Monday, May 27, 2024

 Monday, May 27, 2024

Memorial Day in U.S.

This Fort William Historical Park is a very nice campground, but we have a nice crop of dandelions blooming.  We had a couple of overnighters but they are gone, so there is only one other camper occupied in this campground.



After a rather tough night with my shoulder, we got up and ran some errands this morning, stopping at Walmart and Canadian Tire, then drove out to Kakabeka Falls just a few miles out of town.  The stores here in Canada do not have the variety of goods that we are used to, especially at Walmart. 

We bought a two hour pass at the park — we know we’re pretty fast at these things.  In fact we had 50 minutes left on our pass when we got done. This falls is a WOW, lots and lots of tea colored water pouring over these falls 40 metres below in three different stages.  This is a provincial park with camping so we drove across the bridge, around the park and through the campgrounds a little bit, then stopped at their portage store.  The views from this side are even better and we are standing only about 10 feet from the falls. As with all the other provincial parks we’ve seen there are several hiking trails. This campground is very woodsy with water available, but it doesn’t look like they have any thing at the sites as far as electricity or sewer. We asked and they do have a campground with electricity.  It’s 65 degrees here, feels hot to us.


.




This is the river going out from the falls.  

The views from this side are even better and we are standing only about 10 feet from the falls. As with all the other provincial parks we’ve seen there are several hiking trails. This campground is very woodsy with water available, but it doesn’t look like they have any thing at the sites as far as electricity or sewer. We asked and they do have a campground with electricity.  It’s 65 degrees here, feels hot to us.






This waterfall was the best of the trip and was truly awesome.  We visited the portage store and walked around the grounds, then we drove back to the campground and Joe got started on his chores.  He worked on cleaning the rim of the back tire that had come off the front.  It had been on the inside, and now is on the outside and is extremely dirty.  He didn't have too much luck but he did what he could.  He also emptied the Jeep and swept/vacuumed out what he could.  Meanwhile, since I have an injured wing, I took a nap. 


The population of thunder Bay is 110,000, several times the population of any town that we’ve been in since we left Sault Ste. Marie. Joe’s having trouble getting used to stoplights again, very impatient.  We are heading down the road tomorrow, back in the U.S., so he will need to get use to stop lights again.

 Sunday, May 26, 2024

Around Thunder Bay, Ontario

Happily, we found a McDonald’s again so we were off to breakfast at McDonald’s. The menu is different up here which was kind of surprising but we found enough to make us feel normal.

 Our first excursion was a drive 30 mile drive back the road we drove yesterday to one of the amethyst mines. We thought we were going to Diamond Willow Mine , but there was another mine right before that final turn off that was Blue Point so we stopped there. The bugs were terrible. They just swarmed us and we of course forgot the bug spray back at the RV .They had a gift shop, of course, nothing fancy and I found one inside there that I like that he priced me for five dollars US.  We looked around there and got information and instruction,  then we walked up the road to the rock pile. We got our walking sticks out of the jeep. He provided us with a bucket and any tools that we wanted so we took a hammer and a pic.  The first place we stopped, I took about a step forward on the pile and saw a stone I liked to I backed up a step and stumbled backwards and fell all the way to the ground. Joe tried to help me up, then he fell down so we both managed to scramble our way back up, but that was not a very good beginning.   I fell mostly on my back and skinned my hand just a little bit, but my shoulder is really sore now so that’s not good. We did pick up about 3/4 of a bucket of rocks and went back in the gift shop where I bought the one in there that I liked.   He sold it all to us for $25 Canadian or $20 US. I used some of my Canadian money from last night to pay for it. He told us the best place to find animals was out on the Sleeping Giant  Peninsula which is a wilderness preserve.  That is on our way back so we’ve got three stops to make on our way back. Everything I was carrying went flying -- my walking stick, bucket, pic, purse. I’m probably done mining for the day-- for this trip-- so we’ll see what we can see from the jeep now.  Joe is a little sore on the butt but he says he's not too bad.They told us to use iron out or something like that to get the rust out and then he uses a sander.  At Blue Point, we could walk up to the pit that was fenced off. It’s not open to the public and it’s flooded right now, but he told us that they allow groups to come in who are carrying their own liability insurance. He also said they see black bears back there frequently and run them off or they call the Mounies who come in and yell at the bear and spray them with pepper spray. He said if we happen to see one too close all we have to do is yell and hold up our hand and they will expect to get sprayed so they will takeoff. 

This small raging creek or river was on the road back to the mine.  They said you can pick up amethyst rocks on the banks but we didn't think that was our cup of tea.
A pile of rocks to pick through, this is where we fell.

The pit.

Doesn't he look like a prospector -- especially with the turquoise purse.
Inside this "gift shop".

We just had to walk this little short road back to the pit.  Which was a good thing.

Diamond Willow and Blue Point are the two mines on this road .  We did drive back to the other one.  They had a beautiful gift shop and beautiful pieces of washed, shined up amethyst. They were a little pricier, but their gift shop was really nice and they had quite an inventory of amethyst outside



Some  beautiful pieces.




