Thursday, September 14, 2017

Leaving Michigan…


September 11, 2017

Leaving Michigan…

Duluth, Minnesota

As we left the hotel this morning, we noticed a group of government workers preparing to go out with trucks and trailers that had pictures and  text describing
the evils visited on the Great Lakes fish populations by sea lampreys. I had never heard of a sea lamprey before; however, Robin had, as his first major in college was biology.  Robin talked to one of the biologists who said they were using poison to try to kill the young lampreys (they are really ugly!). He said that these things got into the Lakes when the Welland Ship Canal was built to bypass Niagara Falls. The mouths of these lampreys are suction cups, and they attach themselves to the sides of the prey and suck their insides out. 



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We thought we were heading to Duluth; however, later we found we turned the wrong way on the road—it was going west and so were we, so we assumed it was the road west.  After a few minutes we saw a sign that read, “End of the Earth, 2 miles.”  We realized we were indeed at the end of our road when it led us up to a little hut and a young park ranger asked if we had our state park pass.  “Ah, no, isn’t this the way to Duluth?”  He smiled, as if lots of people make that mistake, and sent us back the way we had come and instructed us to turn away from the lake.  We asked him where End of the Earth was, and he laughed.  He said it was a joke—two rangers came up with it and they had a sign made.
The house at the End of the Earth


Okay.  Got that.  We headed back to find our road with a stop at the Wilderness Gift Shop on the way—a cute little cabin with wall-to-wall souvenirs and shirts and honey and junk. I am not a shopper, and too much stuff confuses me.  We did make a few purchases and went on our way.
Flowerbox at the Wilderness Gift Shop



One of our plans was to take a little side trip to visit the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, so, as we headed north along the peninsula, we listened to Charles Kuralt’s Life on the Road.  He spins such wonderful stories.  I’d read the book and listened to the tapes before, and they never get old.  In fact, one of my dreams was to go on the road with him when I was younger with visions of becoming a journalist and before he died.  He was a journalist extraordinaire, reporting on the ordinary and finding a story in everything and everybody. 

The Lakeshore Visitors Center was closed, and much of the Park is offshore, but we rode through parts we could get to and photographed some of the sand dunes there.

When the audio book ended, and I was driving back along the lake, Robin got out his harmonica and played some nostalgic tunes, ones that only a harmonica can create.

Beyond the end of the road in Michigan, we spent what seemed like only a few minutes in Superior, Wisconsin, and landed in Duluth, Minnesota for the night, right across the street from the ever-present lake.

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