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From: Kenneth Johnson <johnsonkw_at_hotmail.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Apostle Islands
Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2001 23:04:20 -0500
Apostle Islands    July 2001

The Apostle Islands was where I did my first kayaking trip 15 years ago.
It was one of the most beautiful paddling locations I have ever
paddled, and I wanted to do the trip again to refresh my memory and take
pictures this time. There were five of us: Marland, John, and Jim from
Austin, TX, Vlad from New Jersey, and me from Corpus Christi, TX. Marland
did a masterful job handling all the trip research, made all
the reservations, and performed the task of Trip Leader.

I drove from Corpus Christi, leaving at 6pm Monday 7/9, arriving at
Little Sand Bay at
3pm Tuesday 7/10, driving straight through the night to avoid as much of
the city and
construction traffic as possible. Met everyone else and camped at Little
Sand Bay
Campground that night, using Wednesday 7/11 to paddle about 10 miles from
Meyers
Beach north to the Sea Caves and back. Weather was warm (70's to 80's)
and wind and
waves were mild (under 10-15 mph) as was the case for the whole week.
Water was
unusually warm and beautifully clear.

One more night at Little Sand Bay Campground, and then we packed up the
boats for 5 nights in the Apostle Islands, leaving early
Thursday morning, 7/12. Paddled along the sea cliffs on the eastern shore
of Sand Island, out to the lighthouse on the north point, and then over
to York Island (Campsite #2) for the evening (about 8.5 miles). Beautiful
campsite nestled under beautiful big trees just back from the
beach. There are bears swimming from island to island so we carefully
hung our food in the trees.  Great sunsets! Truly a wilderness setting,
with only two other campsites on the island.

Friday morning, 7/13, we paddled east to Raspberry Island, exploring the
cliffs and
landing at the beach to hike to the lighthouse. Two other sailboats were
anchored there,
one a one month cruise from Cleveland. Then we paddled around Oak Island
and up to
South Twin Island staying at Campsite #1. Today's 13 mile paddle was
against a stiff 15
mph NW wind and chop. Another beautiful campsite right on the water, with
a repeat
killer sunset. Survived Friday the 13th with a peaceful night and no
bears.

Saturday July 14 paddled around Rocky Island out to Devils Island, the
northernmost island in the Apostles to explore the sea caves on the
east coast and the lighthouse on the north point. Lighthouse park ranger,
a fellow Texan who spends his summers there, gave us a very
informative tour. This is where the water gets the roughest, with storms
out of the NE kicking up 12 to 40 foot waves at times. Caves
were spectacular, and provided "other-world" paddling experiences as we
worked our way back into them, sometimes in total dark. Back to South
Twin island for another night at the same campsite. After dinner paddled
around North Twin Island; sun doesn't set until well after 9pm. Water was
covered with moths, and beaches had lines of dead moths washing up
providing nourishment for a growing fly population. We thought they were
bad until the Park Ranger told us that the Sunday before we arrived,
everyone on Raspberry was totally covered in flies like bees cover a
beekeeper!

First rain and thunder that evening and early Sunday morning, July 15. As
soon as it
cleared, packed and made a dash for our next campsite on Ironwood Island,
only about
3.5 miles away. Another beautiful campsite right on the beach with
fantastic sunset.

Monday July 16 paddled about 10 miles around Manitou Island, around Oak
Island Cliffs on north end of island, and to campsite #2 on the southwest
end of the island. Again a beautiful site nestled in trees on a slight
cliff overlooking the water. Hiked through beautiful forest up to
the cliffs at the north end of the island, reported as the highest cliffs
on Lake Superior Wisconsin's Lakeshore. Had a "deer encounter" where
we quietly stopped and looked at each other for what seemed like
eternity. Solitude was heavenly.

Tuesday, July 17 was our last day; paddling from Oak Island about 10
miles back to Little Sand Bay Campground. Packed up our cars with our wet
gear and headed back to Texas, after giving thanks for fantastic weather
and scenery on this trip. Truly one of the most beautiful paddle spots in
the U.S.  

Five Sea Kayaks: Dagger Sitka, Dagger Meridian, Current Design Solstice,
and two
Romney Explorers.

Must obtain permit and make camping reservations in advance through the
Apostle
Islands National Lakeshore (headquarters is Bayfield, WI). All
inforomation is available at
the National Park Website at http://www.nps.gov/parks.html under Apostle
Islands
listing.

Launched from Little Sand Bay Campground about 70 miles NE of Deluth on
Highway 13.


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