Friday, November 19, 2010

Shanty Creek Resort to Open Nov. 25



            As I write this, it’s 32 degrees on the slopes of Shanty Creek Resort between Bellaire and Mancelona, and chair lifts will are scheduled to start humming Nov. 25.
Base of a run at Schuss Mountain
            And both the resort, and skiers, can’t wait for temps to drop a few more and for snow to start dropping, both from the sky and the resort’s snow guns, to open another season of fun. It's not there yet, judging from today's live webcam, but it will be soon.
            Occupying the hills here since the 1960s, both resorts have undergone a massive renovation in the last few years. Here’s a preview of what you’ll find when you return:
            As part of its massive $10 million renovation reopens its Lakeview Restaurant & Lounge and the new Grand Lobby looking out over one of northern Michigan’s most spectacular views.
            The Lakeview Hotel & Conference Center – formerly known as the Summit Village Hotel – was given an upscale “lake house” design. Inspired by the Hotel’s mountaintop setting, designers brought the magnificent view of Lake Bellaire and the hillsides beyond into the Lobby and Restaurant with expansive glass walls and tall hardwood ceilings. The complete redesign features rich wood tones, warm reds and chocolates as well as green fabrics, giving an inviting, sophisticated feeling.
            Three new runs will open on the north face of Schuss Mountain, bringing Shanty Creek’s skiable runs to 52.
            Two will weave through the glades to the Red Lift. And a new all- natural terrain park located between Purple Daze and Village Way will offer enthusiasts another option for grinding their way downhill this winter. It’s also located on the north face of Schuss Mountain.
            Schuss Mountain will also be open for night skiing on Friday nights until 10 p.m. For guests checking into one of Shanty Creek Resorts 450-plus rooms and condos, night of arrival Friday skiing is included with ski packages. And to expedite your time to the slopes on Saturday morning, you can get t rental equipment Friday nights until 10 p.m.
            In addition this season, Shanty Creek will be unveiling a new solar-power- lighted cross-country ski trail at its Summit Village, home of The Lakeview Hotel and Conference Center.
            Shanty Creek will offer what it bills as Michigan’s most affordable lift ticket”—the Summit Only package. Introduced last season, the Summit Only lift ticket is Michigan’s most affordable skiing and for just $18 a day, what the resort says is one of the best ski values in America.
            The package includes a ski/snowboard rental option for just $17a day more. For beginners, families, and experienced skiers alike, the Summit Only package is available weekends only all season long.
            In addition, a family of four, all skiing or riding at Summit Mountain, can spend the day on the slopes for less than $150 including rentals.
            The resort also offers what it bills as the Midwest’s most affordable weekend packages:
            The Summit Ski Package
            The Summit Ski Package starts at $75 per person per night on weekends. Requiring a two-night stay, it includes lodging in a condo guestroom, two-day Summit ski slopes ticket, and complimentary skiing night of arrival. In addition, children under age 8 ski free and children under 12 eat free.
            The Midweek Ski Package
            For even greater value, check out the Midweek Ski Package at Shanty Creek, which starts at only $54 per person.  Available Monday through Friday, it includes lodging in a condo guestroom, one- day lift ticket good for any of Shanty Creek’s three villages, and complimentary skiing night of arrival. Children under age 8 ski free and children under 12 eat free.
            Other packages include one for couples that combines skiing with visits to nearby wineries, culinary workshops, and meeting space, which has been totally renovated.
            For more on the resort, go to www.wshantycreek.com.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Meet Michigan’s Newest National Park, Other Monroe Sites: River Raisin Battlefield Figured in War of 1812


Visitor Center for River Raisin Battlefield contains dioramas and other park information


