Saturday, August 26, 2017

Northern Wisconsin

Wisconsin - Bayfield, the Apostle Islands and Ashland
(Sightseeing)

July 30, 2017 - August 3, 2017

We left our friends just outside of Green Bay as they headed west to the Winnebago factory in Iowa and we headed northwest to the Apostle Islands.  We stopped and stayed several nights in Arbor Vitae, WI so we could do the mundane things that have to be done whether you are at home or traveling - laundry, bills, checkbook, haircuts, etc.  We found a nice campground situated on Big Arbor Vitae Lake.
Big Arbor Vitae Lake


This lovely stream ran through the campground.  It was very popular with the kids.
We located a laundromat in the town of Minocqua so we headed there to get this always fun chore over and done with.  We couldn't believe our eyes when we found that the laundromat was situated right next door to an ice cream shop.  What a perfect combination - a captive audience doing drudge work and ice cream.  Who's gonna pass that up?

As you can see - this was no ordinary ice cream!  Wisconsin is, after all, the dairy state!
 As we were wandering about the town doing some errands we spotted these fanciful bovine statues in front of a paint store and just had to laugh.  Would love to have these standing out in a field on Whidbey.  Someplace where you could see it from the highway.




With laundry and errands done we headed up to Bayfield for a look at the Apostle Islands which our friend Sandy (from "Dosh") told us about.

Bayfield is a scenic little harbor town with some wonderful old buildings and a nice deep water port.

Looking down the main street toward the harbor.
A bit blurry but this is the harbor taken from the pier as it was getting dark.
Nice boats docked in their harbor.  Some of them advertise day sailing trips. 

This little Scandinavian troll decorated the outside of a Swedish shop.
Took this is for Harriet because her great aunt looked remarkably like this! (the face, not the body)
These two beautiful buildings are both hotels.  Aren't they wonderful!

Bayfield is the gateway to the "Apostle Islands National Lakeshore".  For the most part these islands are visited only by hikers, backpackers, kayakers, fishermen, etc.  The largest island, called Madeline, is inhabited by some permanent and some semi-permanent residents and has ferry service to it on a regular basis. You have to get to other islands on your own (kayak, boat, etc.) or via water taxi or charter boat.  One of the big tourist draws is a trip around part of the area on a cruise boat.  You get a narrated look at some of the more interesting parts of the islands. They also have a sunken ship cruise where you can look at the remains of several ships that have gone down in the area.  This is possible because the waters of Lake Superior are very clear (and they use a glass bottom boat).

It was initially a bit choppy but the did finally come out and the wind died down.

One of the many lighthouses in the Islands.

This is an old fishing camp on one of the islands.  It's been preserved for historical purposes.
Another lighthouse.
Laura taking pictures!
I look like I'm holding on for dear life.

During storms the waves crash in with tremendous force and gradually wear away the softer pieces of sandstone.

Dramatic sculpturing wouldn't you say?


From Bayfield we drove east towards the upper peninsula of Michigan, stopping in Ashland, WI to see another attraction recommended by our friend Sandy from "Dosh".  Not unlike Toppenish, Washington, they have lots of murals painted around their business area, all the work of two women from the local area.  Here is a small sample of their work.

These three murals are all on the side of one building.



Three waitresses at a local cafe.

Panorama of the old Ashland Ore Dock which is now gone.
It looks as if this building and mural is curved but that is due to the camera.

Close up of part of the Ore Dock.  On top you can see the railroad cars which carried the ore from the mines to the dock.
Railroad track and cars on top of the Ore Dock.
Great Lakes freighter picking up a load of iron ore.
The famous Edmund Fitzgerald which went down in Lake Superior in November 1975.  All 29 crew members were lost.
She was launched in 1958 and at that time was the biggest ship on the Great Lakes.
She is still the largest ship to have sunk in the great lakes.
Some of you may remember Gordon Lightfoot's song "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"
which made the sinking even more famous than it already was.
Railroad workers on the "Soo" line (short for Sault Ste. Marie).  One of 2 railroad murals.

Remembering the logging industry (about 1/2 of the full mural)
A small portion of the "Storefront" mural.
About 1/3 of the Veterans mural.  Every person was taken from family pictures of
locals who served in the Armed Services.
This mural celebrates the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore.
Dhooge's Store in Ashland, circa 1910.
A tribute to the many lighthouses in the area and the men and women who maintained them.

