Good Harbor Bay Sunsets

Summer sunsets over Good Harbor Bay are beloved by both locals and visitors.  At the end of June, the sun slowly arcs over the sky as if it was tracing the outline of Pyramid Point before diving into Lake Michigan.  Each night the colors are different, ranging from bright pink to deep orange.  On June 29th, Mollie Baker, a lifelong resident of Suttons Bay, captured the sunset view from a bluff overlooking both the north end of Little Traverse Lake and Good Harbor Bay on Lake Michigan.  

Mollie will be a senior at Traverse City Central this fall and hopes to spend her university years studying art.  A few of her cherry themed pieces are on display at Benjamin Twiggs in Traverse City.  Mollie paints both animal portraits and landscapes on a commission basis.  Her work can be viewed on her website at https://rose-studios.square.site

Lucy

Lucy is one of our “Stay Home, Stay Safe” housemates. We’ve spent so much time together over the last two months she feels like part of the family. At almost 11 years old, the black on her adorable Pug mug has faded to gray. Twice daily walks through our neighborhood in the crisp Northern Michigan air has trimmed out Lucy’s figure. She’s even lost a pound or two.

I envy her ability to drift off into a deep, restful, sleep. There are moments when I’d like to take a break from the news, curl up next to her and dream the day away. But that’s Molly’s job. Our Portuguese Water Dog is prone to picking a spot on the floor near Lucy’s bed and sleeping parallel to her new pal.

Lucy belongs to Paige, Josh’s girlfriend. On the weekends, the trio hikes in the woods together. Lucy does her very best to keep up. If she falls behind, Paige slips her in a backpack, so Lucy can rest for a minute or two.

When she’s not on a walk or hike, Lucy loves to sunbathe on the back deck. Although she’s normally quiet, she’s likes to yip at the Pileated Woodpeckers. I would too, if a bird my size was circling overhead.

Our in-house photographer, Joe, always has a camera within reach. We, his human housemates, haven’t done much lately but sit in front of a computer, so he’s turned his lens on our canine companions. We are all eagerly waiting for warmer weather, so we can soak up the sun with Lucy.

Backyard Birds

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Our son Josh and his girlfriend, Paige, have been our “Stay Home, Stay Safe” housemates since late-March.  Josh is an outdoor soul. Stuck inside day after day, working from home, with his eyes glued to the computer screen, he needed a diversion.  One afternoon while gazing out the window, he asked, “Where are all your bird feeders?” 

“We attracted so many squirrels and chipmunks, we stopped feeding the birds a few years ago,” I answered.  

Surprisingly, shops selling bird seed, like pet stores, were open during Michigan’s shut-down.  Josh placed a phone order from a local business and our yard became a backyard bird paradise.  Each morning  before starting his workday, Josh checks on his 11 feeders.  I’ve lost track of the different types of seeds he’s using. 

“New bird”, is a text I receive from Josh on an almost daily basis, if I’m not in the kitchen when he’s taking a coffee break.  The neighborhood goldfinches were a dull yellowish-green when Josh started his bird project.  Day by day we’ve watched their feathers change to a bright yellow as if the birds were slowly being infused by our spotty spring sunshine.  Together we are learning to identify the sparrows, woodpeckers and finches.  To date 29 different bird species have visited our backyard.  We all look forward to our winged friends flitting in and out of view.   Spotting and identifying new feathered friends is a welcome daily diversion in our household.  We hope you’ve found one too.

Camping at Rutherford Beach in Louisiana

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I grew up near the shore of Lake Michigan, and I love the beach.  In my opinion,  it’s great a place to walk, swim, picnic or watch the sunset — but it’s definitely not a spot to spend the night.  As we pulled down the Rutherford Beach road I wondered, How did I get talked into shoreline camping?  

Rutherford Beach is part of Louisiana’s Gulf Coast. As we approached our destination for the night, Joe stopped our vehicle in the parking lot.  I took a look around from my perch in the passenger’s seat as Joe stepped down from the van to air down the tires.  There was one port-a-john with its door swaying in the breeze, a dumpster, and a picnic shelter equipped with a seasonal shower.  Along one edge of the parking lot were three recreational vehicles set up to camp.  Adjacent to the beach access road that brought us to the parking lot was a cattle pasture enclosed with a four-strand barbed wire fence.  I could see a herd of tan, brown and black cows grazing off in the distance.

I voted to join the camping caravan, but that wasn’t Joe’s plan.  He was decreasing each  tire’s pressure to increase each tire’s surface area.  This adjustment would allow us to drive down the beach and find a secluded spot to camp without getting stuck in the sand. 

Joe climbed back into the van, looked at me, grinned and said, “I feel like we’re finally camping.” He drove off the parking lot and bumped us along the sand.  We navigated by a lady parked in a silver pick-up truck, typing on a laptop, and one surf fisherman dressed in a red swimsuit, sitting on a Coleman cooler next to his pickup.  Joe choose a camping spot about a mile from the access road, leveled the van and parked.  He couldn’t wait to explore.  I watched Joe stroll down the beach with Molly, our dog.  

I sat in the van and listened to the waves roll onto the shore and wondered about high tide.  Looking out the window, I tried to count the offshore oil rigs. I think at least 20 were visible.  When Joe and Molly returned,  we watched gulls pester the fisherman, then made dinner. As the sunset the wind picked up and I noticed the oil rigs were lit with lights.  

In the middle of the night, high winds woke me up.  It sounded like each wind gust was trying to push the van over.  I poked at my hubby and said, “Joe, I’m having a hard time sleeping.”

He said, “Put in some earplugs. You’ll be fine. You won’t hear a thing.”

“How will the earplugs help with the van’s rocking?” 

Rolling over, Joe repeated, “You’ll be fine.”  At some point the wind died down and I fell asleep. 

The next morning we walked Molly down the beach together, following a two-track road that paralleled the pasture fence.  As we strolled along, I noticed that the waves had washed all sorts of debris ashore: parts of flip-flops and soccer slides, all types of plastic bottles intact and in tiny bits, sun-faded beer cans, odd pieces of clothing including a camouflage jacket and a wadded-up pink tank-top.  The biggest surprise was a blue, plastic, fifty-five gallon drum filled with trash.  Wandering the beach, I saw firsthand that plastic does indeed last forever and perhaps I needed to more conscious of earth-friendly packaging. 

On our way down the shoreline, Molly spotted a black calf, separated from its mother on the beach side of the fence.  The mother was keeping a watchful eye on her little one.  From the well-worn patch of dirt, it looked like the mother had been on duty for a day or two. A couple of the bulls with curved horns snorted when they saw us and kept pace with us on their side of the fence.  On our return, I noticed the calf’s mother had a swollen udder.  Joe held Molly back and I approached the calf slowly, then stopped.  In my best animal-friendly voice I said, “Hey, there.” The calf took one look at me and bolted under the fence.  The sound of my voice was all the encouragement the calf needed to slip under the barbed wire. I think we were both happy that our interaction did not require physical contact.  

Rutherford Beach was a one-night stop on our way across Louisiana.  Joe wasn’t happy with the photos on Google of the beach, so he posted several of his own.  A week later Google sent Joe an email stating that his photos received over 500 views, so would he post more location specific shots?  Joe’s pictures made the shoreline look unique (with the cattle) and inviting, since the sandy shoreline was fairly level.  Reviews of the camping area warned against clouds of biting bugs on windless nights.  Perhaps the van-rocking wind had been our friend? 

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Backyard Birds

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Seated in front of the kitchen windows, our son Josh said, “One bird I’d really like to see is the pileated woodpecker.” Later that afternoon, as if he heard Josh’s wish, a pileated woodpecker visited the large suet feeder hanging in the backyard. Now he swoops in twice a day, trying different feeders, but always returning to the suet. He’s the king of the backyard. When he arrives all of the other birds take flight. While the woodpecker works on the suet there can be so many Goldfinches seeking solace in the bushes it looks like we have a garden of yellow flowers.

Friday afternoon, when the sun’s heat was just a memory, we were seated on the deck talking about our weekend plans. While we chatted, a pair of pileated woodpeckers circled the yard and landed in a large oak tree. The red-headed duo swooped toward the feeders, but did not settle in to peck. Perhaps we were too close? April’s weather kept us inside, but we hope to spend our spring evenings watching the sunset. Hopefully, the woodpeckers will learn to share the yard.

Social Distancing Desert Style

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Finding a camping spot tucked away from civilization is one of Joe’s specialties.  We were enjoying a few days of solitude in California’s Anza-Borrego Desert State Park just as the COVID-19 crisis started to roll across the country.   Anza-Borrego is 80-miles east of San Diego.  Our trip included plans to visit friends in Santa Barbara, before touring the Sportsmobile factory in Fresno, California, then stopping to see relatives in the San Francisco bay area.  March and April were going to be busy months for us. 

Parked in the desert, the March national news felt surreal.  Life was quiet at our campsite on a backroad in the Anza-Borrego desert.   As we sipped our morning coffee we’d watch a bright orange hooded oriole search for desert holly berries in the vines wrapped through a creosote bush near our camp site.  The landscape was dotted with cactus plants on the verge of blooming.  There seemed to be no reason to leave.  Social distancing was the new buzz phrase and the California desert was perfectly suited to finding space.  

But our sons were in Michigan. Our hearts called us home. We left the sunshine on Monday, March 16.  This was our last winter camping site.  

California closed all of its camping areas on March 18, then all its multi-use trail systems on March 23.  Once in a while we do make a good decision.  We arrived home in time to watch the ice melt on Little Traverse Lake.  Now, the sun is starting to shine here in Northern Michigan, the grass is turning green, and new birds are visiting our backyard.  Spring is arriving late this year, but we hope summer will be here soon.