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Minnesota National Parks State Parks WanderLog

Minnesota’s North Shore – Duluth to Grand Portgage

Minnesota North Shore Split Rock Lighthouse State Park

Travel Dates: August 27 – Sept 11, 2015

The “North Shore” is the section of Minnesota from Duluth to Grand Portage along the Lake Superior coastline. I had heard amazing things about this section of Minnesota and had been ready to visit it since we first set foot in the state. After some plan changes and a few detours we finally made it. The landscape, state parks, and adventures did not disappoint!

Ages of Kids: 9, 8, 5
Places We Visited: Duluth, Gooseberry Falls State Park, Split Rock Lighthouse State Park, Tettegouche State Park, George H. Crosby Manitou State Park, Grand Marais, Grand Portage, Grand Portage State Park

There were a couple of logistical complications with staying along the north shore. The first was that I knew it there was plenty to see with 8 state parks, plenty of small towns, and more waterfalls than we could probably count. I also knew we couldn’t see all the things, but wanted to spend more than a week exploring this section of Minnesota.

Complicating things even further, there was a church in Duluth and then another one across the border in Thunder Bay, Ontario. That means we had only a week if we wanted to make it to church both weeks. So, we improvised.

Instead of driving up the north shore a good distance, we stopped at Gooseberry Falls (the first state park north of Duluth) and grabbed a walk-up site for 6 days which would get us through Labor Day and was only an hour drive back to church in Duluth. There was plenty to see and do at Gooseberry and we could take a short day trip up to Split Rock Lighthouse State Park somewhere in the middle.

Our plan worked amazingly well! While there was still plenty we didn’t see, I felt like we were able to immerse ourselves in a beautiful section of Minnesota and really enjoy it!

Read on for a play by play of what we did along the way:

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First stop along our route was the city of Duluth. We were having problems with our trailer brakes, so we dropped the trailer off at a local shop and spent the morning at the children’s museum. Sam had headphones and his laptop to get some work done and the kids had a great time playing.

After grabbing some lunch downtown at the Northern Waters Smokehaus, we wandered around Canal Park for a bit, and then spent a good hour at the public library waiting for the call that the trailer was finished.

Once we picked the trailer back up, we headed for our camping spot at Indian Point City Campground. After trying to level the trailer in one spot and failing, we went back to the office to see if they had anything else available and ended up in the perfect corner spot. Lots of green space to stretch out in.

We also visited the Lake Superior Maritime Visitor Center which was free, totally interesting for Sam and I, and completely bored the kids. We enjoyed watching the Aerial Lift Bridge rise for incoming sailboats, ate ice cream, road the trolley, climbed the tower at Enger Park, and I even got in a short mountain bike ride.

It was a packed, but thoroughly enjoyable 4 days!

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Tuesday morning we started our trek north along the shore. We found an epic pull off for lunch, and spent some time admiring the rugged coastline and the amazingly clear, blue water of the lake.

11429695_1061083393909506_822896934_nThe ranger at Gooseberry Falls State Park was surprised we wanted to stay for 6 days. I think most people pull in for a day, two at most and then move on. We loved hanging out at this park. There’s plenty to see & do and we had great site with a tree the kids turned into a fort.

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Sam and I separately rode the Gitchi-Gami bike trail from Gooseberry Falls to Split Rock Lighthouse. The trail is paved the whole way but has some pretty good climbs and I’m glad we didn’t take the kids. See my review of this ride on The Outbound Collective here.

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My favorite thing, by far, about this section of our trip was the pie at Betty’s Pies. Oh. My. Goodness. It was so good we want back for round two and were even tempted to squeeze in a third visit but decided we didn’t want to appear greedy. If you go, get the Pig Trough. It has three slices of pie (different kids), 4 scoops of ice cream, whipped cream, and chocolate syrup. We downed it in less than 5 minutes. Twice. You can also order online and have a pie shipped to you which is awesome.

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Evening trip Split Rock Lighthouse with beautiful light and rock scrambling. Perfection.

