(To the t-loggers who enter your kind words in the
“comments” at the bottom, thank you for that but please, please sign your name
so I know who you are, Nice Person!
Also, I’ve been asked if this is a motorhome trip. No. We
are only here for a week. We flew into
MKE and will fly back this Saturday.)
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Looking out from our deck at the Algoma Beach Motel |
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Algoma Pierhead Light |
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Roberto and the light. You can't get out to the light unless you swim part of the way. |
There are 11 historic lighthouses on the Door County
peninsula.
The stories at the few we’ve
visited seem to be related to shipwrecks that created the need but not this
one.
In 1878, about 8 miles north of the
Algoma Pierhead Light, the schooner Daniel Lyons was northbound to New York and
the Kate Gillett was headed south to Chicago carrying a load of fence
posts.
They wound up on a collision
course and the Daniel Lyons turned sharply to starboard but this evasive effort
did not pay off.
The Kate Gillett
impaled the Daniel Lyons punching a hole in her hull amidships.
The ship that did the hole-punching kept the
hole-punched ship afloat until all the crew were rescued, then the ships
disengaged and the Daniel Lyons sank.
It
now lies more than 100 feet below the waters of Lake Michigan and is an
historic landmark and archeological exploration site.
I surmise that if the Great Lakes were ever
empty of water, a million ships would be found on the bottom.
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Out past the breakwater, goin' fishin.' Nope, not this girl! |
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Rob standing at Christmas Tree Ship Point. The Algoma Pierhead Light is way out there. |
Algoma was the home of many captains and crew of the
Christmas Tree Ships. In the late 1800s
and early 1900s, 52 schooners transported Christmas trees from up north to
Milwaukee and Chicago, passing by Algoma. Several of the schooners lost the
battle with the winter gales. “Christmas
Tree Ship Point” is designated here to honor those who braved the angry lake to
deliver Christmas trees.
On the way north, we found Wienke’s Farm Market. It’s actually a working farm featuring wonderful
huge fresh zucchinis, beautiful corn on the cob and other shiny vegetables,
cherry pies, homemade cookies, fresh cheese and curds, brats and other smoked
meats including salmon pulled from Lake Michigan, jellies, jams and
peppernuts. Peppernuts (pfeffernüse) are a small cookie rolled in
the thousands by the Krauts including moi as a child. They are about ½” in diameter and I rolled
about a million of them. They sell for
$8.50 per bag of about 20. I may have
missed my calling!
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Wienke's Farm Market |
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Inside the wonderful Wienke's Market |
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Smoked meats galore! |
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Bearcats is a fish market and smokehouse. |
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YUM! The ears are HUGE! |
I took a stab and we wound up at “the best restaurant in
Bailey’s Harbor.” There are tables in
the grass in the back yard a few steps from the lake. It isn’t a sunny day, kind of gloomy as a
matter of fact, but it’s warm and being on the water is a nice touch for a
couple of desert rats who don’t see water at home. The building was constructed in 1908 by
August Schram and was a tavern and dance hall.
Poor old Gus died when he was 36 from a tooth infection. His widow remarried. The tavern stayed but out with the dance
hall, in with the ice cream parlor.
Later, another owner continued the tradition and it is still a tavern
and restaurant, the Harbor Fish Market and Grille. We learned that the restaurant features a
fish boil 4 evenings a week but the management here decided to upgrade it to a
lobster boil. The damage for attendees
is $70 per person. Our bill tonight for
a whitefish boil will be $25 each.
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Our table on the grass at the Harbor Fish Market and Grille |
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The black kettle in the foreground is the centerpiece of the lobster boil. |
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August Schram's original tavern and dance hall, 1908 |
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The same building 115 years later |
After our delicious perch lunch and a few side trips in
an attempt to spot the Bailey's Harbor lighthouse, which never happened, we continued north
along the water to the tippy top of the peninsula to the Harbor Light Inn at
Gill’s Rock. We are in the First Mate’s
room on the second floor overlooking the water.
The water is Green Bay. Humbly I
will admit something: Until a couple of
years ago, I didn’t know that Green Bay was actually a body of water. Up till now, in true fashion of a devoted
fan, I guess I thought that Green Bay was just the name of a town that was
named after the Green Bay Packers! Who
knew?!
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This Viking cruiseliner anchored near our motel in Algoma. A tender carries tourists back and forth to land to see the haps. |