.  Then we had shared the dock with Jill and Howie from Minneapolis on their sailboat Liberty.  Now it was just Lazy W amid the small deserted local boats on the muddy Ontonagon River.  Though it was just 4PM when we arrived, the dockmaster had gone home for the day.  Not much happening here.  And yet we wound up staying another day due to swelling waves out on Lake Superior.

We felt obliged to walk into downtown Ontonagon just to see the Ontonagon County Historical Museum on River Street.  I would not call this small blue building a museum.  I wouldn’t even call it an antique shop.  It was more of a mishmash of old stuff scrounged from grandma’s attic and old churches along with display cases filled with polished agates. The historical significance (if any) of these items was not detailed.  The item most associated with Ontonagon history – the replica of a three-ton boulder of pure copper discovered upstream in the river - was tucked unobtrusively in the rear of the museum among old mining implements and snow shoes.  If you want to see the real Ontonagon copper boulder you will have to go to the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, DC.

Replica of the Ontonagon Boulder


We were quite excited to see another cruiser enter the Ontonagon River and dock in the marina near us!  Unfortunately, we did not get to chat with them much since they arrived in a rainstorm and we left for Houghton early the following morning.

We were back in Houghton on August 9th after an incredibly smooth  5.5- hour cruise.  Again, it was a lonely cruise with just two small fishing boats out near Ontonagon and one out at the entrance to the Keweenaw Waterway. 

Michigan Tech's Ranger III cruises under the Portage Lake Lift Bridge.  Notice how the ship and the bridge are color-
coordinated!


Weather-related delays kept us in Houghton at the city wall for two more days.  Needing to get off the boat, we decided to take a shopping trip to Walmart.  The city of Houghton website listed the schedule for the downtown shuttle which had a conveniently located stop just a few blocks from the dock wall.  We trudged through the rain and waited patiently at the shuttle stop at the Lode Theater Building.  We watched as the long-overdue shuttle passed us by!  A call to the transit office informed us that the shuttle route had changed and there had not been a stop at the Lode for “quite sometime.”  HELLO?  Wouldn’t you think the schedule on the website should reflect that change????  Undaunted, we trudged to the nearest designated stop (according to the transit office) and again waited somewhat patiently for the shuttle that NEVER CAME!  There would be no shopping trip today…

Back at the boat, we hunkered down to wait out the rain.  By late afternoon, the skies started to clear and brighten.  The event calendar on the city of Houghton website listed Bald Squeezebox was to perform at 7PM at the Ray Kestner Waterfront Park as part of the Summer Concert Series.  Who could pass that up, especially if you had been stuck inside all day?  After dinner, we grabbed some beach chairs and strolled down the waterfront looking for some musical entertainment.  Alas, the city of Houghton failed us again – the band stand was deserted, no performers, no spectators.

Don’t get me wrong - Houghton wasn’t all bad.  We enjoyed a nice Italian dinner at the Ambassador, savored the breakfast pasty at Roy’s Bakery and Pasty Shop, and picked up some bargain bottles of wine at Michigan Made (although the Italian and Australian wines we bought were clearly not made in Michigan!)
Passing one of the Huron Islands on the way to Big Bay
 
Saturday was finally a gorgeous day for cruising back to Big Bay where we were warmly greeted by Bob and Pam, the harbor hosts.  They reported that the dock here was filled for the last three days as boaters everywhere on Lake Superior waited out the wind and waves.


Then it was back to Marquette’s Cinder Pond Marina after another perfect cruising day.  We hadn’t had the chance to pedal the lakeshore bike path on our initial stop here, so Sunday afternoon we pedaled off to Presque Isle Park.  It was dry and sunny all the way there – not so all the way back!

Lake Superior from Presque Isle Park

Our reward for spending the day checking off needed boat chores, reprovisioning and doing laundry was dinner at Portside Inn.  I finally got a taste of Lake Superior whitefish and it was good.  Now on to Munising before the weather turns on us again.