Related blog post:
Not Going Back to School And Happy About It

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Our next stop was Tettegouche State Park. While we were backing into our site and unhitching we blew one of our truck airbags. Oops.

The rangers were fantastic and let us Prime ship a replacement from Amazon to the visitor center. We just couldn’t pull the Airstream out of our site until we had fixed it.

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While we were waiting for the replacement to come in, we decided to do an overnight trip into George H. Manitou-Crosby State Park. The ranger had recommended it as one of his favorite places to hike, so we thought we ought to check it out. It was absolutely beautiful! I think we are probably the only people that leave their trailer in a state park so they can backpack in another nearby one.

Related blog posts:
 Trip Report on the Outbound Collective
The Camping Spot We Almost Didn’t Find

11910396_1626700350902824_1554754539_nWe were able to vacate our site on Thursday at 4:10pm (only 10 minutes past check out!) and headed north once again. This is where things got a little rough. We were planning to stay at  Cascade River State Park, but there wasn’t a site left we could fit in so we kept moving to the city of Grand Marais instead. We stayed at the Grand Marais City RV Park with our goal being to eat fish & chips which we did at Dockside Fish Market.

Sam and I also snuck out for dessert at Sydney’s Frozen Custard (amazing roof seating!), and we picked up some World’s Best Donuts (they really ARE that good) for breakfast the following morning. For a small, tourist town Grand Marais has some great food!
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Next stop was Grand Portage. We stayed at the RV park near the Casino as it was really our only option. It wasn’t bad as we had a great view, but the internet was pretty spotty since we were so close to the Canadian Border.

“We parked the Airstream at a wonky angle to maximize our view in a move I will lovingly call The Zimmerman™ due to the conformity busting example of @advodna_dave and @advodna_ann. Today was actually full of noncooperative internet and other difficulties, but hey, Rainbows!” -@telegramsam

 

“This one is for @herboldadventure. Stuff pulled out from under the beds to make forts, and chaos in the back. I’m trying to make dinner and @telegramsam is trying to motivate himself to work despite less than reliable campground WiFi. #reallife#wanderingconfessions -@jesscurren

Our favorite stop (and main reason for being here) was to visit Grand Portage National Monument and continue our education of the beaver fur trade and the voyageurs. We participated in a guided tour of the fort, hiked to the top of Mount Rose, and earned our Jr. Ranger Badges.

“Our obsession with the Voyageurs continues with a visit to Grand Portage. Here is where the Voyageurs from the North West Company in Montreal and the hivernauts from the north country met, partied, traded goods and then went their separate ways. Last night we climbed the short, but steep hike to the top of Mt. Rose and were rewarded with a beautiful view and a rainbow.” -@jesscurren

“Grand Portage National Monument celebrates the history of the fur trade in the early 19th century. Voyageurs from Montreal and hivernauts from the north met here in the summer to trade goods for furs. There was also the local population of Ojibwe people which created quite the blend of culture.” – @currentlywandering

“After the American Revolution, the British based Northwest Company had to move their outpost from Grand Portage across the border to Thunder Bay.
I’m not sure why we have found this piece of history so fascinating, but it has been fun to track the Voyageurs and learn from multiple sites about their rich history.
During the second weekend in August, the National Monument holds the Rendezvous with hundreds of actors in period dress, games for the kids, and food. We definitely want to try and return at some point and participate!” – @currentlywandering

“Inside the warehouse at Grand Portage there are examples of the different types of canoes the Voyageurs used, as well as their cargo. The Montreal Canoe could carry 4 tons of cargo, or everything pictured here in addition to the 16 or so men that rowed it and their personal gear. The canoes were made of Birch Bark and Cedar wood and light enough for just a few men to portage around the rougher sections of river.” – @currentlywandering

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@jesscurren wasn’t feeling very well, but we snuck out for a short wander after dinner anyway. The sky was in excellent form as we pondered the life of a Voyager for the North West Company.” – @telegramsam

After changing some cash from American to Canadian, it was time to cross the border into Canada! We had one last stop at Grand Portage State Park to see Minnesota’s highest waterfall and the reason the voyageurs had to portage their canoes around this section of the Pigeon River. The kids also turned in their Pinelands Minnesota State Parks Jr. Ranger Naturalist books and received their patches.

