Superior Dawn at Grand Sable Dunes

"Superior Dawn" - Grand Sable Dunes , Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore

“Superior Dawn” – Grand Sable Dunes , Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, photo by Michigan Nut.

By curious coincidence, I was just a short distance (at Twelve Mile Beach Campground from where John captured this stunning view of the Grand Sable Dunes. That link can tell you all about this amazing dune structure and I heartily encourage you to visit the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore sometime soon!!

Check it out big as the BIG lake or in John’s Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore slideshow.

Many more photos from the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore can be found on Michigan in Pictures!

Just After Sunrise: Lake Superior Ice, A Cautionary Tale

Just After Sunrise (2)

Just After Sunrise (2), photo by siskokid.

Jim writes that nothing beats the early morning light as it falls on the ice and snow of frozen Lake Superior. He took three shots (#1 and #3) from the beach at Little Girl’s Point in the far western end of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan on a very cold Sunday morning in January. The day before this shot was taken some ice fishermen found out the hard way how capricious Superior’s ice can be. Sam Cook’s story begins:

For an hour and a half, Skip Wick had been trying to stay upright on a chunk of ice in Lake Superior’s 8-foot swells.

The 80-year-old ice angler, stranded on the lake Saturday after big waves undermined the ice in Saxon Harbor east of Ashland, knew his options were limited.

“As I was standing there, the ice kept breaking up,” said Wick, a retired shop teacher from Hurley, Wis. “There was a big roar, like a jet going over, and here would come a wave.”

The roar was the sound of the waves, later estimated by Ashland firefighters at 8 to 12 feet, lifting and grinding chunks of ice as far as Wick could see. The chunk he was on was about as long and wide as a car, he said.

If you read on, you will learn how they were eventually rescued with an air boat, or wind sled, called an Ice Angel. Many who challenge Superior or any of the Great Lakes in wintertime are less luck.

Check this out background big and in Jim’s massive Lake Superior slideshow.

While this might seem like the ice goes on forever, as you can see from the satellite view, it barely dents the lake! More winter wallpaper on Michigan in Pictures.

Morning Light at Reeds Lake

Morning Light
Morning Light, photo by rdmegr

This photo was taken this weekend at Reeds Lake in East Grand Rapids.

Check it out bigger in rdmegr’s Reeds Lake slideshow.

More Michigan lakes from Michigan in Pictures.

Breakfast on the Farm

STreeFog-5

STreeFog-5, photo by richwyllis.

We’ve had a lot of lazy, hazy mornings lately. Hope you get some time to enjoy a nice breakfast this weekend!

Check this out bigger in Rich’s slideshow!

Morning view

Morning view

Morning view, photo by Mike Lanzetta.

Top of the morning to you.

Mike says Yup, no photoshop, she really was right there. See it bigger along with more from this shoot in his slideshow.

Lake Michigan @ PJ Hoffmaster State Park

Untitled, photo by DTOWN Thug (Tim Mayo).

See it bigger in his Lake Michigan slideshow and see more from PJ Hoffmaster State Park on Michigan in Pictures..

Lake In the Clouds Sunrise

Lake In the Clouds Sunrise

Lake In the Clouds Sunrise, photo by Marc Akemann.

I know that we were just at the Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park, but this one was too good to let pass. Marc writes:

The previous day I had been experimenting with a Tiffen CC30M filter for an upcoming job where there was an excess of green. I accidentally left the filter on my 28mm lens which I had planned to use for this shot of Lake In the Clouds. Being 60 miles away from this place, I had to wake up at 3 AM to hit the road to beat the sun. I got to the overlook, climbed down the side of the cliff about 10 feet to a ledge, all in the dark, set up and waited a few minutes, never checking the lens. So that explains why I shot this with the CC30M filter. Anyway, while I was waiting for the right light, the sky was crystal clear and the wind was calm. All of a sudden a stiff wind came in from my right and whistled on over the lake, bringing these clouds in with it. Almost as quickly as it came, the wind stopped and, well, I started shooting. It was really weird.

Check this out bigger in Marc’s Landscape slideshow (or Weather slideshow) and read more about the Lake of the Clouds here and here on Michigan in Pictures.

dawn

dawn

dawn, photo by tbug2.

Be sure to check this out bigger and in Tenille’s Landscapes set.

Ready to Play

Untitled, photo by Michael Zz.

Check it out bigger or in Michael’s Night Shots set (slideshow).

Hope your weekend brings you all the fun you can handle and if you’re wondering what to do, check out Absolute Michigan’s Michigan Event Calendar.

Founder’s Day Sunrise, Marquette Michigan

foundersboatsrise_autolv

foundersboatsrise_autolv, photo by TheDailies.

Kim has a great set of photos from Founder’s Day (slideshow).

On her blog, she relates the story of the Marquette’s first Founder’s Day (May 18, 2009):

While researching Marquette history, particularly the lower harbor and Founders Landing, Joe Constance, a partner with the Landing Development Group, ran across an address Peter White gave to Marquette’s YMCA in 1889. “On May 18, 1849, Peter White and Robert Graveraet first arrived in what would become Marquette,” says Constance. “Reading about their arrival at sunrise and meeting with Chief Kawbawgam, I started thinking about what that friendship meant for our community,” adds Constance. “The 160th anniversary of that date and event in our city’s history needs to be recognized.”

…According to White’s story, the party expected the trip to take three hours, but, “the seven oarsmen were pulling with a will-long strong, deep, regular strokes, that, made the boat show what the sailors call a bore in her teeth for these boys had been told that morning when breaking camp at 4 o’clock at Shot Point, that their destination was in sigh, and if they did as well as they sometimes did that a landing would be made inside of two hours, that the long trip–nine days of coasting would be ended, and the new Eldorado would be reached–and it was accomplished.”

Be sure to check this out bigger too!