Celebrate Lighthouses at the Great Lakes Lighthouse Festival

“September Gale” Grand Haven Breakwater Lighthouse is located in the harbor of Grand Haven, Michigan, photo by Michigan Nut.

There is no other festival like it in the United States. The organizers have done a fantastic job of drawing both vendors and lighthouse buffs from around the globe to what has become the largest and best lighthouse festival in the nation. October is a wonderful time of the year to visit Michigan, with the beautiful fall colors, close proximity to Mackinaw City and Mackinac Island and lots of lighthouses, what more could one ask for?

~Tim Harrison, President of the American Lighthouse Foundation

What more indeed? According to Wikipedia’s US Lighthouses page, Michigan has the most lights of any state with over 150 past and present lights.

It’s definitely fitting to use the most popular lighthouse photo (from John McCormick, the most popular lighthouse photographer) in our Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr to let you know about the annual Great Lakes Lighthouse Festival which takes place October 6-9, 2011 in Alpena.

The Fyddeye Guide to America’s Maritime History says that the festival is the country’s largest lighthouse festival, adding:

The four-day event provides activities for the young and old, including lighthouse tours by personal vehicles, a helicopter tour, or boat tour, entertainment, auctions, dining events, lighthouse exhibits, and shopping. The festival boasts more than 75 maritime-related vendors, including lighthouse preservation groups, artists, nautical crafters, photographers, and authors. This year’s featured guest speakers include Terry Pepper, executive director of the Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Association, national gold medal award winning photographer and author Larry Wright, and Sandy Bihn, president of the Toledo Harbor Lighthouse Society, which operates the 2011 featured attraction, the Toledo Harbor Lighthouse.

If the name Terry Pepper sounds familiar, he’s the authority we turn to for our lighthouse features and his books on lighthouses are fantastic. Check out Terry Pepper’s Seeing the Light and read much from him in the lighthouse category on Michigan in Pictures including our post on the Grand Haven Pier Light.

John took this photo last September. He says to note the guy with the pink surfboard (then see him in the waves in this shot). Check it out bigger and in his fantastic Michigan Lighthouses slideshow.

Chinook Salmon … and the Grand Haven Haven Salmon Festival

Flying Salmon

Flying Salmon, photo by Mi Bob.

Michigan has two species of salmon, Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch). I’m thinking this is a chinook as it looks like the spots are all the way down the tail fin. The DNR says (in part):

The salmon family, or Salmonidae, includes the salmon, trout, and whitefishes. All are characterized by adipose fin, and have a preference for cold water with a high oxygen content, making the Great Lakes an ideal habitat.

The chinook is a fairly new variety of salmon introduced into the Great Lakes in the 1870s. Sometimes called “King Salmon”, these fish did not reproduce successfully and eventually disappeared. In 1966, Great Lakes states Michigan, New York and Wisconsin, with the help of the province of Ontario reintroduced the Chinook. Great Lakes populations of Chinook are maintained by annual stream stocking programs

Chinook live in Great Lakes shoals or near-shoal waters (less than 100 foot depth(s)) as a rule. In the fall they move into the southern reaches of each of the great lakes, traveling 5-15 miles offshore as they go. In the spring they retrace their route and by the following fall, they congregate at the stream they began their journey at and begin their spawning runs upriver.

…Chinook spawn in streams over beds of large gravel, near riffles. Within two weeks after spawning, adult chinook die. Chinook compete with other salmon and trout for scarce spawning grounds. The following spring the eggs hatch, and the young usually remain in the river for one year before they migrate down to the lake.

Once in the lake, males tend to remain for 1-2 years and females for 3-4 years. The King Salmon average a weight of 30 to 40 pounds and 38 inches in length.

Young chinook in rivers eat insects, insect larvae and crustaceans; adults in the lakes eat fish almost exclusively. In the Great Lakes, smelt and alewives make up their main diet. Predators include rainbow trout, coho salmon smolts and fish-eating birds. The young also compete with trout and other salmon for food.

Anglers prize chinook partly because of their large size and the challenge they present for fishing, and partly because they make a delicious meal. While other pacific salmon species have red flesh, chinook meat is often white.

Speaking of salmon, the annual Grand Haven Salmon Festival takes place this weekend (September 16-18, 2011). It pays tribute to the annual salmon migration and features hands-on learning, education and exhibits about Michigan’s coastal waterways. There’s also arts, crafts, live music, wine, food and all kinds of family fun!

Check this out bigger and in Bob’s slideshow.

More Michigan fish on Michigan in Pictures!

USCGC Mackinaw at the Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival

USCGC Mackinaw

USCGC Mackinaw, photo by loomisman.

The Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival (July 29 – August 7, 2011) has been held every year in Grand Haven. It features a parade of ships and a couple street parades, music, carnival, fireworks and all kinds of events and exhibits about the history of the United States Coast Guard. They explain:

The festival unofficially began in 1924 as a Coast Guard personnel only picnic when the local Coast Guard station held rowing competitions for those service members stationed in Grand Haven. Today the Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival has become a premier event with attendance of over 350,000 people including the nations highest ranking Coast Guard dignitaries from Washington, D.C.

The focus of the annual Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival is the National Coast Guard Memorial Service honoring those who sacrificed their lives in the service of their country while fulfilling their motto “SEMPER PARATUS” (“Always Ready”). Each year since the first picnic in 1924 and the first festival in 1937, we have celebrated our heroes, the men and women of the United States Coast Guard with fun filled family events at the annual Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival. Grand Haven is honored by its designation as “Coast Guard City, USA” by an Act of Congress and signed by the President of the United States on November 13th, 1998.

Check this out bigger in in Drew’s Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival slideshow.

Michigan in Pictures has more about the US Coast Guard Cutter Mackinaw.

Surf Michigan!

Kitesurfer in Michigan Surf

Surf_3883, photo by ON THE MOON STUDIO.

The Great Lakes are receiving more and more attention as a surfing destination, and hot spots like Frankfort, Marquette and Grand Haven (where this kiteboarder is tearing it up) are becoming destinations for kayakers, surfers, paddle boarders and kite boarders.

We have some great videos at Michigan: Great Lakes Surfing Capital on Absolute Michigan. See more surfing on Michigan in Pictures. There’s also Northern Michigan Surf on Facebook and in the Surfing slideshow from the Absolute Michigan pool!

Check this out background big and see more in Paul’s slideshow.

Michigan Windstorm of October 2010

NSPier10262010

NSPier10262010, photo by Twinz8.

Over the last 24 hours winds have roared through Michigan. While closed schools, downed trees and lost power are a problem for some, to some photographers & weather lovers (and of course surfers), the wild wind is a boon.

mLive has a report with some video from Grand Haven, a surfing hot spot (surfgrandhaven.com). More about Michigan surfing from Absolute Michigan.

Be sure to check this out bigger and check out more shots from the Grand Haven North Pier in Paul’s slideshow.

More Michigan weather from Michigan in Pictures!

Water Cannon!!

CG2010-8

CG2010-8, photo by Twinz8.

From the 2010 Grand Haven Coast Guard Festival.

Check it out bigger and in Paul’s Coast Guard Festival 2010 slideshow.

Hope your weekend is a blast!

100,000 photos in the Absolute Michigan Pool

Can You See Me Now...?(.142/365) by Sydney Marie Photography

Can You See Me Now…?(.142/365) by Sydney Marie Photography

Sometime over the weekend, the 100,000th photo was added to the Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr.

One hundred thousand.

What an amazing gift you nearly 2400 photographers have shared with Absolute Michigan and Michigan in Pictures over the last four and a half years. Whether it’s dandelions or Detroit Lions, hill sides or mud slides, if it’s Michigan, chances are there’s a photo of it in the Absolute Michigan photo group!

Check this out bigger and in Sydney’s 365 slideshow.

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Hang out at the Great Lakes Kite Festival in Grand Haven

Zip Line Kite

Zip Line Kite, photo by yerffej9.

Every year Grand Haven hosts the Great Lakes Kite Festival, a three-day celebration of kites that happens at the beach at Grand Haven State Park. The event features kite competitions, kite demos and special events that celebrate kites. Here’s a sweet video and you can check out the Great Lakes Kite Festival slideshow on Flickr to see the amazing array of kites they get!

Jeff says that he thinks the 2006 kites were better. Check it out bigger and in his Personal Favorites slideshow.

U.F.O

U.F.O

U.F.O, photo by GH Patriot.

We’re getting reports of Unidentified Flying Objects over the Grand Haven Ski Bowl.

Be sure to check it out bigger and in Kevin’s snowboarding slideshow, which features more of the same.

Brian was there too.

Storm Chaser: Surfing in Grand Haven

Storm Chaser

Storm Chaser, photo by johndykstraphotography.

Around the end of August, surf season really starts in earnest in Michigan and on the Great Lakes. As the winds and waves build through September and November, so does the level of the surfing. Grand Haven is one of Michigan’s best breaks (see Surf Grand Haven) and one of the locations featured in Vince Deur’s awesome film Unsalted. Here’s a cool preview of Unsalted from Absolute Michigan.

Be sure and check this out bigger and also check out the Michigan surfing slideshow in the Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr!