Earth Day, high above our piece of the Earth

Great Lakes, No Clouds

Great Lakes, No Clouds, photo by NASA Goddard Photo and Video.

Today is Earth Day (and also Good Friday). You can read all about Michigan’s role in Earth Day on Michigan in Pictures and check the list of Earth Day events in Michigan from earthday.org.

I thought this shot from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center was a perfect image, and it’s a great lead-in to their Earth Day 2011 slideshow, which looks at almost 40 years of Landsat images. NASA says:

Launched in 1972, the Landsat program is the longest continuous global record of the Earth’s surface. It continues to deliver both visually stunning and scientifically valuable images of our changing planet, allowing us to plan for the future of Earth’s precious resources.

Check this out big as Michigan an in their Explored! slideshow.

Many fish will bite if you got good bait…

Fishing in Bay

Fishing in Bay, photo by ETCphoto.

Betcha goin’ fishin’ all of your time, baby’s goin’ fishing too
Bet your life, your sweet life, catch more fish than you
Many fish bites if ya got good bait, here’s a little tip i would like to relate

Big fish bites if ya got a good bait, I ‘a goin’ fishin’
Yes i’m goin’ fishin’, and my baby’s goin’ fishin’ too.

~Taj Mahal (check out this sweet video)

There’s a boatload of Michigan fishing information at www.michigan.gov/fishing. They note that Michigan has about 146 kinds of fish, ranging from tiny minnows to giant lake sturgeon – hope you get a chance to tell a couple fish stories this year!

Check this out bigger than the one that got away and in Terry’s West Bay slideshow

Wilderness State Park

Wilderness State Park Sky

Wilderness State Park Sky, photo by McPhloyd

This morning I should be waking up in a rustic cabin at Wilderness State Park. I found another website as well which has some pictures of their cabins.

You can see this photo bigger and in Matt’s Wilderness State Park slideshow.

1830s Sloop Discovered off Saugatuck

Stern of Mystery Ship, photo by Michigan Shipwreck Research Associates

Through Absolute Michigan we found out about a cool discovery off South Haven by Holland-based Michigan Shipwreck Research Associates in collaboration with nationally acclaimed author Clive Cussler and his sonar operator Ralph Wilbanks of the National Underwater & Marine Agency (NUMA).

MSRA’s historians have verified that the vessel’s construction and design is consistent with ships built in the 1820s and 1830s, making it perhaps one of the oldest vessels discovered in the southern basin of Lake Michigan. The vessel sits upright and is in surprisingly good condition considering it was built nearly 200 years ago. Exact identification will be difficult as these small, early sloops were rarely documented and most had wrecked or been scrapped before photography became available. MSRA will continue to research and explore the wreck during the 2011 season.

Underwater video of this new discovery will be shown at the annual “Mysteries and Histories Beneath the Inland Seas” evening event on Saturday, April 16, 2011 at 7:00 pm at Holland’s historic Knickerbocker Theatre.

We have all the details (including a video and sonar showing the ship) on Absolute Michigan and you can learn about and register for the conference at the MSRA web site!

Check this photo out bigger and see it and a couple more in their slideshow.

Big Sable Point Lighthouse in Ludington State Park

Big Sable Point Lighthouse  (Ludington State Park, Ludington Michigan)

Big Sable Point Lighthouse (Ludington State Park, Ludington Michigan), photo by Michigan Nut.

I’ve featured Big Sable Point Lighthouse before on Michigan in Pictures, but most of you probably didn’t see that post. Besides, it was done on a day when the Great Lakes’ premier resource for lighthouse information, Terry Pepper’s Seeing the Light, was down! Terry’s Big Sable Point Light Station page begins:

In its report to Congress in 1865, the Lighthouse Board presented the case that “the interests of commerce demand that Grand Point Au Sable be suitably lighted” Congress responded favorably on July of the following year with an appropriation of $35,000 on July 28 of the following year. The State of Michigan responded by providing the Federal Government with fee deed to nine hundred and thirty-three acres for the station later that year.

Construction began in early 1867 with the arrival of Lighthouse Board and Army Corps of Engineers workers, who immediately began the construction of a dock at which to unload the necessary supplies for the project. Next, a temporary cofferdam was constructed to keep waster from entering the foundation, which consisted of tightly fitted cut stone blocks beginning a depth of six feet below grade and extending three feet above.

On this sturdy foundation, the skilled masons began to raise the tower. Constructed of cream city brick, the walls were laid five feet thick at the foundation, tapering to a thickness of two feet thick immediately below the gallery. Within the tower, a circular inner wall, eight feet in diameter supported the cast iron spiral staircase. On its vertical climb, the stairway passed through three landing areas.