Back on the road, we turned off on the .Sleeping Giant road, again on the lookout for wildlife.  At the end  of this road, right back at Lake Superior, was a surprise -- a general store and a community called Silver Islet.  There was a harbor which gave boats a direct run to Lake Superior,  This was 23 miles from the main highway one way, and we went by a few side roads that led to campgrounds, and houses.

.

.

.






.



Joe took one of his kind of side roads down to Moonlight Beach on Lake Superior.  He took a video of this little drive so I’ll see if I can include that on this Blog; thank goodness for roads marked private road -- otherwise we would never get back to civilization. We finally saw was one deer and one hawk and it was 58 mile loop. We messed around on this backroad for about 3 hours, came out at the turnoff to the amethyst mine, 7 miles back.

.


We first thought this might be a swan but we think it's a white pelican, which is what we probably saw yesterday.
Some pretty sturdy boats back here.
This is the road to Moonlight Beach.  We could have driven into the water.  Not much beach though.  Apparently, the video won't load, but this is the road.


We headed back toward Thunder Bay, but stopped at the Terry Fox Memorial, honoring the Canadian, a young, one-legged cancer victim who ran across most of Canada in support of cancer research.  He eventually succumbed to cancer just up the highway from this Memorial.  It’s a very nice statue and has a nice visitor center. It looked like, but it was closed. 






Then we came into town to find some dinner -- we had missed lunch and its now 6:00 p.m.  We had a bag of potato chips and two muffins in the jeep, and so we’re starved. We were looking for a steak place and ended up at a steakhouse called Prospectors, which is across the street from the casino we were at last night. We circled it 3 times looking for a parking space and ended up parking at the casino. The block in front of the restaurant is closed for construction and the street beside it was one-way the wrong way for us.  We decided to make this our "goodbye to Canada meal," and it was certainly pricey, but everything was good.

After dinner, we tried to find the ship terminal or harbor.  We drove up and down along the Lake but it took a while to find the roads that would actually take us to the boats and ships.




It was a long day, from 10:00 am to 10:pm, still daylight when we got home. My shoulder is pretty tender so tonight should be interesting.



Saturday, May 25, 2024

 Saturday, May 25, 2024

Thunder Bay, Ontario

We were on the road by 9 o’clock this morning, heading back to Nipigon to the tire dealer/tow truck.  It rained again during the night but was 42 when we got up this morning.  It’s still partly cloudy so we’ll see which way the temperature goes today.  We arrived at Best Towing right at 10 o’clock.  They got right on us and it only took about 45 minutes, and the good news was that it only cost us $86 in Canadian money.





Joe has been having a terrible time finding diet sodas,  but when we had lunch yesterday at KFC, they had diet Pepsi in a fountain drink, so after we finished with the tire, we drove back through town to get sodas.   It was 10 minutes till 11 and they didn’t open until 11 so we had to wait, but we finally got on the road at 11:07, headed to Thunder Bay.

We arrived in Thunder Bay without incident -- no sightings of any animals.  We still had the view of Lake Superior most of the time, as well as rivers, creeks, and water descending over the rocks along the highway.


Once we’ve seen a bear, we are on the lookout for anything that’s dark so we’ve been paying a lot of attention to dark, brown and black stumps. We looked hard at the area where we had seen the bears yesterday, but apparently they had moved on. But nearer Thunder Bay, the highway moose crossing signs have now changed to deer crossing signs, so I don't know if that means we are out of moose country.

 The campground here is really nice. The weather improved, the sun came out and it got up to 54°, probably the warmest day we’ve had in a couple weeks. It'a supposed to be a high of 65 in Thunder Bay today.  Our campsite here is right on the river, however there’s a wooden fence around this park and so we can barely catch a glimpse of it from the  RV..  None of these campgrounds have been busy. There is one camper in front of us, and a couple of what look like rentals beside us. I don’t know if they’re occupied or not.  They do have rentals available here, we saw a row of them as we drove in to the Registration Building.  There is more than one campground here so there may be more than we see.



We are both just tired, so we took it easy this afternoon.  I persuaded Joe to go out to dinner at the casino so I got to play for a couple hours.  I actually won a little -- not sure how much because I had to convert my U.S. dollars to Canadian dollars for the machines, but the casino won't convert them back.  

The food was ok.  Joe ordered a half-rib and he only got 3 ribs.  Seemed a little sparse.  I ordered fettuccini alfredo but I forgot to have them add the chicken, but it was really good.  The casino was non-smoking, which suprised me, since there are a  lot of smokers up here.  We got back to the campground around 8:00 p.m. and Joe drove around this park to check it out.  Not much going on right now.  They do reenactments of some battle, but I don't know if they have opened the season for that.  We will check that out tomorrow.  We are here for 3 nights, and we are 37 miles to the bridge into the U.S.  We haven't planned beyond here, except that we are tire shopping in Duluth.  Time to get the map out.