            What’s great, or lucky, about the number 393 in Monroe?
            It’s because the long-campaigned-for-and-finally-reality River Raisin National Battlefield Park is now officially the nation’s 393rd national park.
            The War of 1812 battlefield was set aside by Congress, and signed into being by President Obama, and this battle just south of Detroit was one of the bloodiest, and crucial to controlling the Great Lakes.
            The national park doesn’t commemorate a victory for the American side, however. Rather, the battle, which took place on Jan. 18-23, 1813, was one of the worst defeats of the war inflicted on the Americans by the British and their Indian allies, as you’ll learn at the Park Visitor Center, in a former 20th century home built on the edge of what in 1813 was near-wilderness in the portion of the Northwest Territory.
            Fought along the north bank of the river, the battle pitted American and British troops for control of the important port of Detroit, and all of the lower Great Lakes region. With the British were the troops of the famed Indian leader Tecumseh, who did not personally participate.
            After virtually destroying the American army, which had hurried here from Detroit, Indian’s hopes of preserving their land from the ever-encroaching Europeans and Americans rang more true than ever.
            In addition, the British force destroyed the town of Frenchtown, near present-day Monroe, and left the entire Ohio territory exposed to British capture.  After the battle, Indians killed most of the injured Americans. In all, more than 400 were killed, the highest number of Americans to die in that war during a single battle.
            After the battle, Americans struggled for months to regain what they had lost, finally relying on Perry’s naval victory in Lake Erie to secure the area. If they had lost that battle, Michigan and much of the Great Lakes area might have eventually become part of Canada.
            The National Park Service began studying the idea of creating a park here in earnest in 2008 after years of campaigning by local officials and politicians.
            The current visitor center is at 1403 E. Elm Street, and it features a fiber optic display of the battle, dioramas and more.
            And, while you’re in Monroe, see displays of Monroe’s George A. Custer, who led his troops into history at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in Montana, around town, including at the Monroe County Historical Museum.
            Head to town in summer and catch the annual River Raisin Jazz Festival in mid-August. Rent a canoe for a float down the river, or head onto Lake Erie on a charter walleye fishing boat like Tradewinds Charters or launch your own at Sterling State Park or Lake Erie Metropark (that’s up the coast a bit), or play golf on one of several courses in the area. Then shop at Michigan’s top tourist attraction, Cabela’s superstore near Dundee a few miles west. Or, take the kids to the Calder dairy farm to see what a real working farm looks like and for an ice cream cone, courtesy of the farm’s dairy herd. There are plenty of places to stay, including one made for kids and families: Splash Universe River Run, an indoor water park, next door to Cabela's. For more information on the Monroe area, go to www.monroeinfo.com.             

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Iceman Cometh (Again) to Traverse City This Weekend





From top: bikers with broken equipment sometimes carry their mounts across finish; teams from across North America compete.

            If you’re headed north this weekend, and enjoy mountain biking, you might just want to steer those handlebars toward Traverse City to experience, either from a saddle, or as a ground spectator, the largest one-day bicycle race in the world.
             The Iceman Cometh Challenge, now in its 21st year, is a 27-mile point-to-point race, meaning it starts in one spot (in this case, downtown Kalkaska), and ends at another (in this case, Timber Ridge RV & Recreation Resort, in the hills above Grand Traverse Bay’s East Arm).
            And if you’re doubting that world’s largest-claim, look at the numbers: more than 4,000 riders individual and in teams, from across North America, will put the pedal to the mud, snow, leaves, or whatever’s on the ground Saturday (some years it’s been all three).
            This used to be a morning event. However it’s grown so big, that there are now two starts for the full race. Amateur riders push off at 9:30 a.m., while pro teams and individuals leave Kalkaska at 2:30 p.m.
            This is not only a race for the pros. If you’re of a mind, grab your Schwinn and roll off in the Slush Cup, an 8-mile fun race that’ll take you up and down the tree-covered hills near the finish line, starting at 9 a.m. It’s a fun event that the kids will  love, too, as much of the Slush Cup field is comprised of youngsters.
            For the really wee ones, the Meijer Sno Cone race, for kids aged 12 and under, gets underway from Timber Ridge at 3 p.m., on a short (quarter-mile) loop.
            However, if you want to participate, you’ll have to wait until next year for either fun race, plus the 27-miler, as all spots are spoken for. Registration starts in spring at the Web site, www.iceman.com.
            The evening before, head to Grand Traverse Resort & Spa for the accompanying Ice Cycle Expo to see the latest in cycling gear, bicycles, bike racks, and more.
            Then, if you didn’t sign up and chose to spectate rather than participate, grab a spot near the track in the woods in and around the finish as the racers tear around the approach, whipsawing back and forth through the trees with such skill you’ll be amazed that a bike can do what these skilled riders manage to put their mounts through.
            Following the races, the finish line becomes one big party site as spectators welcome those who finished without too many flat tires or bent equipment, beginning at 10 a.m. There will be music, food, and beverages, both adult and otherwise, to slake the thirsts of cyclists and their support groups, along with spectators.
            If you’re going, be ready for any kind of weather. Dress for cold, and be sure to bring wet weather gear just in case. If you’re participating, take it from one who’s done the Slush Cup at least: the entire event is a blast, and crossing that finish line to the cheers of folks who don’t know you from Gary Fisher (a pro racer who’s been credited with beginning the sport of mountain biking), plus your friends, is something you need to experience.
            For more information, go to iceman.com, or go to www.visittraversecity.com


