Below is a review of our week including our crossing of Lake
Michigan:
September 5th, Travel Day #51, Frankfort to
Ludington Michigan: Total Distance Traveled: 51 Miles, Total Time Traveled: 6.5
Hours. We had a great dinner with Dan and Cheri from Cheri Baby 2 and
said farewell as we probably won’t catch back up with them as they are staying
on the Michigan side of the Lake, and we are planning to head to the Wisconsin side
to Manitowoc from Ludington. We had been stuck for three days in Frankfort due
to high winds and that was the second delay (4 days in Charlevoix), so it was
time to get in the lee of the HUGE body of water. We had a 10-knot wind behind
us and sloppy 2-foot seas on the beam, so we got pushed around, but it wasn’t
terrible. The good news was there 5 boats stretched out
over 5 miles doing the same trip, so we had other boats on the rum line which
is always comforting. One of the boats we went by sent me the photo I will post below and when you look you can see the waves are not that big less than 2 feet, only a few whitecaps. You can see how rough the ride was. This is
a very comfortable boat to live on by she sure can’t handle a sea!
Note the waves aren't that big, but boy do we pound!
Once we got settled in, we walked around Ludington and there
wasn’t much to see or do. We were looking for a loaf of bread and couldn’t even
find that, so we were pleased we only had one night reserved, the highlight of
Ludington is the ferry that runs to Manitowoc. The SS Badger is the last coal
powered (talk about smoke!) steam ship in the USA. She docks right behind the
marina and so at 6:45 we all went out to watch her arrive. The ferry runs 400
times a year and has no thrusters. When it approaches it’s dock it drops her
anchor and spins around in reverse and is amazing to watch the captain dock. I
did a time lapse I’ll try and post, but it was cool to watch. We ate on the
boat and had an early night as tomorrow was crossing day.
September 6th, Travel Day #52, Ludington MI to Manitowoc WI: Total Distance Traveled: 52 Miles, Total Time Traveled: 8 Hours. We departed at 7 AM and crossed with three other buddy boats. Her Idea took the lead and we had a good day to cross. The winds and waves were both predicted to be low, and they were. I love it when they get it right. The only issue we had was a fog bank that burnt off by 9 AM. We always had 2-3 miles of visibility, but it was the first day I used the radar since the Hudson River. We lost sight of land within the first hour and didn’t see land for the next 4 hours. It always nice when you start making out structures on the horizon. We also picked up an hour as Wisconsin is in the central time zone, so we had an extra hour to explore the town of Manitowoc.
Manitowoc is a city of 45,000 people that had a huge
manufacturing presence and has lost most all those jobs, so downtown is about
1/3 occupied. My dad sold Manitowoc
Cranes for a living and 20 years ago it was the largest crane factory in the
country. So, they were a major employee in the area however, 10 years ago they
moved all the work elsewhere. So, all the jobs, and all the supporting industry
just went away. This certainly happened
to many Mill towns in rural Maine. We have seen this loss of vibrant Main Streets
in so many towns on this trip, it was very common in upper state New York. We
are as guilty as anyone but adding to the demise of many downtowns not only the
loss of manufacturing jobs, but retail has had similar impacts to that economics.
Retail moving to strip malls, Walmart, Targets the list goes on but its painful
to see what happens to these once vibrant downtowns. You can see how beautiful
the buildings were and now are in such disrepair it’s unfortunate. I feel lucky
that Kennebunk has maintained a healthy Main Street and its wonderful what is
happening in Biddeford. Off my soap box.
One very interesting thing was the Maritime Museum located
in town and had a WW11 submarine USS Cobia docked on the river. A large portion of the
museum was focused the work done by the both the Manitowoc Submarine company and Electric Boat Company in Groton CT. in
support of World War 11. Both Manitowoc Submarine Company (which was a factory that retooled itself) began building subs in 1941. Electric Boat was an established shipyard and is still in operation today. Both would lay the keel and 6 months later
launch the hull and 6 months later commissioned the sub. MSC built 7 submarines
a year 4 years from 1941 to 1944 in support of World War 11. Like many companies in that era, most manufacturers
retooled and built products that supported the war effort. Also, many of the
workers were woman and young men under 18. That was a very special time in our history.
S S Badger passed us while we were both doing the crossing.
Maritime Museum
Once again it was great to be on this side of the lake and
the weather for the next few days looked great.
Track
September 7th Travel Day #53, Manitowoc WI to Port
Washington: Total Distance Traveled: 52 Miles, Total Time Traveled: 7 Hours. We
departed Manitowoc first thing and had a forecast of another great day, with 1-foot
waves and less than 10 knots of wind, and that is exactly what we had. The sun
was out, seas flat and the wind was low, so it was most pleasant day. We ran 2
miles off the Lake Shore all day. I continue to be amazed at how undeveloped
the lake is. Most of the time we just see woods and sand dunes. I didn’t
realize is how many sandy beaches and sand dunes were on Lake Michigan. I’ll
include some pictures of this pretty landscape. Another thing that strikes me,
and we have the same on the coast, as you drive these backroads you don’t get
to the lakes and oceans often. Therefore, being on Her Idea we have
unobstructed views of everything the shoreline offers.
