Thursday, December 08, 2022

Out On A Lake for #64 of the 70/70 Quest

Camp Daggett – where I went to camp as a kid and where our kids went one summer – was hosting a Fall Fest which my pal, Connie, and I thought would a fun way to spend a Sunday afternoon. Kendall and Nick were game so off we went to the Camp Daggett Fall Fest. Well, it turned out they were offering pontoon boat rides on Walloon Lake. The only boat I had ever cruised around Walloon Lake on was a camp row boat and Kendall had never boated on Walloon Lake at all – so "Pontoon Boat Ride on Walloon Lake" floated right onto our 70/70 list!  It was a great day to be out on the lake with vibrant fall colors surrounding the deep blue waters of Walloon. 

 

 

Pontoon boat about to load up

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

Spectacularly blue water and brilliant fall colors

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Smiling sailors

Heading back in to dock...wrapping up another 70/70 adventure

 

70/70 Quest Number 63!

Number 63 of our 70/70 quest happens to be the Sleeping Bear Marathon / Half Marathon / 5k - which I already wrote about back in October because I was just so excited about the experience. It is the first time Kendall and I have participated in a Michigan race together - and, as an extra bonus, cousin John and his wife Marcie joined in the fun as well (and hosted us for the race weekend). You can read all about it in the October blog entry.



Wednesday, November 23, 2022

The Great Pasty Hunt!

Kendall has long wanted to find the best pasty in the universe, so why not incorporate this quest into the 70/70 quest?! For our 62nd entry on our 70/70 quest, we very purposefully queried, researched, and zig-zagged our way through the Upper Peninsula to find The. Best. Pasty!

 

Our results (in the order in which we sampled pasties during our search): 

 

Rigoni's Bakery, Ironwood

Kendall's rating: second best traditional pasty.

Paula's rating: best vegetarian pasty

 

 

Randall Bakery, Wakefield

Kendall's rating: Best breakfast pasty

Paula's rating: vegetarian pasty had cheese (minus points), good crust

 

 

 Bread of Life, Bessemer - forgettable

 


Lawry's, Ishpeming

Kendall's rating: pretty good when cooked slowly (from being frozen)

Paula's rating: no veggie available when we stopped by

 


Irontown Pasties, Negaunee

Kendall's rating: huge, ground beef
Paula's rating: meh
* note on this rating: at this point of the hunt, we were not hugely hungry...


Lehto's, St. Ignace

Kendall's rating: #1 traditional
Paula's rating: #2 vegetarian (but #1 most interesting tasty vegetarian; definitely best to eat fresh!)
These are the pasties we traditionally take home to eat for dinner our first night in Petoskey. In both directions to/fro Boulder/Petoskey, we always stop at Lehto's for pasties!



 
A behind-the-scenes look at the Great Pasty Hunt!

The hunt would not have been possible without a freezer at hand (hooray for Hedwig!) - especially for vegetarian pasties which are often only available in frozen form at pasty shops.

The haul that made it home to Petoskey:

 Lots of good eating here! <burp!>
 

Sunday, November 20, 2022

A bit of Iron Ore History

For #61 on our 70/70 quest, we visited Fayette Historic State Park, a historic town site which was home to nearly 500 residents during its reign as one of the Upper Peninisula's most productive iron smelting operations. Between 1867 and 1891, Fayette's blast furnaces produced a total of 229,288 tons of iron using local hardwood forests for fuel and quarrying limestone from the bluffs to purify the iron ore. Today, twenty historic buildings still stand within the Fayette town site including the blast furnace complex, kilns, the company store, the Fayette town hall, a hotel and homes of those who used to live there. The State Park extends beyond the town site to include trails wandering through what had been residential areas, along bluffs overlooking Snail Shell Harbor and Lake Michigan, and through woods filled with wildlife. This made for an excellent morning of wandering and wondering.

Entering the town site

Looking at the blast furnace complex from across Snail Shell harbor
(visitors can - and we did - go right up to and inside the complex...but I like this view)

Kendall, Taz, & kiln

Walking into town toward the hotel










 

And, of course, we had to wander along the trails