Jul 23, 2013

And Then there was water......Lots and Lots of water

Niagara Falls




Pretty awesome watching 750,000 gallons of water per second tumble over the rocks to the river bed below. Although they are not the tallest Waterfalls or the longest waterfalls in the world they are definitely very majestic. The Falls are located in New York States largest state park. We bought the Discover Niagara Pass that got us into 5 different activities at the falls.  
 


First Stop was The Niagara Adventure Theater. A short 20 minute film on the Indian history of the falls up to the daredevils which have gone over the falls and one incident that was not a stunt. A couple of kids went on there first boat ride with there Uncle in a small 14 foot boat and the motor stalled. Hit a rock and the boat capsized. The little girl was caught just feet from going over the falls. The little boy was not as fortunate or was he? He was found alive with only a few scratches at the bottom of the falls. First person to make it over the falls unassisted without any equipment.

We then went to Maid of the Mist Boat ride into the mist within just a few feet of the falling water. Very hot humid day so the mist felt really good. Even with the souvenir ponchos we still got drenched.




Next was a trolley ride over to Goat island and Terrapin Point to take in a closer look at Horseshoe falls.




Back on to the trolley and we went over to the Niagara Falls aquarium to check out the local fish species and fish from other parts of the world as well.


All in all it was an awesome place to visit.

Most romantic place? Only if you like have thousands of people around you. LOL
Enjoy the pictures to the right. 

Rock & Roll will NEVER Die!!!




Our time in Cleveland although it was short only 2 days I must say It was AWESOME!!!
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a definite Bucket List must do for all you rockers out there.




There was a special Exhibition for the Rolling Stones that took up 2 of the seven floors of the Hall. I was in awe looking at all of the memorabilia from all the rock bands I grew up with.

Enjoy the pictures and remember "I may be old but I got to see the really good bands!!!"  





Jul 21, 2013

Who Needs Cars?

Motor City
Spent 7 nights in Ypsilanti, MI about 23 miles from Downtown Detroit. Very hot and Humid and some awesome thunderstorms. My tooth decided to blowup on me so I went to the dentist. No dental coverage, I was lucky enough to get in and see him. They took X-Rays and I spent about 15 minutes with the dentist. Gave me a prescription for some antibiotics.Total Cost......$1.00 yup one dollar.
WOW

We took 2 separate days to go the Henry Ford. First day we went to the Ford Museum and Greenfield Village. It sits on about 200 acres. About 2 days later we went on the Rouge Truck Tour. The Rouge plant is where the F-150 is built. Very high tech plant. A REAL moving line. 


Where to start ....The Ford Museum is much more than just a car museum. Ford collected Farm implements, jewelry, clocks, large trains, Old vintage airplanes and of course cars and trucks.

Greenfield Village is Henry Fords collection of original buildings that have been dismantled and rebuilt on this property. His grandmothers and his birthplace home, Thomas Edison's Laboratories 3-4 bldgs. Many, Many other buildings and old wooden covered bridges.


The Rouge
Pronounced (ˈruhz)
This is the original plant site for Ford back in 1904 to present day. This place has about 3 times the footprint of the Boeing Everett plant It's huge. The buildings aren't as big though. The building where the F-150's are built is very eco friendly. Entire roof tops are covered in vegetation so all water that is reclaimed from the site and put back into the river is cleaner that your drinking water. Pictures not allowed touring tour. Remember Ford was quite the visionary He built steel plants and Glass plants to supply his parts to make the Model A. He employed 140,000 plus back in the early 1900's. He wanted everyone to have an affordable car so he doubled the workers wages so they could buy vehicles. This created the need for Highways so more people were employed to build highways etc etc. Think about it, it really was the industrial revolution!!

Jul 5, 2013

Mackinac Island MI - A Step Back in Time

 
 
Mackinac (MACK-in-awe) Island is an island and resort area, covering 3.8 square miles in land area  (about 8.3 miles in circumference), in the state of Michigan. It is located in Lake Huron, at the eastern end of the Straits of Mackinac, between the state's Upper and Lower Peninsulas.
  