The forecast for Tuesday, August 15th called for light variable winds with waves of less than one foot – a perfect cruising day.  WRONG! SO WRONG!  It was a rockin’ and a rollin’  ride with gusty winds from the north - just the right direction for waves smacking us square on our port side.  After two hours we had cleared Laughing Fish Point and we were definitely not laughing!  After another two hours we had made it to a slip at Munising’s Bayshore Marina.  Eddie greeted us and delivered the package of oil sample testers that Frank ordered last week.  

New docks being installed at Bayshore Marina in Munising.  Eddie is not so sure these new docks will survive the ice flowing into the bay next spring!

Some big changes had occurred at the marina since we were here just one month ago.  The seawall expansion was completed and new floating docks were being installed.  The weather had not changed much though – it was still windy and chilly!

The pavilion in Munising with the Community Bread Oven to the right


Tuesday is Farmer’s Market day in Munising and the tomatoes have finally ripened in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula!  The evening Summer Concert featured the band Reality Bites playing music from the 90’s.  Next to the pavilion where the concert was held is a large free-standing stone oven (The Community Bread Oven) and the Cooking Carberrys were doing a lot of business selling wood-fired pizzas as a fundraiser for the local high school girls volleyball team.

Lake Superior just didn’t want to let Lazy W out of its grip.  The weather turned nasty and nastier as the week went by.  Thursday the rain came and on Friday the wind was howling at  over 25 MPH with gusts up to 35 MPH.  The lake was stirred up and the NOAA forecast was calling for waves ranging as high as 12 feet!  We were not going anywhere!


So what does one do when stuck in Munising for four days?  Of course, the Captain always has boat maintenance chores to do, so he did some boat waxing and changed transmission fluid. We watched and critiqued the ongoing work on the $2-million dollar marina expansion; we watched the seemingly never-ending long lines of tourists boarding the excursion boats heading to Pictured Rocks in all but the worst of the weather on Friday; we attempted to have brunch at the nearby Navigator Restaurant before giving up (who knew that an order of pancakes and a grilled cheese sandwich could take more than 40 minutes to arrive? The help wanted sign posted on the entrance door indicated that a cook was needed. Definitely needed!); we perused the books and had ice cream at Falling Rock Café; and we checked and checked and checked the weather forecast for the eastern stretch of Lake Superior.  Saturday was looking like a travel day at last.

 
Don’t get me wrong – Munising is a pretty nice place to hole up in bad weather.  But we needed to get a move on.  Saturday we finally left the dock and turned east toward Grand Marais.  It was a beautiful morning to get underway.
Abandoned lighthouse on Grand Island


Approaching the dunes at Grand Sable


Shortly after 1PM we were tied up at the dock in Grand Marais.  John, the harbormaster, remembered us from our last stop here with Alan and Patti – he had been unsuccessful at collecting our dockage fee from that visit because he came to collect while we were off the boat drinking in one of the two local pubs.  He only charged us for tonight’s dockage. 
 



Located just a short stroll from the docks are two pubs – the Dunes Saloon Lake Superior  Brewing Company  and Grand Marais Tavern.  We stopped at Dunes for a quick drink and then headed over to the tavern for a cudighi sausage pizza.  Neither place disappointed us!  Then back to Lazy W for another relaxing evening onboard.  Unlike our last visit here, there were plenty of late night partiers on the beach and, after much partying, they shot off some fireworks. 

Early Sunday morning we were back on the water headed east for Whitefish Point.  Lake Superior was remarkably calm until we neared our destination.  Much to my dismay, a small craft advisory had been posted for the area beginning at 7 PM.  The lake was already beginning to churn up at noon.  Maneuvering through the entrance to Whitefish Point Harbor is tricky in the best of weather – shallow water across its face forces you first to hug the boulder-strewn northern seawall which then turns to port at a menacingly sharp angle and then turn to starboard to hug that wall before arriving at the barebones wooden slips.  Phew, the Captain kept his cool as we skidded into the harbor and the Admiral snagged a dock cleat on the first attempt!

