Monday, June 18, 2012

June 10 - 17, 2012: Baileys Point, KY to Dune Lake, MI



Our trip from Cedar Creek CG to Bailey’s was  pretty and uneventful, although the directions we had for getting to our next campground were very poor and we went quite a ways out of our way because of that. We stopped at the first Bowling Green exit that had a visitor’s center - their slogan: You don’t get a second chance to make a first impression. It was Sunday afternoon, about 1:15, and they weren’t open. Oops – there goes that good first impression. We wandered around, looking for a grocery store or bakery so we could pick up some good bread. No Publix or Fresh Markets up here, I’m afraid. All we found were Kroger’s (which we’ve really liked in the past) and Super WalMart. We tried Kroger’s first and were really disappointed. They seem to have stopped carrying the wide variety of brands they used to have and their bread is lousy – soft, no texture, and tasteless. To make matters worse, they were out of ice! Their machine was broken and management wasn’t smart enough to send someone to one of their other stores for some. We put everything we had in our cart back and went to Wally World – we knew not to expect much from the bread there and they had everything else we wanted. We hadn’t eaten lunch and the directions showed it was “just down the road” so we figured we’d grab something for lunch when we got there and have dinner around 7. I really should have been smart enough to realize we were in trouble when the directions began at a town that wasn’t even in the new atlas we bought, nor was it on the map the state had sent us. It turned out to be a nearly 40 minute drive to Baileys Point, and it didn’t get better there. We had been put at a site where the water was in the back 40 and in spite of having about 35’ of water hose, we weren’t even close to the faucet. The electric hookup was on the wrong (passenger) side of the trailer (most of them in that area were) and it was about 10’ farther than our cord would reach. The site was barely wider than our RV (thank goodness Rich is an expert) and once he backed it in (in one shot, I might add) the tongue of the trailer was on the ground and it still wasn’t level.  We called the host and he found a beautiful site for us – right on the water, power and water on the driver’s side and within easy reach, and almost perfectly level, as were nearly all of the other sites in the A loop.

We had some delightful folks (Ed, a retired law enforcement officer, and his wife) next to us for the last two days we were there and Don and Jeanne, from Cedar Creek, came in unexpectedly and that was a nice surprise. 

 All-in-all, and in spite of a completely wasted day in Bowling Green (we had planned on visiting a distillery, which we couldn’t find and the air museum, which we also couldn’t find) we really enjoyed the time at Baileys Point (and no, none of the literature about it had an apostrophe before the “s”). 

The morning of the 13th saw us on our way to the overnight stop in Anderson, IN. We ran into a traffic jam around 1:30 – an upcoming lane closure 3 miles ahead. It took about 45 minutes to travel the 3 miles to the closure and about 5 minutes to go the ½ mile one-lane road. If it hadn’t been for several truckers working together to keep the type A personality folks from speeding as far as they could before the lane closed, it would have taken far longer. Too bad the state can put a couple of troopers along the highway – they’d make a fortune on the folks who make U-turns and fly up the shoulder of the road. Someday, maybe those folks will realize all it does is make matters worse.   
We pulled into Timberline RV Resort around 5 that afternoon. It was a Passport America and Good Sam’s Campground, so we figured we were pretty safe. It was not quite what we had become accustomed to at the US Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds. The place looked as though the owners had been going for “rustic” but really overshot the mark! It looked like an old drive- in movie location – just lots of posts sticking up out of the ground for sites (electric connections instead of speakers), and a few trees. We were put next to an old, rundown Airstream that had weeds growing up around it and there were old chairs piled up on the picnic table next to it. There was paper littering the ground (it was faded out, and obviously had been there for some time), and just generally run down. The restrooms were very clean, though, in spite of the stalls not having any latches on the doors.

The weather was beautiful – 62 degrees at 8 PM, but it was so skanky we didn’t sit outside. We slept with the windows open and it was 50 in the morning! We never unhooked, so shortly after a quick breakfast, I loaded Dickens up (he was up his ramp into the truck like a shot as though even he didn’t like the place!) and we were on our way to our next stop: Coloma, MI. 

