Jan 25, 2008

The Family

O.K., let's conclude this recent series of Copper Harbor photos with a shot of my family. That's me on the left, Captain Ben. Then there is Drew, my wife Marsha, Logan, Miranda Davis, holding her dog Capone, the husky-shepherd, Gus, and then Art, my son-in-law. We are posed at the entrance to the Copper Harbor Marina on the west end of town on New Year's Eve. Winter has gone into full swing since we left a couple days after this photo was taken. The snow squalls have been rolling over Copper Harbor day after day after day, and it looks as though skiing and snowmobiling conditions are downright superb. Head on up for a weekend. Motels are open, and the Gaslight General Store, and the Pines Restaurant, the Mariner, and the Tamarack. I hear the store has an excellent wine selection of you want to add a little romance to your evenings. I'm not much for wine, so you'll have to trust second-hand reports. Lots of winter fun to be had. Don't wait. I'm making myself eager to get back up there as I write this. I just bought Logan a new pair of snowshoes. We're gonna take them for a spin down here in southern Lower Michigan this weekend. I'll post some photos of that soon.

Jan 24, 2008

A Stillness on the Harbor

Another glorious winter's day in Copper Harbor. This shot was taken on a sunny afternoon, all too close to sunset, on the trail out to Hunters Point. I was standing just about directly across the harbor from the Copper Harbor Marina. That's the East Bluff in the distance on the right hand side of the photo, and Porters Island in the distance on the left. The Copper Harbor Lighthouse, which is about a mile and a half away, is not quite visible, blocked by that point of land on Porters Island. Again, note the dusting of light snow on the very thin ice in the middle distance of the photo. I'm just about to the end of the photos I have selected from our visit to Copper Harbor over the New Year week. Stay tuned for one more shot from that time.

Jan 23, 2008

Caged in Ice

My son-in-law Art Davis was behaving like an animal and caged himself on the Lake Superior shore recently. The roof of the cage was made of an ice cap that overhung a small, shallow cave in the bedrock along the coast. The bars were made of ice formed by the ever pounding waves and ever whistling winds of Superior. My son Drew took on the role of handler trying to subdue the trapped wild beast. But, alas, ice does not make a good cage, and Art was able to break out quite easily. The boys were messing around on a small island outside Copper Harbor. Actually, this outcropping of ancient volcanic rock is now a small peninsula. It was an islet some years back, when lake levels were much higher.

Jan 22, 2008

Cold City

Here's something different for this blog, a shot of downtown Chicago along the Chicago River. The photo was taken from a hotel room on the 24th floor of the Sheraton in downtown Chicago. Miranda and Art Davis and I gathered in Chicago and stayed at the Sheraton last weekend for the annual Chicago Gift Show. We shop the show for some of the items we sell in the Harborside Shop in the offices of the Isle Royale Queen IV during the summer months. It was bitter cold in Chi-town all weekend. The temp at the time this photo was taken was about -10 degrees F. Wind chills were down in the -30s, and they were even worse up north in Green Bay, WI, where the second Ice Bowl football game was played later this same day. We were in Chicago to develop our business, of course, but we look like pretty small fry when considering the massive business ventures of America's big cities, such as the Trump Towers of Donald Trump, which is the glass building under construction up the river in the right center of the photo. Even in the extreme cold, workers were moving about at the top of the new Towers all weekend long. Art and I were pondering how Trump finances these costly ventures. We could only guess. And how much does such a building cost? Though I have been involved in fund-raising for more than 20 buildings at Michigan State University, I really was quite unsure of my guess. Those Towers and all of Chicago, the city with those big shoulders, makes my life seem pretty puny.

Superior Shoreline

This shot is of an ice cap at the Hunters Point Preserve, on Lake Superior immediately outside Copper Harbor and directly across the harbor from the Isle Royale Queen IV dock. As I've said, the family took several hikes out to Hunters Point during the New Year holiday week. The conditions were perfect for every hike. I see today, however, that conditions are pretty poor for a hike to Hunters, with heavy snow and a sharp wind blowing up in the Keweenaw.

Jan 18, 2008

Ice Forming

My Dad, Captain Don Kilpela, wrote to me from Copper Harbor yesterday to say that he had been watching an amazing sight on Wednesday morning. The winds along the Keweenaw Peninsula were amazingly calm on Wednesday. Don said he was actually seeing the surface of the harbor gradually freeze in the morning stillness. He sent me two photos of the event that he took from the Isle Royale Queen IV dock, the first looking west, the second looking north. You can see that the harbor has not frozen much yet, which is quite unusual over all time, but not so uncommon in recent years.



But my, how things can change. From the copperharbor.org web site I copied this shot of Copper Harbor from the Jamsen's Fishhouse next door to the Queen dock yesterday, Thursday, and look how the weather has turned.