Whitefish Point Harbor
 





We were not alone on the big lake today – we observed three westbound lakers. Two were way off on the horizon but the third appeared to be perilously close to shore just off Whitefish Point.

 

The Captain on the Whitefish Point seawall – it’s all fun and games NOW!  In a few more hours the wave action was such that the waves were breaking over the seawall.
 
By the time we awoke on the morning of August 21st Lake Superior was looking serene.  We were on our way by 7AM bound and determined to be secured in a slip at Kemp Marina in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan by noon. There was a partial solar eclipse to be viewed between 1PM and 3:37PM!

Along the St. Mary's River

Smooth sailing the entire cruise through Whitefish Bay!  We surmised that the American locks at Sault Ste. Marie had to be busy this morning as we passed several upbound freighters on the bay and on the St. Marys River.
Entrance to Canadian Soo Lock


We decided to go downbound through the Canadian Lock rather than with the big boys waiting at the American Locks.  As we approached the lock entrance we were informed that we would be sharing the experience with Le Voyageur, one of the Soo Locks Tour Boats.


Lazy W was told to exit the lock before Le Voyageur and the tourists on board got to ooh and aah over our “big, pretty boat.”  The George Kemp Marina sits within a few hundred yards of the Canadian Lock on the Michigan side of the St. Marys River.  We were there in no time.   Nick, the dockhand, fueled us up, pumped us out, and directed us to our assigned slip.  It was just after noon – mission accomplished! 

Now we could get set for watching the solar eclipse.  Frank had crafted a dandy camera obscura for our safe viewing. And he was pretty proud of his contraption until our buddy Jim emailed us pictures of his much classier camera obscura.  Here are the results - four years of engineering studies at SUNY Maritime and this is what the boys made!
 
 
 

As the time for the much anticipated partial solar eclipse approached, we took a moment to toast the completion of our Lake Superior cruise.  (Yes, it was an early start to happy hour!) It was forty days ago that we departed on that adventure from this very slip at George Kemp Marina with Alan and Patti onboard.  The cruise covered 893 nautical miles (1,026 statute miles).  We experienced only three days of weather-related delays westbound but eight on our return trip east.  To another item crossed off the bucket list – CHEERS!

For weeks there was plenty of hype over the North American solar eclipse but here in Sault Ste. Marie it was a pretty disappointing non-event.  Peering intently through our camera obscura, we kinda sorta convinced ourselves that the moon was taking a very tiny nibble out of the upper right portion of the sun.  Oh well, maybe we’ll catch the next one!  J

Thursday, August 3, 2017

Superior, Wisconsin and Duluth, Minnesota


Located at the Head of the Lakes where the St. Louis River forms the natural headwater of Lake Superior, the twin cities/ports of Superior, Wisconsin and Duluth, Minnesota share the largest and busiest harbor on the Great Lakes.  Large grain elevators and huge ore docks dominate the harbor.  Iron ore, grain, coal, limestone, cement, salt, wood pulp, petroleum and other bulk cargo are shipped from here to ports around the world via the St. Lawrence Seaway and the lower Great Lakes.

Since it had the only natural entry into the protected harbor, Superior had a jumpstart on development over Duluth and was well on its way to being the dominant of the two cities.  That is until 1855 when the Treaty of LaPointe was ratified, ceding most of the Ojibwe land in northeastern Minnesota to the U.S. government and opening the area to exploration and settlement.  The Duluth area then boomed with the discovery of iron ore in the Vermilion Range and the 1871 opening of the Duluth Ship Canal.  Duluth soon surpassed Superior as the major settlement at the Head of the Lakes.