We stopped at a Sam’s Club for some groceries, and while finding the address online, noticed a Meijer (Meyer) store that had a raving review about their produce department, so went over to check it out. WOW! What a nice store. It’s about the size of a really big super Wally World, but with the selection and as clean and neat as Publix, and the produce department put Fresh Market to shame. Rich was thrilled to find nice, fresh rhubarb for $2.49/lb! Needless to say, he was eating a stalk when we drove away. We’ll definitely look for more Meijer stores on our travels. 

Our new campground, Dune Lake in Coloma, was another Passport America, and we were scheduled to stay there three nights, to get us through the weekend, and ended up staying one more night. It was different from the Corps of Engineers parks – not as well maintained and the sites were grass, but it was beautiful.  It is privately owned and the owners are working hard to make it better. Rich did have a brief encounter with a mouse in the men's room and while I was finishing up my shower today, a snake slithered in and those were both firsts. They had a Father’s Day celebration for anyone camping there – they provided BBQ chicken (great!), plates, napkins, and utensils and we all brought a dish to pass. It was fun and a lot of folks joined in.

One thing I’ve marveled at here are all the flowers. They are beautiful – naturalized daylilies on the roadside, Asters, Galardia, Hostas of all varieties, and lots I don’t have names for. It reminds me of the first time I was in Canada, just north of New York – there were more flowers there than I had ever seen. Big, beautiful estates and tiny, old frame houses – it didn’t matter, they all had masses of flowers.

While we were at Dune Lake, we went to a festival in South Haven and I saw Lake Michigan for the first time, found another Meijer store, drove to St. Joseph’s on the coast, saw the Lake Bluff Park, which has all sorts of fun things to do: an indoor carousel, hiking trails, interactive fountains, and all sorts of other cool. We drove up the coast and stopped at the Rocky Gap County Park just outside of St. Joseph’s. It, unlike many other Michigan parks, was free! We walked along the beautiful beach, picked up some of the pretty stones washed up on the shore. We could see for miles up and down the beach and only saw about 10 other people. 

The most unusual things we saw were the dunes. We’ll see more as we travel north in the state. Here comes a little information about the dunes that I found on Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources web site: “Michigan's glacial history provides an explanation for the formation of dunes. The Great Lakes dune complex is relatively young, in terms of geological time. As recently as 16,000 years ago, Michigan was covered with glacial ice thousands of feet thick. This glacial ice contained a mix of boulders, cobbles, sand, and clay. During glacial melting, this deposit was left and is known as glacial drift.

This glacial drift is the source of sand in most of Michigan's dunes. The sands were either eroded from glacial drift along the coast by wave activity or eroded from inland deposits and carried by rivers and streams. Only the hardest, smallest, and least soluble sand grains were moved. Waves and currents eventually moved these tiny rocks inland, creating beaches along the Great Lakes shoreline.

Winds, blowing shoreward at speeds of 8 to 25 miles per hour, begin to move the sand grains. The size of grains which are moving is directly related to wind velocity larger grains require higher wind speeds. These bouncing sand grains resemble tiny, skipping ping pong balls as they are moved by the wind through a process called saltation. Colliding with each other, barely a foot or two off the ground, they may meet a slight obstruction, such as a clump of grass, which deflects the wind and allows sand grains to drop. Thus a slight mound or hummock is created.

The wind continues to push sand grains up the windward side of the dune crest, causing the dune to grow in the downwind direction. Many sand grains continue moving and eventually roll down the steep backslope. A dune is slowly being formed, and its continued growth depends upon perennial vegetation, wind, and sand. Because dune plants act as barriers to sand movement and hold migrating sand, they play a critical role in the formation and stabilization of dunes.” Some of the dunes in the north of Michigan are 450 feet high! The ones we saw today were about 40 feet, the sand a beautiful warm tan color and lots of rocks, worn smooth by the waves. Can’t wait to see and learn more. 

We leave tomorrow morning for Huron-Manistee National Forest where we will stay two nights – it’s near Ludington on Lake Michigan. We’ll be there for two nights (no water or electric connections) then we’ll go up to Sleeping Bear Dunes for two days, and then on to the UP! We’ll be out of touch for at least Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday and perhaps for several days after that. Don’t know where we’ll go after that, but we’ll let you know when we figure it out.

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