Late May into June, 2019
Still having wet and cold weather, but the cold snap is about to break we hear. Montana is very scenic and we are finding quieter places to camp…phew! Making our way across the very north of the country, Rt. 2, from here through Minnesota, Wisconsin and then across the UP of Michigan.
Eastern Montana is pretty much grazing land and farm fields- we were surprised! Not many places to camp either.
North Dakota- we’re in the Bakkan Oil Fields and wells, pump jacks and tanks are everywhere. The state has made a bundle of money on it, however the smog from flaring is very evident, as is the quick growth in towns and some visible decline already. Lewis and Clark State Park is on the Missouri River- which right now is feeding some of the major flooding down south.
The little town of Rugby, ND is one cool place! We found Prairie Village Museum that lets visitors overnight in their parking lot! The museum is a collection of late 1800s to turn of the century small town buildings moved here from around the area- from a general store with saltines still in the glass front case, to a barber shop, dress shop, western union office, bank, etc.
Rugby also boasts being the “Geographic Center of North America”- which it technically is not, due to modern calculations, but it has been a tourist attraction here for many years. And, they have a sign letting us know how far it is to Lubec- not that Lubec is the easternmost place in North America…
It is very windy here, apparently most of the time, as trees all lean, and people have try and try to grow wind breaks some which succeed and some don’t. One component we have seen for miles and miles is a hedgerow of common lilac, and they are blooming now! They must be super hardy here. We’ve seen hedgerows up to a half mile long! Behind the lilac might be a row of evergreens a bit taller and then a row of deciduous trees like aspen or cottonwood.
Minnesota- the west side of the state is rolling and farm land, the rest that we crossed is lakes, wetlands and forests…and, did I mention…killer mosquitoes! We are very near the headwaters of the Mississippi River- the river runs through Cass Lake where we stayed one night and on another night we camped on Sandy Lake and River which feeds into the Mississippi.
Rhylee update- progess, but not a full night’s sleep (for any of us) yet. We’ve added hemp dog treats which have CBD and THC to his bedtime routine. We thought that might do the trick, but it barely seems to chill him out, although he does seem hungrier than normal…just saying 😉
Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Wisconsin- A very interesting National Park Service area, actually National Lakeshore and National Wilderness. There are about 20 islands that, back in the day were logged, quarried and fished from, that are protected and pristine for the most part. We stayed at a Tribal Casino Campground right on Lake Superior within view of several of the islands. A boat trip through and around the island one day gave us great views of sea caves and lighthouses.
Upper Peninsula, Michigan- just had to explore this area. Keweenaw Peninsula is the little peninsula sticking off the top of the UP. It looks a lot like Maine, rocky shores, pine trees, and Lake Superior that looks like the ocean. There wasn’t much else there though 🙂 We did stop and buy some of the famous UP Michigan “Pasties” pronounced “pass-ties”- potato, meat and veggie “hand pies”, that Cornish miners brought here many years ago.
Crossing time zones and moving north messes up our internal clocks frequently. We have had sunsets near 10pm when on the western side of a time zone, and then we drive east and mover to the eastern side of the time zone and sunset is an hour earlier. And then add in they we are moving closer to June 21, the summer solstice, the longest daylight….
Moving through Ontario, lots of rain, lots of flooded campsites, lots of mayflies and mosquitoes, good highway, but slow speeds, expensive campgrounds…Lake Huron, Lake Nippising, Ottawa River, St. Lawrence River.