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	<title>Under the Rainbow</title>
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	<description>Ecosocialism or Barbarism</description>
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		<title>Days 60 &amp; 61: Journey&#8217;s End (8/17-18)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/23/days-60-61-journeys-end-817-18/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Aug 2011 02:34:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I didn&#8217;t write anything yesterday, once again because  I was busy enjoying the company of a friend until I was too sleepy to keep my eyelids open. I began the morning with a simple breakfast while hiding from mosquitoes in my tent. I left Shiocton at a usual time. I headed south on pleasant country [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=873&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/23/days-60-61-journeys-end-817-18/#gallery-1-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I didn&#8217;t write anything yesterday, once again because  I was busy enjoying the company of a friend until I was too sleepy to keep my eyelids open.</p>
<p>I began the morning with a simple breakfast while hiding from mosquitoes in my tent. I left Shiocton at a usual time. I headed south on pleasant country roads while tuning into Wisconsin Public Radio for some variety. The discussion at first focused on whether Governor Scott Walker should be recalled, for which the guests were a representative think-tanky liberal and a heartless reptile of a Republican ex-Senator. Then there was lighter talk about the worst ideas of all time, which put me in a better mood and kept me entertained.</p>
<p>In Hortonville, I picked up the Wiowash Trail, a rail-trail through a woodsy corridor between cornfields and marshes. Wisconsin invented the rail-trail, but didn&#8217;t bother advancing with the rest of the country when most states paved theirs. Almost all of the rail-trails in the state are still covered with crushed limestone, which is a slower ride than pavement and dirties your bike up. The Wiowash even had a grassy center strip, but at least some rain the previous night kept the dust down. The trail was also shady and pleasant and the most direct route to Oshkosh. I had no need to hurry.</p>
<p>I stopped for my first break in Oshkosh on the UW campus beside the Fox River. Then I continued south on U.S. 45, which stayed near the shore of Lake Winnebago, though the view was blocked for most of the way by houses with large yards. The traffic on this stretch was light.</p>
<p>I stopped in downtown Fond du Lac to call my friend Lucas and let him know my ETA. It was early enough that I decided not to eat lunch until I got to his house.</p>
<p>What should have been an easy five miles out to the house ended up taking over an hour of confusion and frustration. First I hit every red light in Fond du Lac. Then I found that U.S. 151 had been recently upgraded to a controlled-access highway and no longer intersected roads that were on my bike map. I illegally rode the shoulder to the first exit, a county highway that didn&#8217;t exist on my map, and tried to figure how to get from there to the country road I needed to be on. Exasperated, I finally called Lucas again and argued over directions for ten minutes, ultimately figuring out how to get there without much further difficulty.</p>
<p>Under Lucas&#8217;s East German flag, I pulled into the driveway, parked my bike in the garage, and took in my stuff. After a shower, we went out for lunch at a Greek place in town. We spent the afternoon watching the documentary <em>The War At Home</em>, about Vietnam War protests in Madison, and grilling brats over a backyard campfire.</p>
<p>After a good night&#8217;s rest, I said my goodbyes to Lucas and his family and hit the road for Beaver Dam. Most of the trip was on the Wild Goose State Trail, another rail-trail that took me past Horicon Marsh. This huge national wildlife refuge is the largest wetlands complex in Wisconsin, a beautiful mix of open marsh and tallgrass prairie that hosts millions of migratory birds representing well over 100 species. I got off the trail to ride the three-mile auto tour loop at the north end of the marsh, and I hiked a 3/4-mile boardwalk trail. Hundreds of swallows darted around me as I walked, and yellowlegs, white herons, green herons, and great blue herons stalked the marshes for edible morsels or stood like statues in the water. The place was fabulous.</p>
<p>Riding on through the sun-dappled woods, I contemplated my plan for the afternoon. I would drive to Madison, take care of errands related to moving in, then go out to meet my parents at lake Kegonsa State Park and camp with them for the evening.</p>
<p>My plans for a smooth homecoming would soon be shattered. I arrived back at my car at noon. There it sat, in Lot 48 of the trailer court, just as I had left it&#8211;or so I thought at first.</p>
<p>The first inkling of a problem was that it wouldn&#8217;t start. No problem, I had expected this. I asked the residents of Lot 48, Vanessa and Jeff, for a jump, and it started right up. Then I tried driving off. The back-left wheel wouldn&#8217;t move. It was locked, the brake seized up. With Jeff&#8217;s help, I jacked it up, and we took off the wheel and finally got the brake to pop out. Then it wouldn&#8217;t start again and had to be jumped; it appeared I would need an entirely new battery.</p>
<p>Before I tried driving again, luckily, Jeff noticed a rattle, examined the engine, and pointed out a bolt that had come out of a belt pulley (which later turned out to be the balancer). I shut it off again and jacked the car up, this time on the front-right side, and spent half an hour sweating and swearing, slowly cranking the bolt back in with my wrench. Then we jumped the car again, and the bolt came right back out!</p>
<p>At this point, I decided it was time to call for a tow. Jeff took me into town to a body shop, and the guy there called the local tow truck driver for me. Half an hour later, a flatbed showed up at the trailer court to haul my car into town. The mechanic&#8217;s diagnosis was not good. About $800 of not good. The alternator and the AC compressor are seized up; I needed to replace the alternator and balancer, not to mention the battery, to even drive it again.</p>
