Upside Down in Lake Bellaire

IMGP6640

IMGP6640, photo by jt354.

There isn’t much about Lake Bellaire to be found online – the Lake Bellaire Wikipedia page hasn’t even been edited yet. Fishweb says that Lake Bellaire:

…is part of the Chain O’ Lakes in Antrim County Michigan. It is connected to Clam Lake to the south by the Grass River, and north to Intermediate River. Fishing Lake Bellaire you will find a variety of game fish such as trout, walleye, bass, pike, perch and many more. LakeBellaire is a small but deep lake with a maximum depth of 107′. The depth allows for trout fishing but still offers plenty of shallower depths, weed cover and river beds for fishing many different styles.

Check this photo out background big or in James’ Landscape and Nature set (slideshow).

There’s many more aerial photos and Michigan lakes to be found on Michigan in Pictures!

Icarus, 2010

Micha

Micha , photo by john mark..

All limits are self imposed.

This modern Icarus is Micah Middaugh from the Michigan band Breathe Owl Breathe. Do not leave him open on the basketball court or he will make you pay.

Check it out bigger or in John’s slideshow.

More portraits on Michigan in Pictures.

Detroit River Lighthouse, Bar Shoal – Lake Erie

Detroit River Lighthouse

Detroit River Lighthouse, photo by James Marvin Phelps (mandj98).

The Detroit River Light, also known as Bar Point Shoal Light, was first established as a lightship in 1875. In his writeup of the Detroit River Light at boatnerd.com. Dave Wobster says:

Completed in 1885 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at a cost of $78,000, the Detroit River Light replaced a Canadian lightship that had served since 1875. The light was first exhibited August 20, 1885. Located near the end Bar Shoal which projects from the Canadian shore, in Lake Erie just south of the entrance into the Detroit River. This is the point where up bound vessels make the turn into the Detroit River.

The 49-feet high cast iron plate tower is 22-feet in diameter at the base and 18-feet at the top. It was built on a pre-fabricated 45′ x 18′, crib that was transported to the site from Amherstburg, Ontario, sunk in 22-feet of water, filled with concrete and surrounded by a granite pier.

The light station pier has the appearance of a vessel, with the pointed end directed toward the mouth of the river to break ice flows coming down river.

Click through to read about how the light handled an impact from the 635′ freighter Buffalo and see an aerial shot that shows the unique shape at Wikipedia’s Detroit River Light entry.

Check it out bigger or in James’s Detroit River set (slideshow) where you can also see a side view of the lighthouse. This is also for sale as a print from James.

View many more Michigan lighthouses from Michigan in Pictures.

In this home on ice

In this home on ice 2

In this home on ice 2, photo by Alan Medina.

Check it out bigger and in Alan’s slideshow.

Too cold for you? Stay warm with paczki and The Twist over on Absolute Michigan!

Flake

Untitled, photo by *Alysa*.

Alysa writes…

“If I could tell the story in words, I wouldn’t need to lug around a camera” ~Lewis Hine

Check this out bigger in her Year In Pictures 2010 slideshow and here’s a photo by Lewis Hine on Michigan in Pictures.

i heart detroit and i heart michigan

i heart detroit

i heart detroit, photo by mlephotos.

Some people I talk to are not fans of Valentine’s Day.

I’ve always thought of Valentine’s Day as a celebration of everything and everyone I love and that has always made it one of my favorite holidays.

How about you? Love it? Hate it? Only in it for the chocolate?

Check this photo out bigger in Meghan’s heart slideshow or see what the whole Absolute Michigan pool hearts.

Hope you have a wonderful weekend.

Winter at Dead River Falls

forestriver1.jpg

forestriver1.jpg, photo by johndecember.

The Marquette Country waterfalls page says that:

The Dead River Falls cascades several feet and is viewed from a rock plateau next to the river. After viewing Reany Fall, and while parked at the power house parking lot, follow the power line by walking up the hill. About 300 ft. past the end of this hill is a section of aqueduct with painted words “falls” and an arrow pointing left. Follow the trail to the river about .4 of a mile (Note: trail is very steep).

See more area waterfalls at the link about and see it bigger in John’s Upper Peninsula of Michigan slideshow (or view all 800+ photos).

Many (many) more Michigan waterfalls from Michigan in Pictures.

MacArthur Lock No. 4

MacArthur Lock No. 4

MacArthur Lock No. 4, photo by Ralph Krawczyk Jr.