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

There’s Still Time For A Cider Mill Visit


            The colors may be fading in the north and peaking in the south, and the days are getting shorter and colder, but there is still time to make a visit to a Michigan Cider Mill.
            Many cider mills stay open until at least Thanksgiving, and some operate beyond. And you can bet that as the sugars concentrate in the apples as nights get colder, the cider becomes the sweetest treat of the season.
            Near St. Johns, between Lansing and Clare, for example, Uncle John’s Cider Mill has been hosting family fun since the 1970s, and is planning to be open through Dec. 31.  This month, kids can pick their own pumpkins, take train rides,  and get lost in the corn maze, and after, sip all that great cider and munch on a cinnamon donut, too.  Check out Uncle John’s at www.ujcidermill.com, or call 989-224-3686.
            In Southeast Michigan, Apple Charlie may be gone, but his cider mill that has crushed the fruit of the season for more than 50 years lives on in New Boston, southwest of Detroit. Apple Charlie’s will be open through Dec. 31 as well, and its haunted house, a fixture at many cider mills, is open through Oct. 30. Go to www.applecharlie.com for more, or call 734-753-9380.
            In central Lower Michigan, don’t pass up Fruitful Orchard, just west of Gladwin on M-61. Buy an apple pie produced by the mill’s Amish cooks.  Pick a peck of fresh apples, and enjoy that great smell of cider with fresh donuts wafting through the building as you walk through the door.  Fruitful Orchard is open through Nov. 24. Go to http://www.michiganappleorchard.com/Home.aspx, or call 989-426-3971.
            Three other perennial favorites are Plymouth Orchards and Cider Mill near Plymouth, Parmenter’s in Northville, and the Frankilin Cider Mill in Franklin.
For more information and hours, a good starting point is www.michigancidermills.net. It does not list every one, but if you Google Michigan cider mills and your nearest city, you’ll quickly be on the way to enjoying some of the best of Michigan in fall.  

What’s New on Michigan’s Ski Slopes




Schuss Mountain, part of Shanty Creek Resorts, is a great family destination with accomodations both on-slope and chalets off.