We arrived midafternoon after a 7-hour cruise, cleaned up
and went into Port Washington. Port Washington has a nice downtown that was
only 2 blocks from the marina and unlike Manitowoc is still vibrant and
flourishing. It is much more of a tourist town and so the stores are very well supported,
and many were high end. Great restaurants and a few fun bars that we tried out.
Overall Port Washington has a great vibe and was fun to spend a few hours in.
Port Washington had several loopers in the harbor, so we
gathered for Docktails, and in the end we had 20 folks telling tales. After Docktails
several of us grilled out and had dinner and once again made some new friends
(I know that will shock most of you!)
Track
September 8th Travel Day #54, Port Washington to
Milwaukee: Total Distance Traveled: 26 Miles, Total Time Traveled: 5 Hours.
Several loopers were planning to travel to Milwaukee as the weather was once
again forecasted to be very good and we all wanted to make up for lost time we
experienced on the Michigan side. We were the first to depart at 7:30 AM and
the four other loopers left the harbor at 8 AM so they were 3 miles behind us
all day. Once again it was a perfect day and we only had 26 miles to go. Unlimited visibility, calm seas, and little
wind. We arrived by 11:30 and had to get a pump out and check in at the fuel
dock which is unusually as normally you get your slip assignment over the VHF
radio. So, we were in our slip by noon had lunch, and walked around Brady
Street area Old Milwaukee. We found a great sushi restaurant which we had read
about earlier and planned to go back for dinner. This was a very robust area,
safe and full of restaurants, bars, and a ton of tattoo parlors. We found a great grocery store with excellent
prices (I finally go to get my bread). Most of the shopping we do is in small
towns near the marinas, and they charge accordingly, so it was nice to be in a
competitive market. After getting back
to the boat and cleaning off the Spider poop for 2 hours we headed back to the
Restaurant and had our first sushi in three months, what a treat.
Now Meredith asked me today (when she had two spiders in her
shower!) why I haven’t talked about the spiders. They are everywhere, and we
work everyday to eliminate them but it’s a losing battle. The spiders are on
the docks and crawl up the lines. I spray the lines every day and somehow, they
still get on. The problem is beside having 10 new spiders a day is their poop!
Its almost impossible to get rid of it. It’s starts black then when you clean
in it turns green and that’s what you can’t get clean. Well, it does clean off
like 3 days later. It’s gross and takes an hour a day to try and fight a losing
battle.
Ok enough about spider poop who’d a thunk that would
be an issue
Friday morning, I got an Uber to pick up our order from
Total Wines and More. Best store ever. You order online get your Uber to pop
the trunk and they load the product in the car. This was our first restock in
three months and I’m not planning to have to do so until Florida in January. It
wasn’t AS expensive as diesel fuel but darn close! Meredith washed and cleaned
the dinghy while I was gone and did a great job. Then we did some interior
cleaning and headed to downtown Milwaukee. Found a great lunch place with outdoor
seating and great people watching. The Milwaukee River runs through downtown
and the have a nice Riverwalk with plenty of shops, restaurants, and pubs along
the way.
They serious about their cheese here
Meredith with "The Fonz"
The Riverwalk
Still cant walk by seating without going in to check it out, not ours!!
Great post Jack…thank you! Say hi to PJ and Suzie and have fun!
ReplyDeleteJim
Great read Jack. Give mybest to M!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic entry to your Blog! The pictures are fabulous and how exciting it will be to catch up with family while you are in Chicago!!! Got a question, when do you think you might be pulling in St. Louis, the Gateway to West? Please let us know? Bitzie & Jimmy
ReplyDeleteHey you two...I'm about worn out reading your travels this week. Soo many miles with winds & waves. fueuie....That's a lot. Yet, your comments always seem bright and cheery. So thanks your you most recent blog. I am happy for you both. Much love, Pat Maynard
ReplyDeleteHi. Could try 2-sided sticky tape on the lines to slow up the spiders. Am enjoying your blog? Ellen Rogers
ReplyDeleteEnjoy the blog immensely. Sounds like you are having a great time. Pictures are a great addition. Snow should fly here in 45 days!!!
ReplyDeleteDale and Sam
Great post. As Jack and Meredith know, we are from northern Wi so really enjoyed this post, Was in Milwaukee three years while going to Marquette, The downtown area has improved immensely since we were in a Milwaukee nearly 50 years ago (ouch!!).
ReplyDeleteTotal Wine was a great choice. Reasonable prices and vast choices. Hope you don’t sink the boat from your procurement.
As a side note, in our local paper this week (Ashland Daily Press) there was an article about a couple who just completed the Great Loop, starting and finishing in Ashland, Wi, which in the southwest corner of Lake Superior, 60 miles west of Duluth, Mn. They did it over a two year period, leaving there boat (in Florida, I think) for several months.
Jack and Kathy Carlson
Oops…60 miles EAST of Duluth.
ReplyDeletePJ and Suzy, we had a great couple of days with Jack and Meredith catching up. Been way to long! Had a bunch of Sushi at a nice place in downtown Lake Forest called Kuros Saturday night and sat on our patio till 11PM with another beautiful moon, a very large Chinese Prying Mantis and my nephew Shea and Hayley. Shea showed Jack and Meredith some tricks on the Ipad for watching live sports. Loop on and enjoy the adventurer, think as it gets warmer and you travel more south you will find more Arthropods friends. Hope the spring bottle with bleach helps!
ReplyDelete