Ore docks at entrance to Superior, Wisconsin


Seven hours after leaving Raspberry Bay Lazy W was secured in a slip at Barker’s Island Marina in Superior.  Who would have thought that this was the one stop on our entire trip where we would have to run the air conditioning?!?!?  The temperature reached the humid mid 80’s. One more day of warm weather is forecast and then the high temperatures are expected to sink back to the low 60’s.  Bring it on!

The first order of business – find new house batteries.  Frank successfully completed that task and tomorrow the local Batteries Plus will deliver the replacements almost six years to the day since the dead ones were purchased.  Ka-ching, ka-ching. . .

Much of the sand dredged from the Twin Ports harbor in the 1880’s and 1890’s was dumped along the edge of Superior Bay forming an artificial island.  The island bears the name Barker’s Island after Captain Charles S. Barker, the man who carried out this early dredging operation.  Today it is home to an inn, a marina, the SS Meteor  whaleback freighter and a city park. The island is connected to the city of Superior by a short causeway. Unfortunately, the city of Duluth is not easily accessible from our location here.  Fortunately, we called Enterprise Rent-a-Car and they picked us up!


Duluth has been called the 'San Francisco of the Midwest' - both cities have similar water-to-hilltop topography

  With a car now at out disposal, we were free to reprovision and then explore Duluth.  The Canal Park area with the iconic Aerial Lift Bridge is a great location to catch the arrival of the large freighters entering the Duluth Ship Canal.  Arrival and departure information is provided by the Army Corps of Engineers at Lake Superior Maritime Visitor Center.  We were lucky to have chosen Wednesday for a visit – not one, but two freighters were scheduled to arrive within 15 minutes of each other!  There was time for a quick lunch of wild rice specialties at Grandma’s Saloon and Grill before heading back to the pier to watch the first arrival at 1:30.

Joyce L Van Enkefort approaches the Duluth Ship Canal and scoots under the bridge!
 
 
The piers of the Duluth Ship Canal extend 1,700 feet into Lake Superior.   Rolling waves were thundering through the canal and occasionally through the pier scuppers, leaving substantial puddles along the walkway.  It was a good day to be a landlubber!
Wave action along the Duluth Ship Canal
Fifteen minutes later Whitefish Bay arrives
The Aerial Lift Bridge has been raised for forty-five minutes now!  Patience is a virtue when traveling in Duluth when the big freighters arrive.
With the passage of the freighters through the Duluth Ship Canal completed, the Aerial Lift Bridge is lowered and the crowds disperse.  The show is over!
 
Hugging the shoreline of Lake Superior, the Lakewalk meanders past lakefront hotels and lodges, the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Fitger’s Brewhouse.  Beer was first brewed at this location in 1881.  By 1972, it had become to difficult for small breweries to compete with the likes of Miller and Anheuser-Busch and the brewery closed.  The complex was given new life in the 1990’s and turned into an entertainment and lodging destination in Duluth. Beer was brewing again 1n 1995.  We stopped in for a beverage and a snack.

One of the most photographed lighthouses on Lake Superior is Split Rock Lighthouse, 45 miles north of Duluth.  We had a car and it was a gorgeous day for a drive along the lake.  The trip was well worth it. 
Split Rock Lighthouse - we went down a steep wooden staircase to the shoreline for this picture.
 

Built by the federal government in response to a disastrous 1905 storm that sank or damaged 29 ships on western Lake Superior, Split Rock Light was first lit in July of 1910.  Since there was no roads in the region at the time of construction, all the building materials arrived by boat at the base of the 130-foot cliff and were hoisted up by a derrick.  The derrick remained in use until 1915,  hoisting supplies to the keepers and their families.  A tramway replaced the hoist and derrick in 1916.  By 1934, keepers were finally able to truck their supplies from Duluth.  These hardy people lived on site during the shipping season and left before the brutal winter set in.

The rocky shoreline of Lake Superior at Split Rock Lighthouse

The long walk back up 171 steps to the light

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Lake Superior - Apostle Islands



 


The Apostle Islands are a 22-island chain formed by ice, wind and waves.  Sandstone cliffs, sea caves, windows and arches, sea stacks, beaches – all  surrounded by the cold, blue water of Lake Superior.  Fishing, quarrying and lumbering were major industries here in days gone by.  For centuries the Ojibwe have fished this area of Lake Superior. The great Chicago fire of 1871 spurred demand for sandstone building materials quarried first on Basswood Island and then on Hermit and Stockton.  Logging decimated the forests of white pine and hemlock; while logging here ended half a century ago the forests are still in varying stages of recovery.  Now these islands are viewed less as a source of raw materials and more as a resource for recreation.  But over and over again, you will hear “the big lake is the boss.”  Careful planning and attention to the weather are paramount to exploring these islands.

The Apostle Island National Lakeshore, established in 1970, comprises 21 of the 22 Apostle Islands.  (Madeline Island, the largest of them, is open to commercial development and private ownership.)  It is believed that the name Apostles came into being in the late 1600’s due to the erroneous belief that there were only twelve islands – the French missionaries then named the islands after the Twelve Apostles.  The islands have been renamed several times over the years since then and none of them has retained the name of an apostle.


Approaching Madeline Island
On July 27th we left Ontonagon and spent seven hours cruising to Madeline Island Yacht Club.  It was a gorgeous day for cruising but way too long.  We have had Lake Superior pretty much to ourselves and we would welcome more camaraderie at this point.  We hear that the Apostle Islands area has more boats per square mile than any other area on Lake Superior.  We shall see.

Mooningwanekaaning - Home of the Golden Breasted Woodpecker - is the island's Ojibwe name.

We had heard a lot of talk about Tom’s Burn’d Down Café in La Pointe, the only town on Madeline Island.  So of course we had to go there.  After partaking in the Thursday evening community pizza party at ArtBar, we went across the street to Tom’s, an open air bar reminiscent of the Florida Keys. 

 
Tom's Burn'd Down Café
 
Leona was a woman of the 1950’s who wanted to get away from it all.  What better place to chose than Madeline Island.  In the winter, Lake Superior between mainland Wisconsin and Madeline Island freezes over and an ice roadway links the two – it is even maintained by the state of Wisconsin!  Leona opened her beer bar and dance hall here catering to  summer tourists, winter hunters, snow mobilers, and dog sledders.  In the late 1980’s, Leona called it quits.  Enter Tom and his partners who wanted to preserve Leona’s and its legends. They loaded the buildings onto sleds and moved them closer to the ferry dock and spent seven cold months renovating.  Within days of opening, the place burned to the ground!  But the beer delivery truck showed up as scheduled and Tom turned the trunk of his 1978 Impala into a new home for two kegs of beer.  He was open for business. 


 
Improvements over the years have included chairs and tables scavenged from the local dump and a tarp for the roof.  The floor and half walls are a patchwork of plywood, traffic signs and old license plates. The half walls are covered with witty observations of life.  The bar patrons the day of our visit were an eclectic bunch.  An assortment of friendly dogs were sprawled around the bar, some youngsters flopped around the makeshift stage, and behind us at a rickety table a young gal with a nose ring munching a pizza was getting a tattoo!?!?


Our membership in the Great Lakes Cruising Club got us a free night of dockage at the Madeline Island Yacht Club and we happily stayed a second day.  Hopping on our bikes we pedaled six miles to Big Bay State Park.  At Big Bay Point we had a nice view of Lake Superior.

At Big Bay State Park
 
 
Prior to our Lake Superior excursion, we joined the Great Lakes Cruisers Club and listened to several of their podcasts on cruising this big lake.  One of the questions they addressed was, “Can you swim in Lake Superior?”  The answer was,  “Yes you can, but you won’t like it!”  Well, Frank tried jumping in a few times and he didn’t like it!  The top 12 inches or so is a toasty 65 but below that it is even much cooler.  (I noticed that the anchor was quite chilled on mornings when we left an anchorage.) However, the cold water temperatures do not deter all swimmers on the lake.
 