            More supplemental snow and more fun await skiers returning to Michigan’s 40-plus downhill ski areas when the white stuff starts flying sometime between now and December.
            Capitalizing on two great winters, and with predictions of heavy north country snow due to near-record high water temperatures in Lakes Michigan and Superior (cold winds whipping over the warm water will quickly soak up moisture from the lakes, dumping it when they make landfall in the form of snow), resorts are hoping to build more ring into cash registers, and are reporting some major improvements.
            Major developments include the return of Bessemer’s BlackJack Resort to the downhill scene. In its second winter of new ownership, the resort is a favorite of skiers heading the U.P. in search of what may be the closest runs and scenery to Rocky Mountain skiing in Michigan, outside of the Keweenaw Peninsula’s Mount Bohemia. At Bohemia, season passes purchased on Dec. 4 are just $99.
            Here’s a brief regional rundown of some of the other major additions you’ll find once the chairlifts start humming again:
            Southeast MichiganAlpine Valley, in the White Lake/Milford area, increased its snowmaking capacity, enlarged its terrain parks, and will offer all new rental skis.           
            Mount Brighton Ski & Golf, just west of Brighton, is adding new “progressive” terrain parks with lots of tricks, and all served by two surface tows and one chair lift.
                        Pine Knob, near Clarkston, is lowering its energy costs and footprint by installing new lighting, energy-efficient glass and door vapor barriers. It also changed one chair lift to allow it to run at variable speeds to handle crowds more efficiently.
                        Mount Holly, near Holly, added a three-story foyer to its lodge, a heated patio and outdoor fireplace, expanded its snowboard park, and added 12 new snow guns.
            Northwest Michigan--The big boys on the block, Boyne Resorts, always have something new planned each season. 
            There are 90 new Boyne Low-E  snow guns in place at both mountains. The new snowmakers are about 40 percent more efficient at making what Boyne says is a fluffier, lighter more natural snow.
            Boyne Highlands has opened additional glade skiing  near North Peak and Tournament pass. Riders will see 30 percent more rails and jibs at both ski areas. And for your apres-ski fun,  try the twin ziplines at the Highlands and the Mountain. Boyne Highlands is 1,3500 feet, longest in the region, while Boyne Mountain’s is 780 feet.
            At the cafeteria, both resorts have turned green, swapping out throw-away products for dishwasher flatware, reducing waste by up to 70 percent. Recycling bins are now in place, and both are using post-consumer waste napkins.
            Caberfae Peaks and Golf Resort, near Cadillac, committed to snowmaking this winter with 15 new tower snowmakers, two portable snow machines, plus five new air/water snowguns, fed by 1,000-plus feet of piping.
            Caberfae widened one trail and added two boxes to its terrain park. Children aged 17 and under sleep and ski free Monday through Thursday with two paying adults, except for some holidays.  Purchase a season pass here and also ski at Shanty Creek resorts for just $10 Sunday through Thursday, $25 Friday and Saturday.
            Nub’s Nob, across the street from Boyne Highlands, opens a new race arena ski slope, replacing its superpipe, creating a home for future racers. It also replaced a handle tow with a faster rope tow to service the hill. Nub’s also added eight snow guns and a new groomer. It expanded its terrain park, adding new boxes and other tricks, plus a new jump area.
            Shanty Creek Resorts in Bellaire opens two new runs on Schuss Mountain’s north face, winding through the woods. Boarders will find a new natural terrain park. The slopes at Shanty Creek also will be open for night skiing on Fridays. And, if you’re into sardines, pack as many as you can into your vehicle and pay only $100 to get everyone inside a lift ticket at Schuss between Jan. 8 and Feb. 5. On Martin Luther King Day (Jan. 17, pay only $90 per carload.  And on Jan. 22, sample local and other microbrewed beers at the Beer and Boards Festival.
            Southwest Michigan—Near Grand Rapids, Cannonsburg, near Cannonsburg, also is under new management, and they’ve added a marital twist: book your wedding reception for 125 guests or more and get free season passes.
            Swiss Valley Ski & Snowboard Area in Jones reports adding more snowmaking as well.
            East MichiganHanson Hills, near Grayling, offers a $1 lift ticket and rental every Friday night.
            Treetops Resort, east of Gaylord, gets a new manager, Barry Owens, formerly of Garland Resort near Lewiston, who is sure to make your experience here even better. Treetops also extended a tow rope so skiers have a lower start at the bottom of the hill, and its popular “Yard” terrain park is back, with plenty of tabletops and rails for both skiers and boarders to try. Treetops also has rentals for snowblading and cross-country skiing on nearby trails.
            Otsego Club, a public-private facility depending on when you visit near Treetops, will again host World Cup snowboard teams training there from around the world. Last year, the club built a second-to-none half-pipe training area that attracted teams from across the globe, in a big coups for the facility.
            Otsego also offers more winter fun, with snowmobile rentals, snowcat rides, sledding and the like. Check its website for when the public can ski this private club.
            Upper Peninsula—Besides the return of Blackjack and, plus the new season pass price at Bohemia, other U.P. developments include Pine Mountain in Iron Mountain, which has added a paddle tow for its terrain park so boarders no longer have to risk tearing up gloves on a rope tow.
            Pine Mountain also added a rope tow to its beginner area, and a new run.
Ski Brule, near Iron River, is offering a deal for ski clubs and groups: purchase six lift tickets at $30 each and get the seventh free.
            Marquette Mountain, near Marquette, opens a new terrain park. Mount Zion, the community ski hill near Ironwood, offers free skiing to all Gogebic Community College students and to anyone aged 62 and over.
            If you’re a fan of both Mount Bohemia and Porcupine Mountains ski area, you can ski both all season long for just $124. Mount Bohemia, north of Houghton in the Keweenaw Peninsula, has what’s considered some of the toughest terrain in the Midwest. Most of it is ungroomed, tree skiing.
            We’ll report soon on what’s in store for cross-country skiers.
            

