Time to travel: We visited a couple of new lighthouses, both the old and new one at Presque Isle, Michigan, shopped at Walmart, and found a new campsite. As I write this post, someone near the Au Gres, Michigan city campground where we are staying for the night is giving a live outdoor concert. It is a local musician singing his own compositions and people seem to be enjoying the performance.
The pictures of our travels today will speak more than the written story. It was a lovely day driving through beautiful forests and small towns along Lake Huron. The big news is that summer has arrived in Michigan. It’s in the 70s and 80s.
There are many roads to choose from, the interstate being the fastest, but we have decided to take our time as we have no specific destination or time schedule. We’ve been following Route 23 along Lake Huron in the Michigan Lower Peninsula. We see what we see; sometimes there is a lot to see, sometimes not, but a massive lake is always to our left.
We have learned the characteristics of different campgrounds: national, state, and city parks each have their own unique characteristics. National parks are more rustic with few amenities; state parks often have electric – and sometimes water – hookups with a dump station as you leave, and are in a forest or shoreline setting (though this is not always the case); and city parks are often cleaner, more manicured, and have full services. City campgrounds are also usually less expensive. A big plus for city campgrounds is that we can usually get good internet reception there so that we can keep up with the posts and our email. We have not yet stayed in national forests where there are no amenities.
Day 2: New Sights
As we are traveling the Lake Huron Scenic Tour, along the eastern coast of Michigan, Waze – in its effort to lead us on the fastest route – had us take a turn we didn’t intend. Though it wasn’t the route we had planned, we didn’t regret the mistake. We ended up traveling through immense swaths of farmland – corn as well as other crops. Dotting the roadsides were farm houses, many of them large and quite beautiful. It is a picture of plenty, and knowing the hard work that goes into farming, one can only feel immense gratitude for people who work the land.
Another industry that seems to be popular in this area is wind turbines; they were scattered over miles and miles of fields by the dozens, all working to create non-polluting energy. At first you would think this is a win-win industry – energy and income for the farmers – but there are those who disagree, as the political road signs attest.
Once out of farm area and back to the shoreline we found a nice public park/beach in Bay Harbor, Michigan where we ate lunch and walked on the pier to see the local lighthouse. Traveling to look at lighthouses all over the Great Lakes area can be a trip all its own: not till now could we appreciate the importance of these beacons as we hear their stories and the stories of all the shipwrecks in the Great Lakes before they were built.
For the evening we have found a small county camping area in a nice, wooded area near Lexington, Michigan, and we’ve decided to stay here for three nights. This way we are sure of having a comfortable place for Shabbat.