Our tour was good. As we moved over the wreck, our guide explained what we were seeing. They divided us into 2 groups, and there was enough room around the viewing glass for half of us to see it at a time, so our captain (female) drove back over it a second time for the second group.
She swung in close to shore and let us take a picture of this restored lighthouse on Grand Island. The shoreline here keeps getting less and less as the water level of the lake continues to rise from global warming. One of the passengers on the boat said her parents had a cabin here when she was a kid, and there was a pretty good beach in front of the cabin then. Now, the cabin is right at the shoreline.
The three boats we saw were the Bermuda, the Scow Schooner and the Herman H. Hettler. The literature says there is up to fifty feet of visibility in this water, but all of these wrecks were in much shallower water now. One had been moved, and one had been destroyed in place. The other one, the Scow Schooner, was discovered accidentally and they don't know the name of it, or when it sank.
We had to wait for a dive boat to move for the third wreck. I'm sure Joe was wishing he was diving with them, even though the water temperature, near shore, is only about 70.
The third wreck actually got stuck on a reef in shallow water and stood upright for several years. But it was determined to be a safety hazard, so they blew it up. You could still see the anchor, and a bathtub and toilet seat. The toilet seat even shows up in the picture.
When we got back to town, we had lunch then dropped Dave and Mazie off at the campground, then Joe and I chased down some waterfalls around town. The first one is the Munising Falls.
Down the road a ways was a trail to Miners Castle, so we checked that out.
There was a very busy beach right below this. These Michigan Yuppers (yuppers is the name for those from the Upper Peninsula) are tough!
We had to drive back into the edge of town to go to the second waterfall, so Joe stopped and got a soda. When he came out to the car, he said they had some pretty good looking ice cream inside, so of course I had to go check that out. Then we went looking for the second waterfall, Wagner Falls.
Today's Ice Cream Cone -- Yummy |
We got back to camp and had about 30 minutes to rest before venturing out to our second cruise of the day, the Pictured Rock cruise. This was pretty awesome. Some of the rocks looked like an artist had just taken a paint brush to them. On the boat on the way to the Pictured Rocks, we passed Miners Castle that we had "hiked" to earlier.
And we passed several groups of kayakers near shore.
We took lots and lots of pictures of the Pictured Rocks, so I'll just post some of the best ones, hopefully I won't blow up my computer with all these.
And interspersed with this beauty were rock formations, caves, holes, arches, etc.
Most of the rock formations were named. Here's a few I remember.
Indian Drum |
Indian Head |
Broken Vase |
David opted out of this boat ride, but Mazie is here right along with us.
We could see this waterfall flowing right over the rocks. I bet that water was C O L D!
Depending on the time you select, some of the cruises include a pass by Spray Falls, so of course we made sure that was included in our tour. That adds about 10 minutes to the tour, and is the turning around point.
Spray Falls |
But Joe captured the sunset. It was still quite daylight though, as you can tell from this picture of Mazie and me -- and it's about 9:00 then.
That was a nice boat ride and the rocks lived up to their name!
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