With apologies to Richard Harris, Donna Summer and pretty much everyone…

The captain took the Spruceglen, through the Soo
Ralph has a Holga, on trips he often takes it
It uses film and doesn’t fake it
Which isn’t always the easiest thing to do

Check it out bigger and in Ralph’s The U.P. – Autumn 2007 set (slideshow).

U.S. National Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum in Ishpeming

Iron Mountain MI UP Olympic Ski Jump Slide 1930s RPPC LL Cook C-1693 Unsent

Iron Mountain MI UP Olympic Ski Jump Slide 1930s RPPC LL Cook C-1693 Unsent, photo by UpNorth Memories – Donald (Don) Harrison.

With the Winter Olympics just around the corner, it’s a good time to look back on the history of skiing. I’m guessing many folks aren’t aware of the pivotal role that Michigan has played in the history of skiing.

A great place to start is the U.S. National Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum in Ishpeming. It’s the only hall of fame in America dedicated exclusively to skiing and boasts 20,000 square feet that are packed with cross-country, downhill and snowboarding exbibits and memorabilia to take you from the founding of skiing to the latest innovations.

The core of the hall are the 368 inductees who represent some of the great names in skiing history. Included in their ranks are a number of Michiganians from one of the most influential ski resort owners in the nation, Everett Kircher (who developed the double and triple chair and made numerous other innovations at Boyne Mountain) to Lansing native and world class racer Cary Adgate (whose daughter is currently tearing up the slopes in Northern Michigan).

At this point, you may be asking yourself the same question that I did: “Why Ishpeming?”

About a century ago, a group of Ishpeming businessmen and skiing enthusiasts took the first steps to organize the National Skiing Association, now known as the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association. USSA is the national governing body for Olympic skiing and snowboarding and the entity behind the US Ski Team and US Snowboarding Team. For the story on why that happened in Ishpeming, we have to turn to the International Skiing History Association who explain that:

…The first actual recorded tournament in the Midwest took place in St. Paul, Minnesota, January 25, 1887. Starting from a tower all of twenty feet high, the Norwegian champion Mikkel Hemmestveit went 60 feet in the air to win. Then Hemmestvedt and his brother Torjus took the sport west to Red Wing, Minnesota with an exhibition tourney on February 8, 1887, sponsored by the year-old Aurora Ski Club of Red Wing. That very year, the idea of jumping spread to the Upper Peninsula and Ishpeming soon became a particular hotbed of jumping culture. In the Upper Peninsula after 1900, any town aiming to rank as a place worth living in had at least one big jump trestle. It became a matter of civic pride. The movement was supported by generous donations from the Upper Peninsula mining companies. Along the entire peninsula, ski clubs were founded, copying the organization of earlier Norwegian ski clubs the immigrants had known in their homeland. In Ishpeming, dozens of small backyard jumps were fashioned out of the plentiful snow and a few larger ones were built from trusses of native iron.

The Ishpeming Ski Club was organized in 1887 as the Norden Ski Club. A year later, it changed its name to Den Nordiske Ski Club (the Nordic Ski Club) to reflect its ethnic makeup. Business during club meetings was mostly transacted in Norwegian. Then diversity set in. With the arrival of Finns, the name was changed in 1901 to the Ishpeming Ski Club and meetings were thenceforth conducted in English. From that came a gradual growth toward the birth of organized skiing and, eventually, the founding of the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame.

Definitely click through to their homepage – there’s an awesome ski history video there – and if you want to know more about ski jumping in Michigan, the Detroit News Rearview Mirror has a cool feature on Michigan’s long history of ski jumping with some great old photos!

The photo above from Pine Mountain is one of countless postcards featuring Michigan’s rich history available from Don Harrison. Be sure to check it out bigger or in his ski slideshow (which leads off with a postcard of the jump they had in Ishpeming).

Have a Splashtacularly Michigan Valentine’s Day

A "Splash-tacular" shot.

A “Splash-tacular” shot., photo by Nicksnottoshabby.

Absolute Michigan is ready to help you Celebrate Valentine’s Day the Michigan Way featuring Valentine’s Day recipes from Michigan B&Bs and all kinds of links and info about how to do Valentine’s Day right.

Because Monday is President’s Day, there’s a slew of events from all across the state (check them out via Pure Michigan) including the first-ever Traverse City Wine & Art Festival Winter Wine Wonderland that I’m working on.

About this photo, Nick writes:

This is what I get into when my parents say I can’t go to the skatepark with all my friends… Luckily nothing really went to waste, the Cran juice was drunk, the strawberry devoured, and the newspaper recycled. My flashes are even powered by recharge batteries. What a smart, and Eco friendly kid I am.

Check it out bigger or in Nick’s slideshow.