An Artist’s View of The Lakota Prairie: ‘Living Perfectly Happy Being Miserably Comfortable’ 120 Years After Wounded Knee




            If you want the 50-cent tour of South Dakota’s Badlands and surroundings, do it yourself by hanging a left at Wall Drug, spending a few hours off I-90, and be on your way in time for dinner in Rapid City.
            Or, you can hire someone like Warren “Guss” Yellowhair, Lakota artist, teacher, linguist and tour guide, to take you on a trip into the real prairie that lies beyond the national park, into the historic reservation of Pine Ridge.
            Have him stand at the grave where the Lakotas massacred at Wounded Knee, within the reservation, lie, and sing a remorseful song to the dead. Have him show you his art, from willow dream keepers, to ledger book art prints of war chief Crazy Horse.
            And, while he drives amidst the abject poverty of the villages within this huge prairie reservation, have him tell a joke or two while explaining that he feels the Lakota here are in the beginnings of lifting themselves out of all this by the best means possible: through education, self-respect, and a return to the “old ways,” that have been lost for more than 100 years.
            We drove off towards “the res,” as Guss puts it (his Lakota name, by the way, isn’t Guss; it’s Tasunkanajin, or His Horse Is Standing), as he explained that he’s been a traditional Lakota artist for 25 years now, learning brain tanning buffalo hides from his uncle, other artists, and elders, while also about making drums robes, and unique ledger book art. That art form began in the 1870s, he said.
            “It’s a combination of two cultures. Trading posts used paper, ink and pen to keep track of inventory and records on ledger books, and for the first time, Lakota turned from hides to art on that same paper, creating pictographs telling the history of the culture, and it’s given me the opportunity to travel within the U.S. and to Germany four times.”
            Guss also creates parfleche art, rawhide boxes originally created to hold items, and used in arrow shields. He is an instructor at Oglala Lakota College, teaching students on the Pine Ridge reservation art, Lakota language immersion and self-respect. The latter, through what he calls winter, fall, summer and spring camps for reservation youth that take place each year. The college has conferred more than 3,000 degrees in everything from nursing to teaching.
            As he drove us through the Dakota plains and in and out of the Badlands, he told us about the reservation, 100 miles long, 50 wide, where more than 30,000 Lakota live, or rather, exist.  Lakota, he says, translates to friends, or allies. “We’re very friendly but if you poke us in the wrong way...,” he joked, with more than a hint of historical reference. The word Sioux came from a mix of French and Ojibway, so most Lakota don’t like that word.
            On the day of the Lakota new year, the last day of April (interestingly, the same weekend we fly fishermen celebrate the opening of trout season in Michigan), we go to Thunderbird Mountain and offer tobacco and prayers to welcome back the thunder beings. We also go to Old Baldy and Harney Peak in the Black Hills.” Wind Cave also is sacred because the Lakota believe that is where they emerged onto the earth.
            But on nine college centers, some 1,500 students per semester are working towards four-year degrees, to lift up the population from poverty as part of the Proud Horse Institute.
            “We do have a casino, called Prairie Winds. It provides some jobs. In a place where there is 60 to 70 percent unemployment every little bit helps.”
            As he related that story, we stopped at Scenic, a small near-ghost town on the edge of the Badlands, which saw its last visitor decades ago. Owned by one person, it was rumored it’d been just sold to the Hell’s Angels. One of its few residents greeted us, then asked for a handout.
            It was an example of what Guss was just talking about.
Visitors who want to immerse themselves in the reservation can stay at several properties, and many do, including many Europeans who can’t get enough of the West. There are two hotels, one at the Prairie Winds Casino and the other, Lakota Prairie Ranch. There are also bed & breakfasts, but the real draws are also tragic ones.