<p>What can be done. Shit happens. I should have asked Vanessa to run the car for a while every few days to keep things from rusting. But I didn&#8217;t, and now I am to suffer the consequence of built-up entropy on a complicated machine created by imperfect man.</p>
<p>I feel frustrated and defeated at the end of my journey. At least my parents are on their way to pick me up, so plans for the weekend can go forward without my car. I also have a good surplus in the bank right now, although I fear it will drain away fast as the school year begins and I live without a paycheck until October.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s life. Living on the road is cheap and easy in some ways, hard in others. Coming home is expensive and has its own balance of plusses and negatives. Life goes on. The journey never really ends, it just winds around and changes scenery, like a road through the woods and prairies.</p>
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		<title>Day 59: The &#8220;Last Supper&#8221; Ride (8/16)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/18/day-59-the-last-supper-ride-816/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2011 21:23:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I titled this entry for lack of the ability to come up with a better name and because I just cooked and ate my last camping dinner on the road. I&#8217;m staying in a little town park in the village of Shiocton, which has swingsets, bathrooms, and grills, but no picnic tables. I easily found [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=870&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/18/day-59-the-last-supper-ride-816/#gallery-2-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I titled this entry for lack of the ability to come up with a better name and because I just cooked and ate my last camping dinner on the road. I&#8217;m staying in a little town park in the village of Shiocton, which has swingsets, bathrooms, and grills, but no picnic tables. I easily found enough firewood to roast corn and boil pasta over the grill, and used up almost all of the dry dinner food I had left.</p>
<p>After a beautiful sunrise, it was another warm, sunny day&#8211;downright hot in the afternoon. After leaving the Jesse Lake campsite, I rode south along highway 55. About ten miles down, I entered the Menominee Indian Reservation, one of my new favorite places in Wisconsin.</p>
<p>This reservation is so big it is also its own county, a rectangular block of almost uninterrupted forest surrounded on all sides by corn fields. The road through it was beautiful and tunnel-lake under a dense canopy, and stuck closely to the picturesque Wolf River. Rafting outfitters were common along the way, as were slow vehicle turnouts with parking areas beside the river. I&#8217;d say this is one of the prettiest stretches of road in Wisconsin, and I very much enjoyed the ride.</p>
<p>I stopped for a break at Kashena Falls, near the south end of the reservation. This cascade of the Wolf River over a four-foot or so ledge is a sacred place to the Menominee, according to a roadside interpretive sign. It used to be the upper limit of the sturgeon spawning run. There are still sturgeon in the Wolf River, but now the river is dammed ten miles downstream at Shawano, so the ancient fish can only make it up that far. White people just can&#8217;t seem to leave rivers the way they naturally belong.</p>
<p>Back on the bike, I cruised through the reservation seat of Kashena and rode a trafficky eight-mile stretch to Shawano, arriving in town at 10:45. I made some phone calls and used the library for an hour, then found a city park a few blocks away to eat lunch in.</p>
<p>The temperature had climbed into the upper 80s, and a stiff south wind made the afternoon&#8217;s 28 miles to Shiocton tough. At least the road was interesting as it wound its way through classic Wisconsin pastoral country. I made it to my destination around 3:45 and found a tidy local cafe with ice cream (in Wisconsin, it&#8217;s a given that any town with 500 or more people will have an ice cream place). I drank a delicious chocolate malt, which cooled me down considerably.</p>
<p>After enjoying my treat, I backtracked half a mile to the little town park that allows camping. A dirt track led from the road down through swampy bottomland to the river at a nice sandy spot. There were already two guys there fishing, and they were catching quite a lot&#8211;northern pike, smallmouth bass, bluegill, and even a walleye. I quickly changed and jumped in for a swim. It felt fantastic to wash off two days&#8217; worth of accumulated grime. I relaxed for a while on the shady river bank before going back to set up camp.</p>
<p>Tomorrow&#8217;s ride to Lucas&#8217;s house in Fond du Lac is a very manageable 54 miles. I am going to try riding the Wiowash State Trail to Oshkosh and U.S. 45 along Lake Winnebago. There are plenty of alternate routes if I need them.</p>
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		<title>Day 58: Through the Northeast (8/15)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/16/day-58-through-the-northeast-815/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Aug 2011 17:19:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Today was a long day. Not bad, just long. I cooked eggs for breakfast and got out of Buffalo Lake Campground at 7:40. I rode south on County E and east on County D past many a lake and woodsy resort. I kept going through the hamlet of Sugar Camp and ten more miles on [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=868&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/16/day-58-through-the-northeast-815/#gallery-3-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>Today was a long day. Not bad, just long.</p>
<p>I cooked eggs for breakfast and got out of Buffalo Lake Campground at 7:40. I rode south on County E and east on County D past many a lake and woodsy resort. I kept going through the hamlet of Sugar Camp and ten more miles on County A to Three Lakes, where I took my first real break. The sky was fair with scattered clouds and the wind was light.</p>
<p>Three Lakes was a charming little Wisconsin resort-area town. I found the local library and borrowed their notebook computer for a few hours to catch up on all the internet business I needed to do. I got done around noon, and despite my hearty breakfast I was feeling rather hungry, so I sat on a shady bench outside the library and ate a good sized lunch.</p>
