And it has those characteristics. A high-pitched, A-frame roof, knotty pine on wall and
ceiling, and a decor that includes animal skins and a mounted deer’s head.
| Miners Falls ... the roar is worth the wait. |
Yesterday, early snows came. A couple of inches. Today, the
snow slides down the steep roof with a roar, the warmer temperatures making
slick what yesterday proved an icy grip.
I’m on the second-floor loft, staring out at 16 Mile Lake. The small island across the way has a
single owner, it appears. At least, when I sneak a peek by satellite, there’s a
single house and single dock.
“It’d be nice to own your own island,” I yell down to Cindy,
who’s reading near the fireplace.
“Yeah, but what about the shopping?”
Oh … that.
This is Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, a vast tract of land
between Great Lake waters – Lake Michigan on the south, Lake Superior on the
north – sparsely populated, yet heavy with pines, birches and hardwoods. Its people are called Yoopers, and they are
sometimes the butt of jokes from those down under:
Eino was coming out of
Pickleman's Pantry in Newberry carrying a bag of meat pasties. Toivo was
getting gas and saw him with the bag.
“Hey, Eino. If I guess how many
pasties you have in dat bag, can I have one?”
Eino replied, “If you can guess
how many I have, I'll give you both of them.”
Toivo answered, “Holywha! Okay,
I think you have five of them.”
In fact, many of these jokes come from Yoopers themselves, a
self-deprecating celebration of living in what sometimes seems a Northern
wilderness.
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| The bridge too far. |
The Yoops get back at those who reside on the Lower
Peninsula. They call us “trolls,” because we live “under” the massive Mackinaw
Bridge that connects the two land masses.
Yesterday we visited Marquette, a college and port city to
the northwest. We saw the great
ore docks, shopped high atop the city’s picturesque hills, and had lunch in a
Cajun restaurant whose family has deep roots in French Canada.
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| Laissez les bons Yoopers rouler! |
We were so impressed with the food that we invited the chef
and her husband/waiter to visit us anytime in T.C. And we'd cook.
On our return to the cabin, we stopped by Laughing
Whitefish Falls. We took a short
hike along the steady Laughing Whitefish River. Eventually we heard the
pounding roar of the falls … the river’s massive, copper-tinted waters tumbling
over a sheer drop, then sliding fast atop a broad, long washboard surface of rock
to a deep pool below.
There the river returned to its steady ways, heading north
to eventually empty into Lake Superior.
| Laughing Whitefish Falls |
Today we turned in a different direction – about 12 miles
northeast to Munising, whose name translated from Ojibway means “near the
island.” Sure enough, Grand
Island sits just to the north, massively guarding access to Munising Bay.
Not many folks live in Munising. The last census counted just 2,000 or so. But the area is known best for its
Pictured Rocks and many waterfalls – Alger, Chapel, Horsehoe, Memorial, Munising,
Miners, Scott, Tannery, Wagner, among others. So there’s a brisk tourist trade in the summer and fall.
And so we set out to find at least some of these falls.
First, we made the required stop at the Pictured Rock
overlook to snap photos of Miners Castle.
I’ve remarked before, when I stayed on the western shores of Lake
Superior, how much rockier Superior’s coast is compared with Lake
Michigan. More like Maine, or
California.
| Miners Castle |
And so it was here.
High atop the bluff overlooking Miners Castle, the winds howled off the
lake, made even stronger by the high cliffs. As if through a funnel pointing up, the winds slammed the wall, gathered tightly, then
shot skyward.
I held onto my hat as I peered over the edge; below, angry
lake waters swirled. Folks talk
about how great it is to kayak around Pictured Rocks. Today, though, kayaks would be torn and tossed against the
rocks like flotsam.
We then ventured to Miners Falls, just down the road. Discovering these falls is a lesson in
trust … the long path points the way, but you don’t hear the cascade in these dense
woods until you are a hundred yards or so from it.
| Path to Miners Falls. |
And then the grandeur hits. The awe overwhelms you … that something so mighty, so
massive, so thunderous, could be hidden and muffled by tall oaks, birches and
pines. Few people, relative to the world’s many people, know of this spot, I
thought. It’s an exclusiveness to
be cherished.
We would go on to see Chapel Falls, hidden even
deeper in the woods. We leaned far over the edge to watch Chapel Creek tumble
and turn to noisy vapor. We
pledged then to come back with our children to see all of these falls.
Experiencing these tumblers in November is different from
what the typical tourists see. For
one, the Yoopers themselves have relaxed, now that the downstaters are
gone. And a daily rhythm returns … there's quiet, much
solitude, and Nature’s winds and water beat a tuneful drum, not fouled by
the noise of throngs marching along wooded paths.
| On the way to Chapel Falls, ferns remain. |
Today, for example, the Chapel Falls trail was our own. The
Park Service’s parking lot could accommodate hundreds of cars; the latrines were
even two-holers – separate men’s and women’s. Yet all were vacant when we arrived.
It’s better at this time of year, I think. Ice clings to the
trees, each pine bough glistening as the sun shoots through ... like bright smiles. Granted, the forest has lost its leaves; yet, what in summer is a dense thicket of green becomes a pleasing
community of trees, each one distinct in shape, angle and thickness. Legions of them stretch on, over
distant hills.
And anyway, the green is not far away. At the feet of this timber are small
blankets of bright ferns, a reminder of what was … what again will be.
| Chapel Falls tumbles below. |
As much as those on the U.P. joke about themselves, and we
join in, they know their land is a treasure. It’s one they share with us in
summer and fall. But they do so
jealously, I’m sure.
In a sense, they own this island called the Upper
Peninsula. Okay, it’s not an
island. Wisconsin’s vast border to
the southwest guarantees that. But
it seems an island nonetheless, guarded by deep waters on at least three sides.
And it is well tended by those who call it theirs.
“It’d be nice to own your own island,” I told Cindy.
Yoopers know.