            Wounded Knee
            The upside down American Flag, flown at a house near the small cemetery looking over Wounded Knee Creek tells all you need to know about what happened here during one of the most shameful events in U.S. military history.
            We walked up the knoll overlooking the “battlefield,” in quotes because it wasn’t a battle at all.
            In frigid December 1890, the Lakota chief Big Foot, suffering from pneumonia, had moved his band here after fearing he would be the next target after Sitting Bull was killed, and he was afraid to seek refuge with Red Cloud in Pine Ridge.
            Red Cloud, who does not have a great reputation among many Lakota, did not protect Big Foot. So as the Army met with Big Foot, to give up their arms. A deaf Indian was asked to give up his rifle. Since he couldn’t hear, two soldiers held him, and his rifle discharged in the scuffle, according to some reports. That was all it took. Soon, the wrath of the re-formed 7th Cavalry, some say to revenge the victory at Little Big Horn, fell upon the encampment along the creek. More than 300 of Big Foot’s band lay dead along the creek, including Big Foot, a majority women and children.
            After a three-day blizzard, the Indian dead were buried at the top of a hill in a mass grave overlooking the site, and from which deadly rapid-fire artillery rained down upon Big Foot and the soldiers below. And the government handed out 20—20—of Medals of Honor after the massacre to the participants. Twenty-five Army died, many believed to be victims of friendly fire.
            As we visited the grave, Guss sang his moving song. The words, he explained, meant this:  Great Spirit, you’re the only one with great compassion; Through your compassion I am strong; Because of the sins of the world, I am having a hard time.
            “I had though that was an appropriate song, calling upon the Creator for strength to continue as a nation of people regardless of what was done to us,” he said later. “The genocide here was the pinnacle of the breaking of the sacred hoop of life for our nation.”
            The site was a turning point in 1973, when Russell Means and other American Indian Movement leaders made their stand for 77 days at a church where Big Foot and his band are buried, to call attention to the reservation’s dismal poverty, and to begin what Guss and others are doing today—through the old ways and education, to provide hope, and most of all, pride, in being Lakota.
            “The government fulfills the treaty obligations by handing out mediocre services, and that creates two states of mind here, that if you’re given something, why should I work, or the government owes me. So a lot of factors went into creating this situation,” he says.
            “But we’ve got the land, resources and the people, but because of that mindset it’s hard. We have the largest dropout rate in the U.S. here. People begin to loose that dream and get caught up in drugs and that puts more dirt on the grave,” Guss adds.  “I like to say that the people here can be perfectly happy to be living miserably comfortable.”
            But there are signs of change. “With our college, people are beginning to educate themselves, so I do see a future for our young people. Our old style of government was families coming to help each other, and people are going back to that. That gives power back to they people so they can do some of these things on their own. For the longest time we were made to feel ashamed of our history and to speak the language.
            “All this ties into being proud of being Lakota,” he says.
            Guss says that besides tours like the one we were on, you can also book pheasant or buffalo hunts and other outdoor pursuits either through the Pine Ridge Area Chamber of Commerce, home of a small but good museum, and the Oglala Sioux Parks and Recreation Authority at www.osprabuffalokeepers.com.
            A stop by the Red Cloud School, near the town of Pine Ridge where another good museum is located, along with a shop selling lots of Lakota-made art, also is worthwhile.
            And, you can stay on the reservation and learn how the Lakota are trying to escape from 100-plus years of well-meaning, but misguided, government action, and self-hatred.
           