<p>After lunch I felt super-charged riding down highway 32 and County S to highway 55, bypassing Crandon and stopping after 30 miles in Mole Lake. This community is the seat of the Mole Lake Sokaogan Ojibwe. This tribe played a rather heroic role in defeating the Crandon Mine proposal by buying up the mineral rights to the land where the sulfide mine would have been after a 20-year struggle against it. Had the mine been built, it would have poisoned the Wolf River with sulfates, acid and heavy metals, killing off its invaluable wild rice stands and possibly its ancient sturgeon population.</p>
<p>The afternoon had become a warm one. After Mole Lake, the road got hillier, slowing my progress. It was interesting, though, a pleasant mix of forest and pastoral farms, and I entertained myself by taking pictures of the barns I passed. I stopped after ten miles in Pickerel to munch on a wild apple and find a county map with campgrounds on it. The nearest campground was about 14 more miles away, just past Hollister.</p>
<p>The map didn&#8217;t make a distinction between public and private campgrounds, so while I thought I was looking for a national forest campground on Sawyer Lake Road, it turned out to be a private bar and RV park. I passed up this establishment and went down a big hill looking for the &#8220;real&#8221; campground, and finally stopped a mile off the highway to ask a resident of one of the lakefront homes along the lane where it was. He told me that the only developed campground was the RV park, but there were three very pretty primitive campsites maintained by the forest service on Jesse Lake, about a mile further on. The right choice was obvious. I found the dirt track that led to the primitive sites, which turned out to be fantastic. At a parking area, a trail led down to a large site tucked into a beautiful grove of hemlocks right beside the marshy lake, with a metal fire grate, rough-hewn log benches and a &#8220;wilderness throne&#8221;-style privy. The only downside was that the lake was not swimmable, and it was even hard to filter water from the one-plank dock without getting vegetation in my filter bottle.</p>
<p>I set up camp and cooked dinner on a wide upended cut log. After a hearty meal and clean-up, I went to hang a bear bag from the sturdy limb of a young hemlock about 12 feet off the ground. I got the rope in perfect position on only the second throw, and felt pretty proud of myself until I tried to hoist the packs and realized I hadn&#8217;t tied the rope adequately when it slipped off my mini-beaner. I managed to retrieve the end of the rope using a long stick, but I still didn&#8217;t have the right kind of knot, so it happened again! This time I had to pull the rope down and start over. Of course, after several unsuccessful throwing attempts, the mini-beaner got hopelessly wrapped in a knot around the limb.</p>
<p>I already lost one good caribeaner. I was bound and determined not to sacrifice my mini-beaner as well. I tried several times to haul myself up the nearly limbless lower trunk, and only ended up scraping myself up in the process. I even tried to screw an eye hook I found lying around the site into the trunk to stand on, which didn&#8217;t work. I felt like that guy Bill on the Red Green Show, who is always trying to demonstrate a new way to do things, only to be hopelessly defeated by his own cockamamie schemes. Finally, though, I found a scheme that worked: I made a makeshift ladder by stacking three cut logs of different diameters, flat end to flat end one on top of the other so they were fairly stable, which got me high enough to untie the knot and retrieve the beaner. Having finally learned my lesson not to use a beaner as a throw weight, I tied some sticks on the end of the rope and managed to get it over the limb in a god spot, then hung my bags.</p>
<p>The twilight is long finished and I&#8217;m tired. Tomorrow I&#8217;ll continue down 55 along the Wolf River to Shawano (pronounced <em>Shawno</em>), then cut south to Shiocton, where I&#8217;ll likely camp. It should be a shorter day if I stop there, which would still put me in easy range of Fond du Lac Wednesday.</p>
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		<title>Day 57: North Woods Wisconsin (8/14)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/15/day-57-north-woods-wisconsin-814/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 16:46:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I got out of Copper Falls pretty early this morning. The sky was a blanket of low clouds, but they all burned off by the time I made my first stop in Glidden. The rest of the day was sunny bbut cool, with a light southeast breeze that didn&#8217;t help but wasn&#8217;t too hard on [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=864&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/15/day-57-north-woods-wisconsin-814/#gallery-4-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I got out of Copper Falls pretty early this morning. The sky was a blanket of low clouds, but they all burned off by the time I made my first stop in Glidden. The rest of the day was sunny bbut cool, with a light southeast breeze that didn&#8217;t help but wasn&#8217;t too hard on me either.</p>
<p>My bigest challenge and frustration today was, in fact, renewed chafing soreness on my posterior. I think I need to replace my padded undershorts with something else. I have no idea what.</p>
<p>It was 16 miles from Glidden to Park Falls, and I made it there about 10:30. I was already ahead of what I had planned, which was to camp 20 miles east of Park Falls at Fishtrap Campground. Instead I decided to have lunch at Fishtrap and continue on to the Northern Highland American Legion State Forest east of Woodruff. As it turned out, there was no sign on Shady Knoll Road for Fishtrap Campground, so I missed it entirely. I had lunch a couple miles further on at Round Lake Recreation Area.</p>
<p>Round Lake was the site of a restored logging dam, a big wooden sluiceway with gates that can be closed to build up water behind it, then opened to release the water to carry logs downstream. It itsn&#8217;t used anymore, but was restored as a museum piece, a relic of an ugly era of boundless greed and careless destruction of the great pine forest. After eating lunch, I hiked the interpretive trail over the dam and along the river, appreciating the loaded blackberry bushes much more than the works of man.</p>