Read on for the history of the Big Sable Light and see many more Michigan lighthouses on Michigan in Pictures.

See this photo bigger and in John’s jaw-dropping Michigan lighthouses slideshow. He says that it’s a two mile hike to see Big Sable, so bring a flashlight if you plan to see a sunset!

Remembering Jeff Lamb

Music is what life sounds like.
~Eric Olson

Leelanau Shore, photo by Jeff Lamb

A photographer I have long admired and was fortunate enough to spend a little time with passed away yesterday.

Jeff Lamb took photos of urban landscapes and landscapes that were not urban, blending a love of his fellow humans with his love of the structures they created in his work.

New Orleans to Northern Michigan, Ann Arbor to Amsterdam, he took so many photos that he needed two Flickr accounts, jeff lamb and leylabunny and a photo blog.

See this bigger in Jeff’s Leelanau slideshow and explore his work through the links above.

Celebrate the Great Lakes at the Benzie Water Festival!

The Beach at Green Point Dunes

The Beach at Green Point Dunes, photo by jimflix!.

The 2011 Benzie County Water Festival takes place next weekend (March 19-21, 2011) in Frankfort. The Water Festival moves around Michigan, bringing the message of the vitality of Michigan’s water all around the state in different seasons.

We have an in-depth feature on Absolute Michigan about the festival that includes a number of videos featuring Water Festival presenters including Tom Kelly of the Inland Seas Educations Association; Derek Bailey Tribal Chairman of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians; Hans VanSumeren, Director of Northwestern Michigan College’s Water Studies Institute and musicians Seth Bernard & May Erlewine.

This will be a unique event designed to engage folks in the stewardship of the Great Lakes, the global freshwater crisis and the cultivation of a vibrant and sustainable local culture. A family-oriented, community-centered program will feature Michigan musicians, speeches from water luminaries, interactive multimedia projects and presentations, artisan foods and beverages, workshops, visual art, theater and dance, children’s activities, an ice fishing contest, as well as connections to campaigns and projects protecting our water locally and/or addressing global water challenges.

The Benzie County Water Festival is co-sponsored by the Benzie Conservation District and Absolute Michigan. For more information, check out the Benzie Water Festival Facebook

Get much more information about performers, presenters and special events at water-festival.org!

Jim took this shot at the Green Point Dunes Nature Preserve, a gorgeous nature area that is part of a huge swath of Lake Michigan shore that has been protected. If you check it out bigger, you can see the Frankfort Lighthouse in the distance (and yes – Jim has one or two shots of that!).

That’s a job creation engine out there…

Layers of Michigan Winter

Layers of Michigan Winter, photo by nasunto.

The Wall Street Journal reports:

An analysis by Michigan Sea Grant at the University of Michigan says more than 1.5 million U.S. jobs and $62 billion in annual wages are linked directly to the Great Lakes.

The study was released Thursday. It says Michigan has 525,886 jobs connected to the Great Lakes, more than any other state. Illinois ranks second with 380,786, followed by Ohio with 178,621.

Most of the jobs are in manufacturing. Others are in tourism and recreation, shipping, agriculture and other sectors of the economy.

Jim Diana, director of Michigan Sea Grant, says the study illustrates that protecting the lakes is crucial to attracting and retaining businesses and jobs.

That’s a lot of jobs … and at an estimated $62 billion in wages, it’s a very compelling argument for Michigan to take a leadership role in protecting the Great Lakes. Here’s the news release from Sea Grant and the PDF of the Great Lakes Jobs Report.

About the photo Nina writes On the shore of Lake Michigan: Cold sand and a layer of ice. In the distance, snow, ice, whitecaps on the beautiful and temperamental lake, and a cloud-filled sky. Check it out background big and in her Lake Michigan slideshow.

Fly Fishing: Eagles in Grand Haven

Fly Fishing

Fly Fishing, photo by KevJams.

I think Kevin shot this near Grand Haven. He has so many eagles in the first shot of his Birds of a Feather slideshow that it looks like Alaska. I rolled back through “Eagle” on Michigan in Pictures and found this photo of eagles over the Grand River in Grand Haven, so I guess it’s a regular happening.

View it bigger.

Happy Accidents at Van Buren Dunes

van buren dunes beach- holga

van buren dunes beach- holga, photo by EllenJo.

Is it cruel or welcome to post photos like this in February? Please discuss below…

EllenJo writes that because her hands were wet it was hard to advance the film, so she ended up with some cool “happy accidents” like this. Check this out bigger in her blue slideshow and I hope your weekend is full of happy accidents!

More about Van Buren Dunes on Michigan in Pictures … more Holga too!