Jan 17, 2008

Home Is Where the Blizzard Is

Marsha, Drew, and I stopped by our Copper Harbor house while up north over the New Year week. The house is all closed up for the winter, of course, but Marsha had a couple of things she needed to pick up. The shot was taken on New Year's Day, when we had one of those Upper Peninsula blizzards that are localized strikes that can occur anywhere in the region. This day, after several days of perfect winter weather, the local blizzard blasted the Keweenaw while the rest of the U.P. had mild weather. (Downstate, we heard later, had gotten socked with 9 inches of snow the night before, New YHear's Eve. We returned home to Okemos two days later to find all 9 inches waiting to be shoveled out of our large driveway.) This picture is of Drew standing near the picture window in the cabin. You can see the blizzard raging on outside. The temp inside was about 25 degrees. No chance of snow melting off your shoulders inside on this day. We have to be careful not to drag too much snow inside on our clothing, for it will all melt in spring.

Jan 16, 2008

Ice Caps

The family took several hikes out to Hunters Point during our stay in Copper Harbor over New Year's week, as you have no doubt surmised from the shots of the Hunters Point Preserve I have already posted this week and last. On one hike we ran across a number of beautiful and fascinating ice formations, such as the one the family is examining in this photo. That's Miranda Davis, my daughter, kneeling on the left, with Drew standing next to her, and then Art, her husband, and Marsha. We were all taking a close look at this ice cap, which Lake Superior had elegantly constructed with its waves and winds. Ice caps are especially nice early in winter. Later in the season, the formations get covered in snow as the lake freezes farther and farther away from shore. In the distance, take note of the last visible point of land. That's not Hunters Point. It's a rocky point in the center of Porters Island, about a half mile from where we stand. Now, here's a close up of some of the icicles hanging from the ice cap pictured above:

Jan 15, 2008

Homes

The trail to Hunters Point, which we walked several times during our week up north over the New Year, has many nice views across Copper Harbor to the waterfront of the village of Copper Harbor. This photo is of my 12-year-old Andrew standing on the shore near the trail. In the distance is the center of the village. On the left the arrow is pointing at the Isle Royale Queen IV dock, where my parents live, Don and Betty Kilpela. Their home is above the offices of the Queen IV. This is where I work every summer with my brothers in operating the ferry service to Isle Royale National Park, as our family has done for 37 years. On the right the arrow is pointing at the location of Ben and Marsha Kilpela's house in Copper Harbor, which is a block away from the waterfront and can't be seen through the trees. Note that the harbor was free of ice at the New Year. Also take note of that thin ice shelf extending out from the south shore of the harbor. The paper-thin ice was lightly dusted with snow from one of those brief snow showers that pass Copper Harbor all season long. Drew was searching for artifacts and good stones along the shore. My son-in-law Art Davis, year-round CH resident, has got him interested in collecting bottles and electrical insulators, in addition to all his other collecting interests.

Jan 14, 2008

Hunters Point Preserve

There was news this fall about the piece of valuable and beautiful property pictured here, the west end of Copper Harbor (next door to the state marina), which has been successfully purchased to become part of Grant Township's Hunters Point Preserve. The Preserve now extends from the point, in the center of the harbor, all the way west around the end of the harbor, south across the highway, and on up the side of Brockway Mountain just west of town. The photo shows the ice forming onje evening on the shallows at the west end of the harbor the day before New Year's Eve. One of the trails out to the point follows this shoreline. I am a bit of a outdoors libertarian and am loath to sound like a preacher, but we must all work together to keep the Hunters Point park as beautiful and pristine as possible. It's getting lots more foot traffic as a result of all the publicity that came with the fund-raising for and purchase of the property to preserve it from development. But this has meant that the park has been getting some rough use at the hands and feet of some visitors. I encourage you to join together in doing our cooperative best to keep this place as beautiful as it has always been. See this web site for more information on the preserve and its fund-raising activities:

Jan 11, 2008

Ice Overhang

My cousin and good friend Bob Orton is pictured in this shot, standing with my son Drew on the edge of an ice shelf on Sedar Bay, a wide, shallow indentation in the northern coast of the Keweenaw Peninsula about 30 miles southwest of Copper Harbor. My boys and I visited Bob on December 30 at his house on Sedar Bay and took a walk along the lakeshore in the early evening as the sun was going down -- before 5:00! It's was a very nice evening. Not very cold. No wind to speak of. Take note of the way in which the neverending waves of the calmer periods keep undercutting the ice that the lake builds on shore during the colder, windier periods. These ice formations can build far out on the lake in a long cold-snap, and sometimes can be found miles off the coast. But it was only the immediate shore that was encased in ice this night on Lake Superior in early winter. Drew had no fears of the shelf breaking under his weight, for he doesn't add much to the considerable mass of the ice he's standing on. But it is true that the lake will eventually undercut the ice so much that it will break off and fall of its own weight back into the waves. We found many of these large broken blocks being slowly broken apart into even smaller chunks that evening. You can see a couple of these giant blocks that have broken off in the near distance behind Drew.

Jan 10, 2008

Snowfall

Logan, my 15-year-old, served as my gopher when we went on that snowshoeing hike along the southside of Lake Fanny Hooe during the New Year week, which I discussed in one of my previous posts. The principal task I gave him was knocking the snow piled on branches, as on these well-laden cedar trees. Can you see Log amid the clumps of falling snow? I need this done to protect my camera, which has too often gotten wet from snow-clumps dropping onto it when I happen to bump a branch. We were going through these cedars because I was trying to get into position from some good shots of the Manganese River, which was tumbling along on the day of our hike, since the temps were in the mid- to high 20s.