The 1950's in Ashland.
Celebrating Oredocker high school football.

There were other murals but it seems redundant to try to show them all.  The two women who did all these murals have also done some for other towns.  We really enjoyed seeing them and having the opportunity to look back into Ashland's past.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Wisconsin's Little Finger


Wisconsin - Door County
(Camping with friends from home!)

July 22, 2017 - July 30, 2017

Door County sits at the end of a peninsula which sticks out into Lake Michigan just East of Green Bay.  Wisconsinites call it the "thumb" but as a Michigander I scoff at that.  Michigan lays claim to the "thumb" designation.  Just look at a map of the two states below.

Image result for wisconsin map
    
          Image result for michigan map

What Wisconsin calls a "thumb" looks more like a pinky finger sticking out into Lake Michigan while the lower peninsula of Michigan, shaped like a mitten, clearly has a thumb which sticks out into Lake Huron.  I rest my case.

Now on to our travels.

Judy and Susan, two friends from Wenatchee happened to be in the Wisconsin/Minnesota area for medical and travel reasons and we managed to work out a plan to get together in Door County and camp at Bailey's Harbor for about a week.  The entire county is beautiful, a mixture of agriculture, orchards (especially pie cherries), vinyards, wineries, lots of artists and their work, museums and some very charming towns.  They even have a ferry which leaves from the tip (of that little finger) and takes cars and passengers to Washington Island.  Gardens and flowers were everywhere.  We lucked out with the weather - it was sunny and in the low to mid 70's every day.

We saw artistic works.

Metal sculptures.
Chainsaw art (high quality).
Mixed metal and glass.



Fun with bottles, vases, etc.
This interesting work was along side the driveway of a house we drove by.
We turned around to get a picture and discovered the figures were ...
...made from plastic milk/water bottles.  So clever!

One of several "eggs" that decorate the town of Egg Harbor.
We saw flowers galore!  They clearly take great pride in their gardens and in keeping the towns looking very spiffy.








Of course there were ample views of bays and harbors.







Judy and Susan's 2 soft coated wheaten terriers loved the water however Callie likes it a bit more than Shelby.
There are museums, farms and those charming towns.

Door County Maritime Museum in Sturgeon Bay.
Laura checks out a periscope.

The road to the ferries at Northport (at the fingertip).
They don't have any kind of a ferry waiting area like we're used to having and they don't even move
their cars over to the side of the road.  You just suddenly find yourself behind a long line of cars.
It seems like they don't figure on people sight-seeing around the end of the road or coming to just
see the ferry.  Don't know why we didn't get a picture but it's a tiny ferry by our standards - 10 cars max.
Big farm near our campground.  They had a dairy herd as well.
One of the famous places in Door County is Al Johnson's in Sister Bay.  They have live goats grazing on their roof as you can (almost) see in the two pictures below.  They bring them in every morning from the farm to spend the day being photographed.

The darn goats wouldn't cooperate and stand up so we could see them better.
The goat silhouettes hanging from the edge of the eves display the flags of:
"unknown", Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Finland and Denmark
When we were visiting our friend Sandy in Meredocia ("Dosh") she told us to be sure to go to a fish boil.  There a quite a few restaurants that serve a "fish boil" meal and we decided on going to the "Old Post Office" restaurant in Ephraim (pronounced Ef-rumm).  The process starts with boiling potatoes and onions over a big fire.  After they have cooked for a specific length of time a pot containing fresh Lake Michigan whitefish is added and cooked for a specific length of time.  When everything is done the chef throws ... well, you'll see below.  

The Old Post Office Restaurant
The potatoes and onions and fish are cooking.  When they are done...
...the chef throws a can of kerosene on the fire!
The water and all the oils from the fish (which have risen to the top of the pot) boil over the top and onto the fire.
The chef and his assistant remove the two cooking pots from the boiling pot.
They place the two cooking pots into a big wash tub and allow all the water to drain off.
At this restaurant, once you get your food someone comes over to the table to debone the fish.
And now you are ready to eat.  It was delicious!
Fish Boils are so popular that at the Old Post Office Restaurant they do 3 seatings a night!
 Don't miss a fish boil dinner if you ever get to Door County or happen to find one offered somewhere else.  Yumm!