<p>I hit the road for 24 more miles east on highway 70 to Woodruff, where I picked up a few groceries and enjoyed a giant ice cream cone from the local sweets shop. Three miles further east in the state forest, along County Highway J, was Carroll Lake Campground. I would have stayed there, but you had to register at a different campground that would have meant backtracking and getting off my route. So I continued on another few miles to Buffalo Lake Campground, a much prettier spot a bit off the highway where I could register on site.</p>
<p>My first order of business at Buffalo Lake was a swim in the clear water. My campsite came with its own steps down to a narrow, sandy beach. It was the perfect spot. I cooked a hearty dinner, registered with the camp host, then went back to the shore to relax and write. As I was getting ready to head into the tent, my neighbors in the next site over arrived and invited me over to have a beer and relax by their campfire. I took them up on it, and enjoyed a couple more hours of social time.</p>
<p>Tomorrow I&#8217;m hoping my butt doesn&#8217;t hurt as much and I can get down to the first campground along the Wolf River, a longish ride. This will mean I&#8217;ll be able to get to Shawano or somewhere south of there on Tuesday and not have to ride too far on Wednesday to end up in Fond du Lac, giving me more time to spend there with my friend Lucas.</p>
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		<title>Days 55 and 56: Chequamegon Love (8/12-13)</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 16:34:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I didn&#8217;t write anything yesterday, in part because it was a day off from biking, but also because I was too busy enjoying the company of good friends. I spent yesterday morning helping Xander plaster the outside wall of his house. After a big fajita lunch, Xander, Melissa and I drove out to see the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=862&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/15/days-55-and-56-chequamegon-love-812-13/#gallery-5-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I didn&#8217;t write anything yesterday, in part because it was a day off from biking, but also because I was too busy enjoying the company of good friends.</p>
<p>I spent yesterday morning helping Xander plaster the outside wall of his house. After a big fajita lunch, Xander, Melissa and I drove out to see the land where Melissa is running a therapy program for children with autism, then down to the White River to swim and collect some of nature&#8217;s bounty. We found summer apples that were already sweet, and a plethora of wild blackberries and raspberries to snack on and take home for pancake making. In the evening we had a smelt fry at the house and ate fish tacos with my friends Zach and Christel and their kids Oleana (3) and Mirabel (6 mos.). The day was nicely capped off with music-making in the living room.</p>
<p>This morning (8/13) I used yesterday&#8217;s berry harvest and some of my leftover blueberries to make very fruity pancakes. Xander, Melissa and I had been invited out to pick purple raspberries at the home of Bill Hart, whom I met at Thursday&#8217;s picnic. We spent an hour or so at the farmer&#8217;s market downtown, then drove out just west of town to Bill&#8217;s place. His bushes were loaded with big, soft, purple berries. We picked several quarts&#8217; worth, and I filled one of my old Gatorade containers for the road.</p>
<p>We arrived back at the market just as it was closing down. As often happens on that block of Chapple Avenue, I ran into more friends I haven&#8217;t seen in quite a while, and we all ended up chatting for at least another hour. Finally, I said my goodbyes and got back on the road heading south.</p>
<p>I only had about 26 miles to ride to get to Copper Falls State Park, and I did them without a stop, arriving at the park at 3:30. The greeter at the entrance station put me in an overflow campsite, which happens to be the nicest site in the park. It&#8217;s very roomy, private, and close to the Bad River.</p>
<p>I had plenty of time to swim in the river, get camp set up, and take an afternoon hike. After seeing the familiar waterfalls, I walked a very nice loop trail that I&#8217;ve somehow never been on before. I had plenty of firewood at the campsite, so I made dinner over a fire, roasting purple potatoes from the farmers&#8217; market and frying grilled cheese on cranberry walnut bread from the bakery. I am continuing to enjoy the fire&#8217;s friendly ambiance as I write.</p>
<p>Tomorrow I will journey south as far as Park Falls, then leave highway 13 behind to head east into the Chequamegon National Forest to camp. It seem strange that my trip is nearing its end, but I am ready for it&#8211;ready to be settled a while after a long summer on the road.</p>
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		<title>Day 54: Around the Bay (8/11)</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 16:23:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I got out of camp around 7:00 this morning. Leaving my tent set up, I hiked the beach-side boardwalk into the State Park and continued around the beautiful rocky point. Along the way, I stopped to snack on sweet raspberries hanging thick like red lanterns on the bushes. At the park office, I chatted with one [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=860&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/15/day-54-around-the-bay-811/#gallery-6-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I got out of camp around 7:00 this morning. Leaving my tent set up, I hiked the beach-side boardwalk into the State Park and continued around the beautiful rocky point. Along the way, I stopped to snack on sweet raspberries hanging thick like red lanterns on the bushes. At the park office, I chatted with one old co-worker and the new park supervisor, who had just replaced my old boss when he retired over the winter. He seemed like a nice guy and even offered me a ride down to the campground, but I wanted to keep hiking.</p>
<p>I was ready to ride when I got back to the Town park. I packed up my stuff and headed for the ferry dock. By the time the boat dropped us in Bayfield it was noon, which I decided was late enough to have some lunch. I ate in the community park near the marina and watched a group of kids and their day camp counselor play water balloon games. One of the kids had on a t-shirt from the YMCA in Cincinnati where I attended summer day camp when I was his age and worked as a teenager. Small world.</p>