We chose a busy holiday weekend for our visit...July 5th.  We were staying at Sault Ste. Marie MI and it was an easy 50 mile trip to St Ignace MI to catch the ferry over to the island. We bought package tickets that included a trolley ride around the island.  It was a very good decision on our part to catch the first ferry of the morning at 7:30 am...by 8:00 am we were on the island and having breakfast. 
The streets were quiet only a few locals and workers were out.  While eating breakfast I watched morning deliveries to the businesses and people going to work...all without cars or trucks. 
The streets are quiet early in the morning.
Traffic Jam
 
Automobiles have been banned since 1898.  Visitors and residents travel by foot, bicycle or horse-drawn carriage. There are only 600 year-round residents. And during the summer, there are more than 500 horses.
 
Mackinac Island became one of the nation's favored summer resort destinations during the Victorian era. Vacationers arrived in large lake excursion boats from Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago and Detroit seeking the cooler weather on Mackinac Island. They danced to Strauss' waltzes, listened to Sousa's stirring marches, dined on whitefish and strolled along the broad decks. To accommodate overnight guests, boat and railroad companies financed the building of Grand Hotel.  


 
The Grand Hotel is indeed Grand.  I had seen pictures of it before, but it is much better in person.  We thought we would just peek into the lobby and take a few pictures of the porch and grounds....WRONG!  They actually have a woman - dressed in red with white gloves on standing on the grounds to stop "looky loos" from entering the grounds...unless they pay $10 ea for a ticket (which would be redeemable at the restaurant toward lunch).  We just used our telephoto lens. 
 
Over 80 percent of Mackinac Island is within Mackinac Island State Park—free of charge and open year round.  The horse-powered trolley took us on several roads throughout the park and we saw historical monuments, cemeteries and geological viewpoints on the island.
 
Fort Mackinac has the oldest building in Michigan and 13 other historical structures and has exhibits explaining everything from military training and battles to medical treatments to family life within the fort.  It also has an outdoor display of a HUGE bust of Gerald Ford! (It doesn't look like him).
 
Near the end of the trolley ride, we got off and walked to some of the areas we wanted to see more of and photograph.  We chose a spot that gave us downhill roads to follow - not the steep uphill one. 






Horses, carriages, bikes, walkers....
 
 
 
As we walked back into the town after our hike we realized how lucky we were to have come over early.  The lines were very long for everything and the streets were crowded with horses, buggies, bikes and people.  We found a small waterfront spot to have some food.  I chatted with a guy in line who said they had to wait 45 min to catch the ferry they were scheduled for...I realized that getting up at 5 am to leave wasn't such a bad idea.

 This was one of my favorite places to visit...
 

 
 
 

 

Jul 4, 2013

Circle Tour of Lake Superior



Our first stop was at The Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center, located on the northern edge of the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, near Ashland WI.  This is a really awesome building that was originally designated a National Children’s Forest and is staffed by National Park Service employees who provide detailed information about the Lake Superior Region. 
 

There are two theaters, murals and exhibits to illustrate the heritage and history of the Lake Superior Region.  Outdoors there are boardwalk trails that wind through swamps and meadows.  They have lots of brochures and information on all sorts of activities.

We spent the night at an RV park in Bayfield WI.  At the tip of the Bayfield Peninsula in Lake Superior are the Apostle Islands.  We took a ferry out to the largest island – Madeline Island and the town of LaPoint.  There really isn’t much there…it’s a touristy town.  We wanted to find the bank where my mom worked about 30 years ago.   

When we left Bayfield we headed towards Two Harbors MN.  Along the way we made a stop at the Visitors Center in Superior WI.  I had found a form online to become an “Admiral of the Lake”.  I printed out the form and had to get it stamped at each of the 5 Lake Superior Travel Regions around the lake.  We were able to get it stamped at the visitor’s center plus we picked up an arm load of brochures.  
 