            When You Go
            A self-taught traditional artist, Warren “Guss” Yellowhair also has an AA in Lakota Studies from Oglala Lakota College, and teaches there. He has displayed his art in many shows and exhibitions, including Gold Rush Days in Sidney, NE, and the Coeur d'Alene Art Show in Idaho, and elsewhere across the country.
            He also helped organize portrayals during the Lewis & Clark bicentennial sponsored by the National Park Service with the Lakota Heritage Society. His art is available and many local powwows and in stores such as Prairie Edge Gallery in Rapid City and Lakota Prairie Ranch Resort, near Kyle, and on eBay. For tour information, go to www.nativediscovery.org. To contact Guss about both his art and tours, call 605-454-0507. Or email him at Tasunkanajin_1@yahoo.com.
            For a list of upcoming powwows on Pine Ridge, along with other guides and native artists, go to the native discovery.org site, or www.pineridgechamber.com. The site also has information on reservation accommodations including campgrounds, hotels, and bed & breakfasts, plus horseback riding, fishing and other cultural events and art galleries and attractions, from the Oglala Lakota College History Center in Kyle, to area guest ranches.
            While you’re there, buy a Tanka Bar, a natural buffalo and cranberry energy bar made on the reservation. Learn more at www.tankabar.com.

Warren Guss Yellohair displays some of his Lakota art

A monument to the dead from Wounded Knee stands over the cemetery as prayer offerings flutter in the wind

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Searching for Golf Nirvana in Michigan? Find it at Roscommon’s Forest Dunes


           By Bill Semion

            If you’re in a golfing family searching for that out-of-the-ordinary course to call your own, you just might find it in the pine forests of East Michigan, a few long drives north of the tiny vacation community of Roscommon. 
            Tucked in the pines and bordering the famed Mason Wilderness Tract, Forest Dunes is an uncommon find in Michigan’s long list of public golf course choices. If you’re a golfer, you’ll be blown away by your discovery, never expecting what you’ll find, and even if you’re not a golfer but with someone who is, there is plenty to do here while your companion is on the links.
            After entering the grounds and meandering your vehicle along a the pine-shaded road, prepare to be stunned with a clubhouse that looks as if it were airlifted straight from Scotland.
            The massive 22,000-square-foot stone and wood structure looks over an artful 18-hole course designed by none other than Tom Weiskopf, who carefully cut into the surrounding red and jack pine woodlands while incorporating the natural landscape and dotting it with Scottish-style mounded fairways and plenty of sand to get you in trouble, hence its name.
            Each hole of the par 72, 7,141-yard course is named, with the first appropriately called Eagle’s Perch, named for the majestic birds golfers often see cruising above. In fact, you’ll see more bald eagles and other winged creatures than you probably thought, too. In 2003, Forest Dunes was certified as the first Gold Audubon Signature sanctuary in Michigan, one of just 16 worldwide. And somewhere along the way, you’ll also probably hear that the grounds weren’t always so genteel.  The surrounding woods sported an earlier nefarious history, as a hangout and getaway for Detroit’s infamous Purple Gang in the 1920s.
            Since Forest Dunes opened for golf, the accolades for this relatively undiscovered Troon-managed course have mounted up, starting with being named the top best new upscale golf course in American by Golf Digest in 2003, and continuing in 2009, when it was listed as the No. 2 best course in America by GolfWeek Magazine, and a 4 ½-star rating as one of the Best Places to Play by Golf Digest in 2008-09.
            Inside its beautifully appointed locker rooms, you’ll see some of the names who’ve discovered the club.  They include Detroit Red Wings great Steve Yzerman and former Visteon CEO and Ford Vice Chairman Peter Pestillo among them.
            Also on the grounds is a beach club bordering 27-acre Lake Au Sable, made for relaxing, swimming, or fishing (equipment is available at the club).  Or, grab your fly rod and waders and head for the South Branch of the Au Sable River’s Mason Tract, where no-kill regulations have grown monumental-sized fish to catch and release while you enjoy 13 miles of riverfront. Guided trips are available as well
            Bring your mountain bike and ride trails through the property, or head to the Mason Tract, where two-track roads meander through the property. Or, canoe or kayak the South Branch from liveries in Roscommon. Other activities include nearby horseback riding, hunting, snowmobiling, casino outings and shopping.
            In winter, the course may be closed but Forest Dunes isn’t, as several miles of groomed cross-country trails open to skiers starting in mid-December, conditions permitting.
            After golf, enjoy brunch each month, or dinner nightly. Luxurious rental homes also are available on the property.
            But you needn’t worry about meeting any of those characters. Only the quiet whoosh of the pines, the smack of driver against ball, the call of bald eagles, orioles, and warblers, and a sense of quiet awe that only comes from golfers experience something that’s truly magical.
            Forest Dunes is just northeast of Roscommon off exit 239 on Interstate 75. Call 866-DUNESMI, or 989-275-0700, or go to www.forestdunesgolf.comwww.forestdunesgolf.com.
           