“These falls and other obstacles in the first handful of miles of the Pigeon River are why Grand Portage exists. The high canyon walls made shorter portages, where voyagers would carry their canoes and cargo around an impassable section of river, quite difficult. For scale, look for the Canadians sitting to the top right of the falls. The Pigeon River is also the US/Canada international border.
The easiest portage around this otherwise very important river is a 12 mile overland trail known as Grand Portage. Why is it so Grand? From Lake Superior you can travel by water to the Pacific Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, Arctic Ocean, and the Gulf of Mexico with portages no longer than 11.5 miles. Grand Portage is the longest portage along dominant water routes in all of North America.” -@telegramsam

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Next up, Canada!

Categories
Mommy Diaries

While the Cat’s Away, the Mouse Will Stay Up Until 3am Watching Netflix

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I really kept thinking I should go to bed, but for some reason I just didn’t feel tired. It had been an exhausting day and I should have dropped off to sleep, but Royal Pains kept calling my name and tempting me with one more episode. Netflix auto playing to the next episode is such a sneaky design feature.

Every time Sam leaves for a work meeting or conference I have aspirations for getting more done than when he’s here. How I became that delusional is up for debate, since running this circus with two of us is hard enough. Instead I find that by the time the kids are in bed,  the dishes are washed, and there is some order to the trailer I have no brain power left over for blogging, editing, or anything productive. Thus, Netflix.

Amazingly I was still conscious during the day and helped the kids plow through school and even a bike ride. We had a good time, but I’m grateful when my better half is home to help keep my schedule sane!

Categories
Biking Daily Life Michigan Mommy Diaries

At Least There Was a Caterpillar

SAM_4477-EditLife is always harder when Sam is gone. This was true back in our sticks and bricks, and even more so on the road. He always gives me my second wind around 5pm when I’m about to crash, and I love sharing responsibilities, fun, and chores (those pesky things) with my best friend.

Occasionally he still has business trips that take him away from home, and I try and keep everyone still breathing and functional on my own. I am two days into his current 3 day business trip and remarkably today went better than yesterday.

We are camped in a State Park that has a network of mountain biking trails and after getting out on my own yesterday (don’t worry, the kids were fine) I was determined to take them out today on what the locals assured me was an easier trail.

First off, you have to be a special kind of crazy to take three kids mountain biking by yourself especially when one of them is 5 years old and frequently interchanges her “tired” voice with her “whiny” voice. Both sound the same to me.

Fortunately the trail started out pretty level & smooth, but we gradually had sand, tree roots, and even a few climbs that included sand and tree roots.There was definitely more walking the bikes than riding them on the last half of the trail. When Endomondo called out our lap pace and indicated the last mile took us 33 minutes I just had to laugh.

The bright side of walking your bike up the trail is that you see things that otherwise would have been a blur. As I waited at the top of the hill I watched Andrew bend down and then exclaim, “Mom! This is a really cool caterpillar!”

And it was. I dropped my bike and trekked back down to see it. The little guy was fuzzy, white, and had black spots running down his back and was arguably one of the most interesting caterpillars we’ve seen. After we saved his life by moving him off the trail with a small twig, the kids continued pushing their bikes up the hill.

This time though there was a little more spring in their steps. Even if the trail was frustrating, slow, and a discouraging, at least there was a caterpillar.

Categories
Homeschool Mommy Diaries

The Magical Homework Fairy Makes Her Debut

The Magical Homework Fairy Makes Her DebutWe’ve had some problems lately in the home school department. Our road schooling/home schooling curriculum is fairly lax. We don’t have a strict schedule, and will often have more field trips than book days. Since I absolutely loved field trips as a kid, my kids learn the best with hands on exploration, and there is so much to see in this amazing country, I don’t think this particular trend is broken.

What we ARE struggling with, however, are the days we do stay home and work on our regular, core subjects. Before you can fully understand the complexity of our difficulties, I think a little background on our mornings is in order. Sam and I have discovered that I am not a morning person. Not by any stretch of the imagination. I’ve tried so many times to get up early before the kids to read my scriptures, blog, or just get a start on the day and I just can’t! Rather than guilt myself every single morning, I’ve lowered my expectations so that my alarm clock is usually Cara climbing in bed with me at 7am when she is allowed to get up. The other two, older children are either in bed reading or playing Lego’s and happily stay that way until we call them to breakfast sometime between 8am- 8:30 when I’ve finally decided the bed no longer needs a guardian.

After breakfast we’d clean up and get started on schoolwork, but before you know it lunch time rolled around and we weren’t even halfway done. It was frustrating for everyone. No one wants to still do school after lunch. Not only did our mornings drag on and on, but the kids were usually pretty grumpy! They were frustrated that morning free time didn’t last all day and they had to stop doing something fun in order to work.

Obviously we needed a mental and structural change so Sam and I had a discussion about it one night and reminisced the days when Andrew would get up and practically have school done before breakfast. It was awesome. No poking, prodding, scolding, yelling, or frustration from us, he just got it done. We realized that although we loved the kids’ reading habits, spending hours reading in bed every morning was actually contributing to less than desirable behavior.

So we outlawed reading and playing Lego’s before breakfast. To give them something to do instead, we introduced the Magical School Fairy (aka Mom) who prepped their assignments ahead of time (which she never did before) and had them waiting on the bedroom floor. The kids usually wake up around 6:30am and many of their assignments are self-driven. They can complete those before breakfast, and leave Spelling, Math, and other group studies for after.

In the last week, we’ve seen a vast improvement in attitude, timely completion of schoolwork, and overall its just been a better schedule. Even Cara wants her assignments, and the other two kids are great at helping her read the instructions and know what she should do. Many nights the kids will ask before bed if the Magical School Fairy will be coming that night (as we don’t do book school every day) so they can be prepared.

The downside for the Magical School Fairy is that she sometimes doesn’t have time to correct school work and give out new assignments until after the kids are in bed. Last night, she was up until midnight putting groceries away (Costco trip), correcting school work, and trying to get stuff done. While the change has been good for the kids (so far), I definitely have some scheduling that I still need to work out for me!

Categories
Backpacking Fitness & Recipes

Airstream Kitchen: Whole Grain Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars

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We discovered these delectable treats as I was looking for a way to pack a dessert in to the Apostle Islands for Andrew’s birthday.  Made with whole wheat flour & ground flaxseed, I can at least pretend they are more healthy than regular chocolate chip cookies, right? At least until we add the marshmallow.

Whole Grain Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars

1 cup whole wheat flour
1 1/4 cups white flour
1 1/2 Tbsp ground flaxseed
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp sea salt
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 eggs
1 tbsp vanilla
1 cups semi-sweet or dark chocolate chips
Large, toasted marshmallows (optional)
Hershey’s chocolate bars

Preheat oven to 375 degrees, and spray or grease a 9×13 pan.

In a medium bowl, cream butter, then add sugars and mix until creamy. Mix in eggs and vanilla. Gradually stir in flours, baking soda, and salt until completely mixed. Really you should mix these all separately first, but I always just mix the soda and salt in the measuring cup with the flour after dumping a little in the bowl to make room. Call me lazy. Or just efficient.

Add chocolate chips until just mixed in.

Spread mixture evenly in prepared pan. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden brown. Cool in pan, cut into bars.

These are easy to wrap individually and take hiking or backpacking, or cover and store in a cool, dry place.

We roasted marshmallows over the fire, stuck a piece of Hershey chocolate inside, and then smashed them on top of the cookie bars.

I don’t think we’ll ever eat a regular S’more again.

Whole Grain Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars with Marshmallows. Delicious and slightly healthier than regular cookies!