Monday, July 22, 2019

Heading West

U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame
After hunkering down and doing more visiting for the Fourth of July week, we headed west across the U.P. of Michigan, top of Wisconsin and into Minnesota. We took our time with three stops over a week to do this. Our next planned visit was Voyageurs National Park. On our drive north on US 53 in Minnesota we made a spontaneous stop in Eveleth to see the  U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. We didn’t know it was there but saw the sign. It is a rather small place but what they had was interesting. They seemed to have stopped adding or doing anything after about 1998 other than adding a few more members and plaques. Maybe that indicates the level of historic significance in U.S. hockey since then, or they ran out of money and resources.

Voyageurs NP view near
Ash River Visitor Center
Voyageurs NP
On to Voyageurs National Park. This park is on the U.S. and Canada border. The name comes from the days of fur trade over 200 years ago when men, called Voyageurs (French for “travelers”), paddled huge 26 foot canoes full of trade goods and furs through this waterway. We learned a lot about those days and men at the Museum of the Fur Trade a few years back so we enjoyed seeing this actual waterway that they traversed. It was much prettier than I expected as I thought it would be swampier.

Split Rock Lighthouse
We headed back southeast to get back to the Lake Superior shoreline and Split Rock Lighthouse. When we got to the lighthouse visitor center it was so crowed and expensive that we just decided we didn’t need to see another lighthouse that badly so we drove a mile to the south to a wayside and took pictures from there before driving north to Grand Marais. We stopped a couple times on this drive to enjoy the view along the Lake Superior shoreline.
Grand Marais harbor
Grand Marais harbor

We spent a day in the quaint little town of Grand Marais, MN which is right on Lake Superior. We hung out on the lake and walked around town. It was a pleasant day.


Next, we moved just 35 miles north to Grand Portage for a few days. From this base we worked around storms and enjoyed the cool weather along the lake while the rest of the country was setting heat records. 

We drove a few miles north one day to Grand Portage State Park on the Pigeon River which is the border of the U.S. and Canada. We walked a couple paths including one to an impressive water fall.
Lake Superior just north of Grand
Portage, MN - Isle Royle on horizon

The following day we visited Grand Portage National Monument. It was less than a half mile walk from our RV park. The monument is co-managed by the NPS and the local Ojibwe community. This is the site of the most prominent fur trade center and rendezvous point for the east and west Voyageurs. We started at the Heritage Center (visitor center) which had some nice exhibits and an excellent film. We then walked to the reconstructed community where people were in period clothing educating and answering questions. Everything was very well done making this a great experience. 

Big Falls at Grand Portage State Park


Pigeon River just below the Big Falls



Ojibwe Birch Bark home

Montreal canoe
Grand Portage NM

Grand Portage NM - Great Hall

Grand Portage NM

Friday, July 5, 2019

Moving on to Michigan

Indiana Dunes NP lakeshore drive
Mount Baldy dune

After visiting in Wisconsin, we moved on to Michigan. From Milwaukee we drove around the south and stopped at Indiana Dunes National Park. This park was recently upgraded from a National Lakeshore to a National Park and it was purely done by politics, not by justification. Other than the visitor center, this park has poor facilities and poor roads. It was serving its purpose of preservation as a Lakeshore and should not have been upgraded.

Genuine Dutch Windmill
As we drove north to our next destination near Grand Rapids, MI, we made a spontaneous side trip to Windmill Island (Wiki link) in Holland, MI. This is the home of a more than 200-year-old Dutch windmill moved here in 1965. They give informative tours throughout the day. They also have replica Dutch buildings and a street organ that plays periodically. It was a nice stop.

Bridge and windmill

Replica Dutch buildings
Michigan State Capitol

We spent a week visiting and then moved over toward the east side of the state so we could go to a Detroit Tigers game. We stopped in Lansing to tour the Michigan State Capitol. This is a wonderful “budget” Capitol. Our tour brochure explained how things that look like gold and expensive wood were really very well-done imitation materials. It doesn’t matter, it is a beautiful building.
Michigan State Capitol -
Rotunda

Michigan State Capitol -
Senate Chamber

Michigan State Capitol -
House Chamber

Michigan State Capitol -
Supreme Court Chamber

Michigan State Capitol -
Dome