            

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Garland Gets a Facelift














New Owners pump millions into Lewiston’s famed year-round resort
 By Bill Semion
Thought you’d not see major investment in a northern Michigan resort in today’s economy?
Garland, the nation’s largest log resort east of the Mississippi, is dispelling that notion as new owners, only on the grounds since last year, are already revamping infrastructure and planning additions that will again make this northeast Michigan resort THE place to stay in the region.
            Some examples:
            • A name change. It’s now called Garland Lodge and Resort
            • A new $1.5-million 5,000-square-foot full-service spa opening this spring
            • Revamped, spiffed up golf courses (four are on the property) with a possible future fifth in the offing
            • All rooms to be redone by the start of summer to a new, woodsy-feel
            • The addition of mountain bike paths to lure more families among more outdoor-oriented offerings
            • For winter, a huge LED light show called Light Up the North featuring more than two million lights at drive-past displays.
            • All the other great Garland draws return, says president Barry Owens.
             In winter, that means the hugely popular Gourmet Glide, a cross-country ski event each weekend starring after the holidays. Ski between five food stops over approximately 10 kilometers, nibbling on everything from mimosas at the main lodge, to trout, while you and others catch and release rainbows in a pond.
            And for the ultimate in romantic dinners, there’s Zhivago Night. Wether permitting, board a sleigh for an evening ride through the woods to a lodge for a multi-course gourmet dinner while you and your special guest are serenaded by a musical duo.
            For more on Garland, call 877-4-GARLAND, or go to garlandusa.com.  

            




Thursday, March 25, 2010

            Fishing The P-M, A River For All Seasons
Here’s a How-To, When-To for One of Michigan’s Most Storied Streams
By Bill Semion
            Doc Green’s and Birch Hole. Whirlpool. Rosebud and Jorgenson’s. And Merle T. “Simmy” Nolph. If you’ve ever slipped a wader leg into the swift, westward-flowing waters of West Michigan’s Pere Marquette River, you might recognize those names. If you haven’t, you should.
            The Pere Marquette, named for one of Michigan’s pioneer priest explorers and flowing cold and clear from springs to the east of Baldwin, is just as storied in its trout, and salmon history.
            It in the hearts of all trout anglers (or should be), because it was the first stream in the nation to be planted with brown trout, brought to Michigan by boat and wagon to Flint, then carted cross-country to be reared at a hatchery and, as Frank Willetts, the tallish ponytailed owner of the Pere Marquette River Lodge in Baldwin will tell you, planted into the river on a Tuesday in 1834. It was designated a Natural Wild-Scenic River in 1978.
            Willetts hosts anglers from across the country at his lodge at the start of the flies-only stretch, to fish those storied holes I named above.
             “It’s simply an awesome cold water fishery because it sustains a huge migratory fishery and having the top 8.6 miles as flies only also enables our browns to grow to exponential form,” Willetts says. “Along with those you get steelhead, salmon, and coho, and also white suckers, which are a huge food source for the trout.
            “Our winter steelhead usually start showing up around Oct. 15 to gorge on salmon eggs. The salmon start trickling into the river the third week in July, and in the ‘little man’ (Little Manistee, just a few clicks north of the lodge off M-37) the third week in June,” he said.
            Deciding on which of the river’s 22 public accesses to use in spring depends, of course, on conditions. Water temperature is key, he advises. “Forty-two degrees is optimum. Colder temperatures below 34 degrees make fish sluggish.”
            While I learned to fish the PM’s steelhead by sight, Willetts says most fish the holes with a strike indicator, which looks like a bobber. 
            “You should rig like this: fly, another (dropper) fly, split shot, then the indicator. