The Other Witch of November: Witch Hazel

Witch Hazel

Witch Hazel, photo by Voxphoto

Naturalist Jonathan Schechter wrote an article last year entitled Witch of the Woods – and her name is Hazel about this small  tree that actually flowers in November:

Native Americans knew this tree before the invaders with guns and axes in tall sailing ships landed on the eastern shore and carved the land to suit their wants and needs. In colonial America even as the British exchanged shots with the rebellious colonists, the shrub’s flexible forked branches was being used as “witching stick” by the dousers: folks who held the forked branches in hand waiting for the tip to point to hidden waters. Bad news for Halloween fans: The word witch in witch hazel originates from the old English word for pliable branches “wych” and has nothing to do with a lady in black straddling an airborne broom.

Your grandmother and probably your mom (and maybe you) used this plant for a wide array of medical ailments. It is found in a liquid form in almost all drug stores today and sold as an astringent, and for treaments of irritations, pain and itching, skin conditions and another 20 or 30 uses!

More about Witch Hazel (Hamamelis) on Wikipedia.

Check this out background big, see  more in Ross’s garden slideshow and also see his past work on Michigan in Pictures.

The Great Storm of 1913 at Pointe Aux Barques

The U.S. Life Saving Station, early 1900s, photo courtesy Pointe Aux Barques Lighthouse Society

Glen Willis of the Pointe Aux Barques Lighthouse Society has an excellent article on The Great Storm of 1913 that explains that most historians agree that the most significant and most dreadful storm on Lake Huron took place over the weekend of November 8-10, 1913. Known by all mariners simply as “The Storm”, it was first detected on the western end of Lake Superior on Thursday, November 6th then progressed rapidly south and east, dropping temperatures and spawning marine warnings.

At Pointe aux Barques as the temperature dropped, it began to rain. As the wind picked up the rain turned to sleet. The sleet began to ice up everything it touched. The waves offshore quickly reached 10 to 12 feet, and then more. Then the snow came, thick and wind driven. Shipmasters out on the lake were finding sailing conditions that were unlike any they had seen before. The sleet that had coated their vessels turned the pilothouse windows opaque. It sealed and froze the doorways. To step outside a cabin meant that the skin would be painfully pelted by frozen bits of sleet & snow…

By midday Sunday at Pointe aux Barques, the snow was so thick and so heavily driven by the wind that vessels out on the lake could not see the rays of the light. At nearby Harbor Beach waves had already destroyed some lakefront buildings and had run the 552-foot D.O. Mills ashore. At mid-lake the wheelsman on the 500 foot Howard M. Hannah, Jr. found that the forward motion of the ship had ceased and that the bow had fallen off into the trough of the waves. Without enough power to drive it the ship was at the mercy of the elements. Waves were higher than the ship is tall and as they crashed down upon the ship the windows and the cabins were stove in. The ship was not under command and as it drifted into Saginaw Bay the master could see the flash of the Port Austin Reef Light. He then knew that his ship would not be saved.

Read on for much more and also check out several articles on the deadliest storm in Great Lakes history on Michigan in Pictures and Freshwater Fury on Absolute Michigan.

Pointe aux Barques is the oldest continuously operating Light on the Great Lakes, and the Pointe Aux Barques Lighthouse Society preserves the light and operates a museum. Visit them for more!

More shipwrecks on Michigan in Pictures.

Lines a loser in Election 2012

Huge Lines in Michigan, photo via examiner.com

Another election is in the books, and you can see complete Michigan results on the Secretary of State website.  In Confusion and congestion rule Election Day, examiner.com featured the photo above and writes that problems, confusion and frustration early on had some exiting without casting ballots in Metro Detroit. The Detroit News adds that problems weren’t limited to Detroit, with wait times of 2+ hours reported in Ferndale, Ann Arbor and other locations.

Regardless of what candidate won, I hope that we can all agree that lines and other barriers to casting a legitimate vote are something we should strive to overcome before the next major election.

Here’s some great photos of voting across Michigan from Michigan Radio.

Election Day: Sometimes the light shines on you

Rainstorm and Sunlight on Pictured Rocks

Rainstorm and Sunlight on Pictured Rocks, photo by ShelNf

I wondered a lot about what to post on Election Day, but when I saw this photo, I knew I didn’t have to look any more.

In the end, I suspect it doesn’t matter as much about what your vote is as the simple fact that you do vote. A lot of sacrifices have been made to give you this moment when you can make some statements about the future you want, and there’s way to much to be done to sit on the sidelines. Here’s an easy way to see your ballot courtesy of Absolute Michigan.

That light is shining today. Does it shine for you?

ShelNf writes that while walking out on Miner’s Beach in the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore on a rainy day, he noticed a patch of sunlight that had broken through the clouds, illuminating part of the cliff face. Check this photo out on black and see more in his really awesome slideshow.

Lots more Pictured Rocks and more elections too on Michigan in Pictures.

Setting an Example at the Cadillac Tower

Setting An Example

Setting An Example, photo by DetroitDerek Photography

Wikipedia says that the Cadillac Tower was the first building outside New York City and Chicago to have 40 floors with a spire height of 438 ft making it Detroit’s 12th tallest building. It’s a Beaux Arts skyscraper that was designed by the architectural firm of Bonnah & Chaffee and built in 1927 as Barlum Tower.