We decided to drive back to Duluth after we got the trailer set up at the park in Two Harbors.  We drove down to the waterfront in Duluth to see the Aerial Lift Bridge and take a walk out to the lighthouse.  We had lunch at “Grandma’s Restaurant”- nice place and good food. The atmosphere is nostalgic/eclectic. It is also home of Grandma’s Marathon.  This marathon is the 13th largest in the United States with over 17,000 participants. We were glad we went to Duluth when we did because the next day it poured and was very foggy. The Marathon started about ½ mile NE of where we were camped and was going to start on Saturday, so we left the campsite on Friday to avoid the mass of people. Duluth was also the birth place of Bob Dylan.  While in Two Harbors we drove out to Gooseberry Falls.  There are a series of 5 waterfalls within about a quarter mile down the river. We actually hiked about 2 miles – We could hike down one side of the river, cross a bridge and then hike back up the hill on the other side.  We were on the “other side” as far as we could be from the visitor’s center when it opened up and poured. Good thing we had rain ponchos in the backpack. 

Our next stop was Thunder Bay, Ontario. We started doing a Canadian Heritage series of Geocaches that took us to places where we learned about people and places that made Ontario what it is today. Several multi-caches and zigzagging all across Thunder Bay was quite interesting. We also drove to Kakabeka Falls there was some serious water flowing here. The largest falls volume-wise west of Niagara Falls.

 


We next drove a short distance to Sleeping Giant Provincial Park just north of Thunder Bay.  Most Canadian Provincial Parks are very basic and rustic- usually only electric and sometimes water.  They also came with swarms of mosquitos. We drove a winding narrow, less travelled gravel road to some of the tallest cliffs in Ontario - about 650 feet above Lake Superior to Thunder Bay Lookout. The view that day was clear and very awesome. We actually saw a black bear by the side of the road.  After the lookout, we drove to the other end of the Peninsula to the fishing village of Silver Isle.  What was there was old and quaint.  Then the wind, fog and rain started to move in…it made us feel like we at the ocean instead of a “lake”. 

We decided to leave the fog and mosquitos of Sleeping Giant a day early and headed out to the middle of nowhere.  We hadn’t made reservations and that can be sort dicey in the Canadian Wilderness- particularly since we wanted at least electricity and water.  There aren’t many private campgrounds in Canada- most people stay at the parks-and even most private parks don’t have water and sewer.  The only campground recommendations we got were for Ney’s Lunch and Campground – across the highway from Neys Provincial Park and 20+ miles west of a small town named Marathon.  We played golf a couple of times on their 9 hole course.  We were there for Canada Day so we went into the little town of Marathon and watched teams of 8 pull this very large Ontario Provincial Police (O.P.P) Command vehicle. It was a timed event and they had to pull the vehicle about 20 feet.  Interesting watching how the locals interacted amongst themselves.

 
On July 2nd we decided to finish the Canadian section of the Circle tour and head for Sault Ste Marie, Michigan.  We stopped at a visitor’s center in a place called Wawa Ontario – mainly to see the huge metal goose that it is famous for.  We wandered around the grounds for a while and ventured into the woods to find a geocache…mosquitos are almost deadly there.  There were several great viewpoints of Lake Superior, but some are very hard to stop at when you are towing a travel trailer. 

Arriving at Sault Ste Marie was a welcome relief…we were able to use our cell phones and iPad again and to have decent Wi-Fi service…we are certainly spoiled.

 While at Soo Locks Campground in Sault Ste Marie, we completed the last portion of the Lake Superior Circle Tour that we planned to do.  We followed the lake to Whitefish Point to visit the Lake Superior Ship Wreck Museum and Whitefish Point Light House.  On the way we stopped at Point Iroquois Lighthouse and Randy had the chance to climb to the top.  I stayed on the ground to take his picture J

 

 

The Ship Wreck Museum is a fascinating place.  We were able to watch a video of the recovery of the bell from the Edmunds Fitzgerald and to talk to a diver that was there and who had done a lot diving at different ship wrecks.  The wreck of the Edmunds Fitzgerald happened while I still lived in Wisconsin and was in the news for a long time.  It was interesting to see all the displays.  We also saw the rescue equipment that had been used for ships and people.  This equipment was explained in detail to us and it was amazing that over 50,000 people had been rescued over the years.

We were in Sault Ste Marie over the 4th of July.  We watched the parade and were able to view the fireworks from our campground.  Before we left town, we stopped the locks visitor’s center and watched the ships going through the locks – including a huge Coast Guard ship.
It was a great trip around the lake…even though we had fog, rain and mosquitos.