<p>A few people questioned me about my trip while I was eating lunch. While I always try to be polite, I have to admit it gets old after a while being a curiosity and answering the same set of questions over and over. It occurs to me that people don&#8217;t generally walk up to other picnickers who look &#8220;normal&#8221; and start asking the details of their lives; it would be seen as tactlessly intrusive to do so. But somehow because I am seated next to a touring bike, it&#8217;s fine in many people&#8217;s minds to interrupt my lunch break to get me to tell them exactly what I am about. Often, I have trouble even answering the questions, because they don&#8217;t contain adequate parameters for explaining my multi-faceted summer experience. For example, a common question is, &#8220;where are you riding to?&#8221; I have to guess what time frame they&#8217;re after: today? This summer? My whole live? Give me some context here.</p>
<p>Here are the top ten questions I get asked, and how I often <em>feel like</em> answering them:<br />
1. &#8220;Where did you start from?&#8221; My mother&#8217;s womb.<br />
2. &#8220;Where are you going?&#8221; To wherever I end up.<br />
3. &#8220;How far do you ride in a day?&#8221; As far as I need or want to.<br />
4. &#8220;How far have you ridden?&#8221; Depends on the time frame.<br />
5. &#8220;How long have you been riding?&#8221; Since 7:30 this morning.<br />
6. Is this your first trip?&#8221; No, my parents took me camping as a baby and taught me to ride a bike when I was six.<br />
7. &#8220;How do you do it?&#8221; Step 1: Put feet on pedals. Step 2: Rotate pedals. Step 3: Repeat.<br />
8. &#8220;What do you eat?&#8221; Food.<br />
9. &#8220;Where do you stay at night?&#8221; Usually in my tent.<br />
10. &#8220;I couldn&#8217;t do that.&#8221; You&#8217;re right, but only because that&#8217;s what you think.</p>
<p>After lunch I decided to ride up the Brownstone Trail, a narrow, fairly smooth dirt path on an old rail grade that allowed me to avoid climbing the big hill to get out of town. This was a pretty, woodsy ride, which dumped me out at Pike&#8217;s Bay Marina. From there I continued down 13 past old familiar landmarks&#8211;Mt. Ashwabay, home of Big Top Chataqua; Bayview Park and Sioux Beach; Houghton Falls, the garden shop, and Good Thyme Restaurant. In Washburn, I made an obligatory stop at Chequamegon Books and across the street at the Washburn Museum and Culture Center, both of which are housed in beautiful old brownstone buildings. Then I carried on ten more miles to Ashland.</p>
<p>After a brief stop at the Black Cat Coffeehouse, I made my way over to my friend Xander&#8217;s house. Nobody was home yet, so I read for half an hour, when Xander got home, followed closely by his partner and my other good friend Melissa.</p>
<p>Tonight there was a picnic at the Bandshell to update people on the status of the proposed Penokee Mine. This would be a 22-mile-long open gash in the earth where now there lies serene forest, beautiful trout streams, waterfalls, and the source of the surface and ground water of the Bad River Watershed, which feeds the Kakagon Slough, Lake Superior&#8217;s largest wetland and a huge wild rice production place. It seems mineral and energy companies will stop at nothing to demolish the most sacred, beautiful places for a little more profit.</p>
<p>I followed Melissa down to the picnic early to help set up. I volunteered where I could to get food prepared and schmoozed with a number of good folks who I haven&#8217;t seen in a while. The picnic was well attended, and there were great presentations on the mine by Bob Tammen and Al Gedicks, both of whome I have worked extensively with on the issue.</p>
<p>Tomorrow I&#8217;ll be sticking around Ashland. I plan to leave after I catch at least some of Saturday morning&#8217;s farmer&#8217;s market. It&#8217;s really nice to be here again, catching up with old friends and visiting good memories. I&#8217;ll be in Madison in one week.</p>
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		<title>Day 53: A Berry Nice Day (8/10)</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2011 15:59:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Like many evenings this summer, I am journaling on a beautiful lake shore as the sun goes down. Tonight, howeer, I am on my favorite beach on the greatest of lakes. I&#8217;m back at Big Bay. I left Jess and Ivan&#8217;s this morning before either of them were stirring. In the brightr morning sunshine I [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=858&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/15/day-53-a-berry-nice-day-810/#gallery-7-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>Like many evenings this summer, I am journaling on a beautiful lake shore as the sun goes down. Tonight, howeer, I am on my favorite beach on the greatest of lakes. I&#8217;m back at Big Bay.</p>
<p>I left Jess and Ivan&#8217;s this morning before either of them were stirring. In the brightr morning sunshine I rode to Cornucopia, where I stopped in at the Siskiwit Coffee Shop, then ate a late breakfast by the beach. Then I headed up into the Bayfield Hills on Highway 13. I have always wanted to ride this very scenic, hilly, woodsy stretch of road. Wild turkeys and sandhill cranes took flight at my approach.</p>
<p>The most direct route to Tom Glazen&#8217;s farm, a two-mile stretch of gravel road, was closed due to a bridge out, so I had to take a longer detour up through the orchard country above Bayfield. Aside from the climb, this was quite a nice ride along low-traffic paved country roads. I made it to North Wind Farm around 11:30 and found Tom in the fruit shed dealing with customers. After they left (apparently to his relief), we shot the breeze for a while, then I went out to the berry patch and picked a pound and a half of the sweetest organic blueberries to be found anywhere.</p>
<p>I lingered for a while, conversing with Tom&#8217;s partner Anne and a guy stopping in who I knew vaguely. Then I carefully packed up my squishable fruit and headed toward town. I made a brief stop at Blue Vista Farm, which has very nice flower gardens (and lots of their own berries, but their organic ones are more expensive than Tom&#8217;s, and it&#8217;s just more commercial).</p>
<p>In town, I stopped in the Bayfield Carnegie Library to use the internet for an hour or so, then got ice cream at the Candy Shop (disappointingly, they no longer put a giant malted milk ball in the bottom of their waffle cones). After wandering around downtown a bit, I headed to the ferry dock and caught the next boat over to Madeline Island.</p>
<p>In the island town of LaPointe, I found Tom Hart, the bike mechanic who sold me my bicycle back in 2004. He still sets up shop on the island once a week during the summer. He recognized me and the bike and was excited to hear about the use I&#8217;ve gotten out of it. While we were conversing, a guy on a mountain bike loaded with camping gear rode up to ask about his tire pressure. I wound up asking if he wanted to share a campsite, and we rode up to the Town Park together. His name was Mike.</p>
<p>The Town Park campground was quite full, and we grabbed the last non-electric campsite. After swimming at the beach, I made dinner for two, and we ate and socialized before I went off to do my journal entry for the day.</p>
<p>Being in this peaceful place brings back so many memories. Tomorrow morning I plan to hike the boardwalk over to the state park side of the bay and go around the point, and hopefully run into some old co-workers at the park office. Then it&#8217;s a short ride to Ashland for a Bandshell picnic and time with good friends there.</p>
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		<title>Day 52: Back on the Road (8/9)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/10/day-52-back-on-the-road-89/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Aug 2011 18:43:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I had a wonderful time in Duluth over the weekend. I feel like it was a break in my bike trip, though. A lot happened, but except for running a few errands, I was on my bike very little. Thus, for journaling purposes, I&#8217;ve decided to skip over the four days at home and pick [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=855&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/10/day-52-back-on-the-road-89/#gallery-8-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I had a wonderful time in Duluth over the weekend. I feel like it was a break in my bike trip, though. A lot happened, but except for running a few errands, I was on my bike very little. Thus, for journaling purposes, I&#8217;ve decided to skip over the four days at home and pick up with today as Day 52. This seems fitting, since it is the start of a new journal book and a new, final phase of my long journey, one which has already been and should continue to be relaxing and fun.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll briefly summarize my time in Duluth. I got to see and spend time with most of my friends and unofficial family who live there. I spent much of Friday walking around town, relaxing, and enjoying just being in Duluth. On Saturday there was a grillout at Enger Tower in my honor; we got stormed on, but everyone was able to crowd into the cozy picnic shelter with a crackling fire in the hearth and have a great time. On Sunday, I accompanied my former housemates Cole and Colour (Cole&#8217;s 5-year-old son) to St. Paul for their relatives&#8217; birthday party at the Como Zoo. Monday was spent catching up on the news and uploading photos to the blog, and Monday evening I got a good chance to catch up with some friends I didn&#8217;t get to see over the weekend. Thank you to everyone who helped make the last few days super special!</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I stayed over Monday night at my friend Amy&#8217;s apartment. This morning I said goodbye and hit the road around 7:30. I rode from the East Hillside through town along the Lakewalk and the old familiar route to the Bong Bridge. As I crossed the high bikeway over the bay, it struck me that this would probably be the last time I rode this way for a long, long time. It put me in a nostalgic mood.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I was business-like getting through Superior. I rode 21st Street to 5th Avenue through East Superior, then crossed the highway at the Nemadji River to the Osaugie Trail, the rail-trail that runs the length of the city&#8217;s northeast edge. It could really use to be repaved. The Nemadji River was even browner than usual; apparently it has been really high lately and is largely responsible for the lake&#8217;s unusually high load of sediment and floating debris.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>At Moccasin Mike Road, the city&#8217;s eastern edge, I got on the expressway for the mile to the Highway 13 exit, then turned to ride this familiar road east the rest of the way to my destination. A strong west wind pushed me along the whole way, which I was glad for because east winds off the lake occur frequently along this stretch and would have made the ride not as fun. As it was, I sailed, getting just a bit damp from a few sprinkles that moved through with the low, racing clouds that blanketed most of the sky. It was a cool day, with a high only in the 60s.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I made it to Port Wing around 11:30 and stopped there for lunch. Then I rode the eight hillier miles to Herbster and arrived at my friends Jess and Ivan&#8217;s house around 1:15. Jess, who works nights every other week, was just getting up, and Ivan cooked us all Swedish pancakes, which of course I couldn&#8217;t refuse despite just having PB&amp;J for lunch.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I spent the afternoon earning my keep by helping lime wash the outside of their strawbale house, which is in the final stages of construction and a lot more &#8220;done&#8221; than last time I saw it. This work was actually great fun, getting to do something useful with my hands while hanging out and socializing. Around supper time we got washed up and grilled venison, brats, and a fillet of fresh lake trout I had picked up in Port Wing. Some of Jess and Ivan&#8217;s college friends came over, and we all had ourselves a feast. I so overate that I had to go lie down for a while, but got up to spend some quality hours hanging out around the bonfire before bed.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>While showering for dinner, I used a newish bathroom scale to weigh myself. For the record, it said I weigh 137.2 pounds, which is the lightest I&#8217;ve been since I was somewhere around 10 years old. This might have something to do with my compunction to eat too much&#8211;but it might not. The food was very, very good.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Tomorrow I&#8217;m planning more visits to friends and special places around the Bayfield Peninsula. This will include berry picking at North Wind Organic Farm, the home of Tom Galazen. I&#8217;m thinking I&#8217;ll camp out at Big Bay Town Park on Madeline Island and pay a visit to some former co-workers at the state park there.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Day 51: Coming Home (8/4)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/05/day-51-coming-home-84/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 06 Aug 2011 00:59:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/?p=568</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I didn&#8217;t sleep that well last night. I was too excited about the prospect of getting to Duluth today. At 5:20 AM, pretty much as soon as I could see the ground outside my tent, I was up and packing. It was a warm morning and the flies and mosquitos hadn&#8217;t taken the night off, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=568&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/05/day-51-coming-home-84/#gallery-9-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>I didn&#8217;t sleep that well last night. I was too excited about the prospect of getting to Duluth today. At 5:20 AM, pretty much as soon as I could see the ground outside my tent, I was up and packing. It was a warm morning and the flies and mosquitos hadn&#8217;t taken the night off, so I ate my breakfast in the tent and wasted no time in breaking camp. In an hour&#8217;s time I was on the road.</p>
<p>The air was still and the sky filled with patchwork silver clouds as I rode through gently-rolling forest. I passed through Remer without stopping and took my first break at a gas station on the edge of Hill City. It was only 8:15 and I had done 24 miles. I only lingered long enough to down some Gatorade and gorp and refill water before hopping back on for the next 16 miles of flat marshland to Jacobson. There I crossed the Mississippi&#8211;quite a bit larger than at its headwaters in Itasca&#8211;and stopped at another gas station for a refill. The next 18-mile stretch brought me to Floodwood, my lunch stop.</p>
<p>With a light southwesterly breeze and mostly flat forest and swamps to ride through, I reached Floodwood at 11:20. I stopped for lunch at the very nice highway rest area, which has a building with clean bathrooms and a neat little coffee shop inside. Even though it was early, I ate a hearty lunch, then rested a bit and called Coley (my former housemate) to let her know I&#8217;d be arriving in the afternoon. She was headed to Big Top Chataqua tonight and house-sitting for her mom through the weekend, so for now I&#8217;d have the old house to myself. We have made plans for hanging out during the day on Saturday and Sunday.</p>
<p>My mood after lunch only gained in excitement. I&#8217;ve been ready for a good break from riding for a while, and now I was on the home stretch along a segment of U.S. 2 that I have driven numerous times. I made a refill stop at the gas station by the highway 33 interchange, and soon after I was counting off the familiar landmarks of a route I used to drive when I had to pick up or drop off rural Lake Superior High School students. Soon enough, I made a left turn onto Morris Thomas Road, the most direct route east through Hermantown to home. I never realized driving this road just how awfully cracked up the pavement is. I bumped my way up and down the rolling hills of Hermantown, passing familiar streets in succession, not worrying about miles now, just closing in on my target. I cheered at the awesome sight of Lake Superior as I crested the last hill, then went flying down Piedmont Avenue, hung a left on Skyline Parkway (with its even more godawful surface), climbed passed the golf course, rounded the hill below Enger Tower (stopping to snap a few pics at the overlook), cruised down through my old neighborhood, and came to a halt in the driveway of my former house. It was 3:30. I had ridden just over 100 miles in nine hours. I was home.</p>
<p>As expected, no one was home, so I let myself in using the secret key, hauled in my stuff, and drank a beer Coley had left in the fridge at my request. It felt so, so, so good to be here. I threw my clothes in the laundry, took a shower, and spent the rest of the afternoon eating and relaxing.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t have any firm plans for tomorrow other than catching up on blogging and taking it easy. Perhaps I&#8217;ll do some hiking. Hopefully I&#8217;ll see some friends. Saturday there is a grillout in my honor up at Enger Tower, and I&#8217;m spending Sunday with Coley and Colour on a road trip to Como Park in St. Paul. I think it should be a nice, relaxing weekend.</p>
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		<title>Day 50: Great North Woods (8/3)</title>
		<link>http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/05/day-50-great-north-woods-83/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Aug 2011 15:17:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>northlandiguana</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The campground was full, but nothing stirred at 6:00 this morning. As the sun rose in the clear sky, I cooked myself a stellar breakfast of cheesy scrambled eggs and pancakes. Then I broke camp and headed for Douglas Lodge to do some exploring. The rollercoaster ride through the woods on the bike trail was [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=northlandiguana.wordpress.com&amp;blog=4024300&amp;post=566&amp;subd=northlandiguana&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://northlandiguana.wordpress.com/2011/08/05/day-50-great-north-woods-83/#gallery-10-slideshow">Click to view slideshow.</a>The campground was full, but nothing stirred at 6:00 this morning. As the sun rose in the clear sky, I cooked myself a stellar breakfast of cheesy scrambled eggs and pancakes. Then I broke camp and headed for Douglas Lodge to do some exploring.</p>
<p>The rollercoaster ride through the woods on the bike trail was quite thrilling. My legs felt well rested. At the lodge, I got right to hiking some of the trails that cut through the forest and around the small lakes that dot the southern part of the park. I hiked to the Allen Lake Fire Tower and climbed up it for the expansive view of gently-undulating forest. Then I looped back to the lodge on the North Country Trail, passing some backcountry campsites along the way. I did about 5 miles total.</p>
<p>I loved breathing in the aroma of the North Woods, being in the forest I had missed all summer. Unfortunately, though, I forgot my hat, and being as this is Northern Minnesota in midsummer, the mosquitos and biting flies were atrocious. I tried not to let them bother me, but I think mammals must be genetically programmed to find buzzing flies one of the world&#8217;s greatest annoyances. On the return portion of my loop, I did something I haven&#8217;t done once since starting my bike trip: I ran. I must have looked awfully silly running while beating at the swarms around my head with a paper map and pulling deer fly bodies out of my sopping hair.</p>
<p>I made it back to the lodge area around 10:15 with most of my blood supply intact. Hot and sweaty, I got a drink of Gatorade and poked around in the Forest Inn Gift Shop. at 10:45 it was time to hit the road.</p>
<p>Out on the highway, a pleasant westerly breeze helped me along at a good clip. It was a fantastic day weather-wise, sunny and dry. Without much of a break, I rode about 30 miles to the shore of Leech Lake. In LaPorte, I picked up the Paul Bunyan State Trail, a newly-paved segment of rail trail that parellels highway 200 to Walker but is back in the woods far enough to make it a very pretty ride.</p>
<p>On the shore of Leech Lake, I came upon a little resort with picnic tables and a deck overlooking the water, right next to the bike trail. It was 1:00 and I was hungry. Walker was still four miles distant, with no indication of any place else to stop before there. This looked like a good place to have lunch. Not many people were around, there were no &#8220;private property&#8221; or &#8220;no tresspassing&#8221; signs, and it just looked inviting to passing cyclists using the trail. I tend to think of resorts as semi-public places, and didn&#8217;t think anyone would mind my sitting down for a little lunch at one of the empty deck tables.</p>
<p>I was very wrong. After I had taken out all my stuff and commenced making a sandwich, the resort owner came by, looking like he was preparing for a boat trip out on the lake, and muttered something to me about this being private. He did not tell me to vacate the premises, only that I should have asked for permission. So I apologized and said I would finish soon and leave. Apparently I wasn&#8217;t quick enough though, because five minutes later he came back, red-faced, and picked up my bike (which is not light with the bags attached) and literally threw it on the ground near the trail, then started grabbing the stuff I had out on the table and throwing it all over the ground while yelling at me to get the hell off the property. When I tried gathering up the stuff he was making a mess of, he physically pushed me around, yelling at me the whole time to get out. I tried pointing out that it was kind of hard to leave while I was being assaulted, and finally got him to back off enough to let me throw my stuff together and haul it over to the bike trail.</p>
<p>I sat in the shade on the side of the trail to finish my lunch and try to calm my nerves. I find it ironic that of all the experiences I&#8217;ve had on this trip&#8211;passing close to grizzly bears and bull moose, dodging semis and hiding from wicked storms&#8211;the situation in which I felt the second-most threatened for my safety should come from a not-so-Minnesota-Nice resort owner. (I have to admit that the most dangerous incident was still my fording of the high creek in Glacier).</p>
<p>The incident tainted my mood a bit for the rest of the day. I made it to Walker fairly quickly after lunch, and made brief stops at the grocery store and the giant outfitters in downtown, Reed&#8217;s (I needed a new bear hang rope as I left my nice p-cord hanging as laundry line in Ada). I hardly got a mile out of town when my back tire deflated. There was nowhere to change the flat but along the sunny roadside, and it turned out to be one of those frustrating ones that you think you can patch but won&#8217;t work because the valve stem is busted. It took me half an hour to finally get my spare on and get back underway. Then I pedaled non-stop to the Mabel Lake national forest campground.</p>
<p>Once I got through Walker, I was back on familiar ground, having biked this stretch in the other direction two years ago on my way to the 10,000 Lakes Festival in Detroit Lakes. At Whipholt I passed Huddle&#8217;s, a <em>nice</em> resort whose owners were kind enough to let me camp on their lawn for free in 2009 (I did buy dinner there that evening). This time, I didn&#8217;t feel like I had time to stop there.</p>
<p>Mabel Lake Campground was deserted, probably due to a combination of the hoards of deer flies and it being the middle of the week. I chose a roomy site with its own private beach on the clear, sand-bottom lake. The first two feet of lake water was the temperature of a bathtub. The flies weren&#8217;t as bad on the beach as in the site, so after a swim I cooked dinner there while waiting for my tent parts to dry out. The downside of this was there was no shade, so I needed another swim after dinner to wash off the new persperation that formed just from sitting in the sun.</p>
<p>After dinner, I tried hanging a bear hang. I got my caribeaner over a high, sturdy birch limb, but couldn&#8217;t get the cheap nylon cord I had bought at Reed&#8217;s to slide enough to let the beaner down. On the next few tries, I managed to get the cord so tangled up in the leafy branches of a young maple that I ended up having to cut the cord and so lost my good caribeaner. Today&#8217;s luck has been mixed, that&#8217;s for sure.</p>
<p>Hopefully tomorrow will be luckier. I can&#8217;t think of a good place to camp at a reasonable distance between here and Duluth. I figure it&#8217;s about 105 miles to my old house, which I may be able to make with an early enough start if the wind and weather cooperate like they did today. If I have to deal with climatic or mechanical issues, I&#8217;ll probably have to find some place to park my tent between Floodwood and Saginaw, maybe in Brookston. But it sure would be nice to see home tomorrow night.</p>
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