Saturday, August 3, 2013

Miles and Miles

July 31, 2013 - Wednesday

Some final thoughts about Apostle Islands National Seashore. While beautiful, it is a boating oriented park. You really need a boat to see it. The tour boat situation is expensive ($40-$50) and is geared mostly for campers and hikers. The islands are 20 to 30 miles, a good 1-2 hour boat ride. The lighthouses on the Islands are currently being renovated at a high cost and will have limited access for most people.

We got an early start this morning. Weather was beautiful, go figure. The 450 mile journey wasn’t that exciting, other than in Superior, WI, which is a big commercial port, along with Duluth, MN. The highway spanned a couple of cool bridges, and had a great view of the freighters. Dan wants to go back for a longer look there. A picture follows, but apologies in advance for the out the window shot, no place to pull over....


Since I haven’t talked about our rig lately, thought it may be a good time. It got weighed earlier this year, the F250 weighs in at 7000 pounds and the trailer is 8100 lbs, with about 800 lbs on the king pin. The trailer is pretty close to expected, but the truck weight was surprisingly heavier, which explains its capability with this tow. On the way to Jamestown it was blowing 25 mpg right on our nose, holding us to 5th gear, 4th on the uphills, and about 7-8 mpg overall. It took about 9 ½ hours to arrive at Camp Wal-Mart of Jamestown, ND. We can do these long tows because of how the whole rig performs!

August 1, 2013 - Thursday

We woke to a sunny morning and got rolling by 7 AM or so, as we wanted to make Havre, MT 600 miles away. The wind had died down, but hills again kept us to 5th gear and about 8 mpg. The landscape in western North Dakota, near Theodore Roosevelt National Park looks a lot like the Badlands in South Dakota. About 30 miles into Montana we depart I-94 making our way along MT 200 west. This road was rough and very narrow. Cars have speed limit of 70 mph, trucks 60, which is insane. We putted along at 55-60 mph, and that got a little hairy as you passed wide load hay trucks.
After about 75 miles we took MT 24, which was also rough with big hills, but very pretty scenery. In about 40 miles we came to Fort Peck Lake, which is actually a reservoir, and quite pretty. There was a turn off so a picture follows.


After another 40 miles we headed west along US 2. This is the same road that originates in Michigan’s UP. We didn’t take it due to oil rig traffic and big trucks from Minot west.

We arrived at the Havre Wal-Mart after about 13 hours. Whew, a long drive. Dan got a little tried about the time we hit Fort Peck, so he kicked back a 5 Hour Energy. First time he used it, and wow he’s still doing laps in the parking lot! For old farts it may be 10 hour energy.

Hopefully we will make it to St Mary and Glacier NP tomorrow.

August 2, 2013 – Friday

We are in St. Mary, MT. It rained; actually poured most of the trip. Dan hates driving with the trailer in the rain. Visibility is low, traction is reduced, and it makes a mess of the truck and trailer, although one positive, it cleaned off most of the dead bugs from the front of the truck and trailer. Set up camp at Johnson’s in the rain, euch!

It is supposed to rain big through tomorrow, so we’ll need to find some indoor stuff to do. The mountains were pretty much invisible in the fog as we drove down to East Glacier to check out the Lodge there. It, as well as most of the other lodges in Glacier, were built by the railroads in their prosperous days in the 20s & 30s. East Glacier is like stepping back to that time, pretty neat. A picture follows.


We aren’t sure what our plans are for tomorrow.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Superior Scenes


July 30, 2013 - Tuesday

It started cloudy, cool, and rainy today so we were in no real hurry to get going today.  We started our day at the State fish hatchery here in Bayfield.  They rear lake trout, splake, and brown trout by the hundred thousands!  They must have a high mortality rate.  It was interesting to learn how they hatch and raise them.  Splake is a hybrid between Lake and Brook Trout, however they will not spawn in the wild, so the hatchery process is necessary to keep the species going.


We then visited the NPS info center for pins and postcards and for recommendations for access to some areas we were thinking about.  Due to trail conditions from the rain, we were left with Myers Beach.  They launch kayaks here for a 3 mile paddle to some of the sea caves.  The Lake was perfectly flat again today, but weather looked threatening, so it seemed to us a bit risky, but many were going.  There are guided kayak expeditions for $100 PP/day.  So instead we walked along the beach.  We have told many of you, give us a beach to walk, and we can make a day of it!  Of course we took some pictures and they’re next.

 



Here is a short video of "Superior Scenes."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thMJ2Ze-8Wc&feature=youtu.be


The journey starts in earnest tomorrow as we head for Jamestown, ND.

 

Our Next Adventure

July 28, 2013 - Sunday

Today was “launch day”, the beginning of our journey for 2013. We hit the road around 8:30 AM, a nice early start. We’re getting pretty efficient at this, probably due to practice and Lynn’s to-do list keeping us focused and organized. The weather all day has been cold and cloudy with periods of rain throughout the journey, although it cleared enough to make the Big Mac crossing quite nice. That bridge is a wonder and it is beautiful as was the blue water in the Straits beneath it.

We arrived at Camp Wal-Mart in Marquette about 6PM. It is cold and raining with a stiff NW wind blowing. 52 degrees cold, Brrrrr….., set a record for coldest July 28th here since 1971. Camp Wal-Mart has no electric, (hey what do you want for free) so we are using our new propane catalytic heater. Really glad we have that.

Hopefully this weather will improve as we get to the Apostle Islands tomorrow.

July 29, 2013 – Monday

We woke up to a beautiful sunny day as we prepared to depart for Bayfield, WI. We arrived at the Apostle Islands campground about 1 PM central time. The campground is a nice setting, the sites are well separated and pretty big, but a couple of things didn’t set well with us. First were $1.50 showers, geez, doesn’t $30 a night get us included showers? Second, the power box was improperly wired. Our surge protector wouldn’t pass it and our circuit check indicated the hot and neutral reversed. We plugged into the neighbor’s (vacant site) box and all worked. The box appears newer. Dan told the owner and he got all cheezed about it, and that it was probably my stuff causing the problem. So Dan told him we are staying plugged in there until he fixes it or we leave. It is this exact situation that prompted us to install that protector.

Bayfield is a lot like Leeland, Michigan. It is the gateway to the 22 islands that make up the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore. Most Islands were heavily logged into the early 1900s until NPS took them over. They are typical of other Great Lakes Islands, low and tree covered. These have rocky shores for the most part. The area is beautiful, but a little ho-hum to us after our 40 years of visiting and boating almost all of the lakes.

Madeline Island is the largest of the group, but is not part of the NPS holdings. It is a residential community served by ferry boat from Bayfield. There is a museum there, but it’s too far to walk to and the cost to transport your car along with the two us puts it at $50. We have decided it’s probably not cost effective to go there.

We did take the Sunset Grand Tour with the Apostle Islands Boat Co. It was well worth it, although a bit chilly. They did a great job hitting the high points and giving some of the history. We saw a couple of lighthouses, sea caves, and a shipwreck. Some pictures follow.


Sea Caves

Raspberry Island Lighthouse

Sunset



Tomorrow we plan to drive the scenic shore line route.