The Captain takes a quick dip in Lake Superior
 
 
The morning of July 29th marked the start of the 11th  annual Pointe to LaPointe Open Water Swim.  This 2.1 mile swim from Bayfield on the mainland of Wisconsin to LaPointe on Madeline Island follows the route of the winter ice road.  From a modest field of 24 people in 2006, this fundraiser has swelled to 400+ hearty souls clad in wetsuits who brave the chilly waters of Lake Superior.  The NOAA weather forecast noted that the surface temperature of the lake ranged from 55 to 68.   By the time we left Madeline Island Yacht Club and cruised through the North Channel there were only a few swimmers still in the water but plenty of standup paddle boarders, kayakers and Cost Guard boats were on duty to protect and monitor the remaining swimmers.  The best finishing times for men were posted at 45+ minutes and for women 47+ minutes.
Cruising the Apostle Islands
 
 
We continued our cruise through the North and West Channels passing the islands of Basswood, Oak, Stockton and Otter.  All the islands appear thickly forested just like the rest of the Lake Superior shoreline with the exception of the spectacular Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.  The Apostle Islands National Lakeshore looks to be a good cruising area but I am spoiled – I am awaiting more spectacular landscapes to appear to make the trek worthwhile.
Successful anchoring off Rocky Island
 
Our dinner companions off Rocky Island
 
After a calm clear night at anchor off Rocky Island it was time to hoist the anchor and move on to further explore the surrounding islands. We made our way to the bow to remove the snubber and lo and behold, the windlass failed to spring to life.  This was no time for the windlass to be out of commission as we had laid out 150 feet of anchor chain! 
The captain went below to check on several things in the engine room and at the electrical panel.  After awhile he found, to his great dismay, that the number 1 house battery that powers the windlass (among other things) was dead.  The great thing about traveling with a captain who is a SUNY Maritime “Domer” is that he never lets these mechanical/electrical boat issues stop us.  He just keeps muddling through until he comes up with a workable plan.  And I know enough to stay out of his way during that process.  By 10:45 he had come up with a solution to bypass the dead number 1 house battery and energize the windlass with the number 2 house battery.  We were on our way.
After some debate it was decided that we could anchor out one more day before having to get to a marina and replace the house batteries.  So we cruised north to Devil’s Island where the scenery was touted as spectacular.  It did not disappoint!
The Devil's Island Lighthouse on the north shore of the island was a popular place for sightseeing.  We hadn't seen this many boats on the water since Pictured Rocks!
Devil’s Island is the northernmost of the Apostle Islands.  To the earliest Indian inhabitants, the island seemed to possess supernatural powers and the name they gave it meant ‘Island of Evil Spirit.’  The island’s north shore is exposed to the wrath of the winter storms of Lake Superior and its sandstone shoreline is carved with intricate sea caves and arches.
Sea caves along Devil's Island


 
 
Island Princess cruises past Devil's Island Light
That night we boldly anchored in Raspberry Bay and hoped that the windlass would not fail us the next morning.    The guide books suggested that this anchorage would be quite crowded with weekend boaters.  Not so!  By nightfall only two sailboats had joined us there.
We had spent three days without internet or phone access!  Our only means of checking for weather updates was NOAA weather radio.  All reports indicated that Monday, July 31st was ‘a go’ for making the 54-mile cruise to the twin port cities of Superior, Wisconsin/Duluth, Minnesota. With light southwest wind, the waves were expected to be calm. 
That morning the windlass worked flawlessly and, with the anchor securely stowed, we were on our way by 6:40AM.  We rounded Sand Island and headed west.  It was a great day for cruising.
Built in 1881, the Sand Island Lighthouse was constructed of locally quarried sandstone.
 We encountered no boat traffic along the way until we were about 14 miles from Duluth.  The heavily-loaded laker Burns Harbor was heading east on Lake Superior.
Burns Harbor