The building is best known, however, for its hanging murals. From 1994 to 2000, one side of the building featured a 14-story Detroit Lions star Barry Sanders, which was replaced with one of Red Wings star Steve Yzerman. Currently the building features an ad for the Fidelity investments.

Also see the Cadillac Tower website and have a look at the proposed Cadillac Centre for this location.

Check this out bigger and see more in Derek’s Sunset and Sky Series slideshow.

More Michigan architecture on Michigan in Pictures.

Nawadaha Falls and the Sweet Singer of Hiawatha

Nawadaha Falls

Nawadaha Falls, photo by Jason W Lacey

Should you ask me, whence these stories, whence these legends and traditions,
With the odors of the forest, with the dew and damp of meadows,
With the curling smoke of wigwams, with the rushing of great rivers,
With their frequent repetitions, and their wild reverberations,
As of thunder in the mountains.

I should answer, I should tell you: “From the forests and the prairies,
From the great lakes of the Northland, from the land of the Ojibways,
From the land of the Dacotahs, from the mountains, moors, and fenlands,
Where the heron, the Shuh-shuh-gah,  feeds among the reeds and rushes.
I repeat them as I heard them.
From the lips of Nawadaha, the musician, the sweet singer.”

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, The Song of Hiawatha

You may already be aware that one of the main purposes of this blog is to allow me to indulge in my passion for Michigan and its history. Names of the first people who dwelt in Michigan are of particular interest to me, and I was very gratified to discover not only that nawadjiwan is an Ojibway word meaning in the midst of the rapids, but also that it was the name of the singer who taught Longfellow The Song of Hiawatha.

I almost had to leave it there, but then I found a reference in Michael Witgen’s book An Infinity of Nations: How the Native New World Shaped Early North America.

Longfellow acknowledges Schoolcraft’s influence on veiled fashion, when he tells the reader he learned Hiawatha’s story “from the lips of Nawadaha.”  Few readers would realize that this was the Indian agent’s Ojibwe name. Logfellow asserts that Nawadaha had merely repeated these stories, not unlike himself and not unlike an Indian sitting in his lodge on long winter nights telling stories to amuse the children.

You can read on for the author’s puzzlement that Michigan Indian agent Henry Rowe Schoolcraft – himself married to a native woman Jane Johnston Schoolcraft (Oshauguscodawaquat) – would tell tales that are in large part false. As the Wikipedia entry on the Song of Hiawatha notes however,  Longfellow was far more concerned with excitement over accuracy and made numerous editorial decisions in the construction of his epic poem.

GoWaterfalling.com says that Nawadaha Falls is the upper most of the three falls along the Presque Isle Rivers final stretch.

This is a low, wide waterfall. Its width varies greatly depending on the water levels. Nawadaha Falls is similar to but a little higher than Manido Falls. The steepest part of the falls is on the eastern side, and when the river is low, most of the water flows there. There is a nice natural overlook out in front of this drop easily reached from the trail on the east side of the river.

South Boundary Road is not to far beyond Nawadaha Falls. You can cross river here and hike down the other side to make a loop around all the Presque Isle Falls. The eastern side is much wilder, but the whole hike is very enjoyable.

They add that Manabezho Falls is the larger and most interesting but that the whole hike is well worth it. To bring this full circle, the figure that Hiawatha is modeled on is the trickster god and emissary of the Great Spirit, Manabezho.

Check this out background bigtacular and see more in Jason’s great Michigan slideshow.

Many more Michigan waterfalls on Michigan in Pictures!

Fall is hanging on

Untitled

Untitled, photo by Brooke Pennington

Although an early leaf drop has been forecast, it seems from the photos in the Absolute Michigan pool that pockets of fall color are still to be found.

Check this out on black and see more in Brooke’s bokeh slideshow.

More bokeh on Michigan in Pictures including Ross’s excellent photo and explanation of what bokeh is and isn’t.

Frankenwaves

Frankenwaves

Sandy’s Frankenwaves, photo by PhotoYoop

Superstorm Sandy’s Michigan impact has been fairly minor, forcing a few power outages but mainly sending hundreds of Michigan power company employees east to help restore services. Lake Michigan did record the second highest wave height ever of 21.7 feet, and of course brought out surfers to test their skills against some big waves.

Check this out on black and see a few more shots of the Superior waves in Cory’s slideshow and also in this gallery on his PhotoYoop Facebook page.

Happy Halloween from Michigan in Pictures!

Halloween Spectacle, photo by Kim Nixon

The Halloween Spectacle is an annual event that took place last Saturday in Marquette. Here’s hoping you can get out and make a spooky spectacle of yourself tonight!

Check this out bigger on Facebook and see her slideshow from the Halloween Spectacle on Flickr. More work from Kim at Create with Kim.

…and more Halloween from Michigan in Pictures and Absolute Michigan!

Riding towards Halloween

Halloween sunset... ©n.wamsley

Halloween sunset…, photo by Through My Eyes, Nicole Wamsley (astra.amara)

Nicole has the perfect photo for the day before Halloween. Check it out on black and see more including some really cool Headless Horseman (woman?) shots in her Halloween slideshow.

More Halloween photos on Michigan in Pictures.