Friday, August 30, 2013

Chicago To Ottawa, IL

After having traveled down all 300 miles of Lake Michigan, which by-the-way, contains 1.3 quadrillion gallons (1,299,000,000,000,000) of water, we arrived at DuSable Harbor in downtown Chicago.
Approaching Chicago

Fly Hunting While Approaching Chicago


View from boat

Beautiful night view from marina



Our friends, The Elwart's, along with other friends, Jane and Karina Kedo and Tim Wallace, picked us up and took us to dinner and a hilarious show at "Second City" (it's like Saturday Night Live, in fact many of the famous SNL players - Chevy Chase, Gilda Radnor, John Balushi, and many, many more, are alums of Second City).
Before The Show


The next day, we took a 90-minute architectural tour via boat all through downtown on the Chicago River.  We saw and learned about Art Deco, Post Modern, Organic and Repurposed buildings and of course, the Willis, a .k.a. Sears Tower and the Trump Tower, both of which we could see right from our slip in the marina. We also learned that Chicago is called the "Second City," not because it is second to New York City, but because it replaced itself after the great fire of 1871 that destroyed most  of the city. We also learned that it's called The  "Windy City," not because there's a lot of wind here, but because Chicago politicians were so full of hot air. It was fascinating tour and made our own trip on the same route a few days later, much more interesting.
Downtown Buildings



Chicago Merchandise Mart

That same evening, the Elwart's again picked us up and off we went for our bi-annual dinner at, "Fogo De Chao." It's a Brazilian Steakhouse and a carnivore's dream. They give you a round disc that is green on one side and red on the other. When you want more meat, you have your disc green-side up. When you want to take a break, you flip it to red. During your dinner, there are guys constantly roaming the room with large knives and long double skewers of all kinds of meat (and a few selections of chicken and sausages). When they see a green disc, they ask you if you'd like whatever meat they have, and if you say yes, they carve off a piece and your job is to grab it with the little ice tongs that are part of your place setting. The are several of these restaurants in the US - Boston, Philadelphia, Orlando, Atlanta, Baltimore, Denver, Miami Beach, etc. They are great fun and we highly recommend a visit - but go VERY hungry and don't pig out on the fabulous salad bar (that's what they want you to do so you don't eat as much meat!).
Check Out His Knife!

While in Chicago, we didn't go to the top of the Willis (a.k.a. Sears) Tower, the museums or the famous Bean, because we'd been to them on previous trips to Chicago. That left us time to socialize with fellow Loopers,  "Off Leash," "What's Next? and "Second Wind." It also left us time to wash off the zillions of Shad Flies that had decided that "HUMBUG" was a good place to die.
Hiromi, Mike and Sidney from "Off  Leash"








 




We left the city by entering the Chicago Lock on a foggy morning and it took us about an hour to transit the downtown area on the Chicago River.
Chicago Lock On A Foggy Morning









Low Bridges In Chicago

Just Making It Under A Bridge














Nancy & Dave Gorzka Joined Us From Chicago to Joiliet

Almost immediately after leaving downtown Chicago, the scenery becomes very industrial and we began to encounter large strings of barges. At one point, we were forced to thread our way through a gauntlet of two gigantic tows. Each tow was two barges wide by three long which left only 25 feet
between them for our 13 foot-beamed boat to pass through.
In The Gauntlet


Traffic Jam (Big Things Are Barges)
After a while, we caught up with our new Canadian friends, Debra and Rick Chabot, whom we had met in Chicago. We followed them on their Mainship 40, "What's Next?" to Joliet. That night, we tied stern-to-stern with them on the town wall and the next day, traveled with them past some cement and chemical plants and later, beautiful, rolling farmlands and corn fields, to Ottawa, IL.

Ottawa was the site of the Lincoln-Douglas debate in 1858. It was also where Wild Bill Hickok grew up.
Deb & Rick On "What"s Next?" Watching Barge Pass

Making Time On The Illinois River

















Farm & Cornfields Along Illinois River

Such A Lovely Couple
HUMBUG will wait for us in Ottawa for two weeks while we drive home for Pete's nephew's wedding in Boston, drop off about a hundred pounds of charts and Waterway Guides and pick up another hundred pounds, and sleep in our house for the first time in over three months. We've traveled over 1,700 miles, burned more than 800 gallons of diesel and every second has been a blast.



































Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The East Coast of Lake Michigan






Mackinac Bridge
On August 3, we began our month-long journey down the east side of Lake Michigan by passing under the Mackinac bridge which spans The Straits of Mackinac (connecting Lake Huron and Lake Michigan).
Deep Lake

The lake is truly a fresh water ocean. You can  not see the opposite coast, it's extremely deep in many places and it looks just like it does when we are out in the Atlantic. The east coast, in particular, looks like you are cruising along the Rhode Island and Massachusetts shorelines because the whole shore is lined with white, sandy beaches and dunes.
Beautiful Beaches and Sand Dunes

We chose to travel down the east coast of the lake rather than the west coast, because the east coast has harbors of refuge about every twenty miles.Most of these harbors are in-land lakes that have been connected to the large lake by man. In these harbors, are beautiful, old beach resort towns each with its own unique personality. Harbor Springs looked a lot like Edgartown - lots of large, white, old-money summer homes; Petoskey looked like Oak Bluffs - tiny, brightly painted, gingerbread houses close together each with a  charming name; Charlelevoix had cool, quirky "mushroom" houses; Leland had an historic section of old fisherman shanties; Pentwater was having it's home coming weekend complete with parade, fireworks and fireman's breakfast; Grand Haven provided us with front row seats on our upper deck, to their nightly, 20-minute musical water fountain show; Saugatuck was diverse, artistic and fun with an 1837, hand-operated chain ferry, and wild dune buggy rides; and South Haven had incredible sunsets.
Mushroom house
Mushroom house
Me in Fishtown
Peaceful Manistee

A lot of these towns are connected by wonderful, paved bike trails, so we rode our bikes a lot this past month, sometimes 20 miles or more a day.  We were lucky to have our friends, Jan and Ralph Elwart, who live on the other side of the lake in Lake Forrest, IL, join us in Grand Haven and cruise with us for a week  to South Port. Other friends, Nancy and Dave Gorzka, sailed all n ight long from Kenosha, WI to join us and the Elwarts for a long weekend in Saugatauck where we enjoyed a lovely evening at the Clearbrook Country Cllub with the Gorzka's local friends, Kathy and Bob Kubasiak, who transported us to the club in their snazzy, red,1964 Ford Fairlane convertible, top down.
Cake I Made For Ralph's Birthday

Gorzkas & Elwarts


Elwarts & Us

Frankfort light



Couple of Beers in the dunes
Dune buggy ride was JUST like riding a roller coaster - WILD




Dune Buggy Trails















Lake Michigan Sunset

While in Saugatuck, we were stern-to in our slip, right in front of a gazebo in a lovely little park.  One afternoon, while were were lounging on our upper deck, much activity started happening at the gazebo. Turned out, a wedding was happening thirty feet off our stern, effectively making us "wedding crashers." When they print their wedding photos, they'll see us sitting in deck chairs, wearing t-shirts and the word, "HUMBUG" in 8-inch red letters. I'm sure Photoshop will be employed!
Angelina's and Susan's Wedding


Thursday, August 1, 2013

Mackinac Island

Downtown Mackinac (MackinAW) Island is like Provincetown on steroids minus any motorized vehicles  and plus 600 horses. The island, which is in Lake Huron just before the Straits of Mackinac, where Lake Huron joins Lake Michigan, is a tourist mecca. Ferries full of day trippers arrive all day long. There's one fudge shop and trinket store after another.  And, because there are no cars or motorized buses or taxis, there are lots and lots of bike rental places. There are also lots and lots of horse-drawn taxis, buses and "trucks." Apparently, one car made it on to the island shortly after cars were invented, and the local horse-carriage trade, seeing the writing on the wall, got an ordinance passed that's still in force today that prohibits motorized vehicles. Hence, the place has stayed cool.

In addition to the horse and buggy, fudge shop and bicycle-related things of interest here, there's a fort on the hill overlooking the harbor and downtown. It was built by the British to ward off the yucky
Americans in the American Revolution, but it only took a couple of years for the Americans to sneak around behind it and take it for themselves. The British, going to school on the American's attack technique, snuck  up behind the fort and took it back during the first land battle of the War of 1812. The treaty at the end of the War of 1812, gave it back to the Americans.

Anyway, that fort's now a major tourist attraction and cannons and rifles are shot off periodically all day long and fifes compete with the music at outdoor patios of the restaurants downtown. Because we were in the harbor, which is right downtown and therefor right below the fort, we were awakened every morning by revelry and serenaded each evening by taps.

We stayed here four days and biked around the island (only 8 miles - flat and paved) every day, viewed the Grand Hotel of course, and had some wonderful dinners (a nice change from the rustic outposts where we dined on Georgian Bay).

Arch Rock Mackinac Island

Candy/fudge abounds

The Lilac Tree Hotel (I got a pedicure at their spa)

In the harbor with the fort on the hill

Two-horse taxi to dinner, a 45-minute riide into the woods from town

Harbor view from fort

Riding around the island one morning

On another morning ride
Typical scene while riding around the island - water is weirdly Carribean blue