The result of the tasks I gave Logan is illustrated in the second photo, in which Log shows off the snow that has collected on his head and shoulders. He doesn't seem to mind the snow piling up on him. He doesn't even seem to notice much, since he has that shaggy head of hair, of which he is certainly as proud as Samson (as I once was of my shaggy mane in the days of my youth). Good job Logan. I was glad you were on duty. I got some good shots of the river, too, which I might post. That will have to come after some other shots I have ready to go up.

Jan 9, 2008

Icicles

The weather was, indeed, very nice during our stay in Copper Harbor over the New Year this season (highs in the mid-20s and lows in the teens). Here's a shot of my 12-year-old son Andrew snapping icicles hanging from the eaves of the Davis cabin in town. Art and Miranda Davis, daughter and son-in-law to me, live in the oldest still-inhabited building in the village, built in the 1880s, if I recall correctly. (I am sure Art will correct me if I am wrong, so check the comments to this post if you have doubts.) It has always been strange to me that it can snow so hard for so long in the Keweenaw, such as it did for two weeks in mid-December this year, when the area received about three feet of snowfall. And then the snow-machine will stop because of a slight alteration in the continental weather pattern, and there will be no snow for weeks on end. That was the case just before the New Year, despite the comfortable cold. And now, yesterday, January 8, Miranda reported that there was some light rain in Copper Harbor. That has happened much more frequently in midwinter in the past decade. Something is obviously up with the weather, whether it's something for good or ill. I spoke of this last year on this blog, global warming. The consensus seems even more solid that it is occuring. But I have been reading some articles that make the claim that its results will not be all that terrible. The debate goes on.

Jan 8, 2008

Rocks and Winter Waves

Marsha and I took a drive down the Superior lakeshore at the top of Michigan (west of Copper Harbor) just before the New Year. It was a windy day, though relatively warm. We made several stops along the way, but the wind kept us from staying long in any one place. This shot captures one small scene along the shore. It was taken in Esry Park, a Keweenaw County roadside turnout at Agate Harbor, which is about eight miles west of Copper Harbor. The photo fails to capture the sharp, bone-numbing cold we felt on that day. We were bundled tight with the latest high-tech clothing, but still the unusually damp air stabbed at us. As I say, it was even that cold, in the high 20s on that day. It was a fine day to be looking at the ice sculptures that nature creates all winter long.

Jan 7, 2008

Snowshoeing

I mentioned in my last post that snowshoeing is on the rise in the Keweenaw, and here's some proof, Miranda Davis and Logan Kilpela on snowshoes on the Kamakazi Trail on the south side of Lake Fanny Hooe just outside Copper Harbor. I never thought I'd see the day when Miranda would be on snowshoes regularly, but she and Art have taken up the envigorating sport with determination. Logan is wearing Art's shoes, by the way, since I didn't bring up my pair for him to wear. It was a beautiful walk along the shores of Fanny Hooe on this day. I didn't make it far myself. I have been hobbling around inside and out because I've had a stress fracture in my left foot that I am trying to heal. But I managed to limp my way along the trail slowly.

Jan 4, 2008

Queen IV Dock

My sister Jo (Jocelyn) of Calumet and my wife Marsha walked with me on a cold morning in the Harbor up to the Tamarack Restaurant on the main drag. This shot was taken on December 30, I believe. We walked from my parents' place on the waterfront, on the dock and above the offices of the Isle Royale Queen IV, which is in the background of the photograph. And now you see that there is plenty of snow up at the tip of the Keweenaw right now. Go on up and enjopy it when you get a chance. There were some snowmobilers in town over the Christmas-New Year week, but not as many as I've seen in the past during this same period. And I hardly saw any cross-country skiers or snowshoers (though snowshoeing has become much more popular in recent years). Good pancakes from Bonnie and Bill at the Tamarack, as always. Good place to get breakfast in the summer before an Isle Royale day trip.

Jan 3, 2008

Dusted Shoreline

The family, Ben, Marsha, Logan, and Drew Kilpela, went north to Copper Harbor for the New Year, so now I can post some shots from the Keweenaw that are more recent than the one in my last post. Here's a shot from Hunters Point again. This is just outside Copper Harbor itself. Though there has been lots of snowfall and though there is almost two feet of snow on the ground in CH right now, the Lake Superior shoreline was mostly clear. The air temperatures haven't been low enough often enough and Lake Superior has not yet become cold enough to form a lot of ice on the open lake, or even in the harbors of the Keweenaw. Copper Harbor was almost completely open just four days ago (there were two cold nights on January 2 and 3, so things might change). Thus, the shore remains open for the most part all along the Keweenaw Coast. It was a windy and cloudy late afternoon on the day I took this shot (I think it was December 29). It shows a dusting of wind-driven snow on the bedrock and stones not touched by the small Superior waves rolling in.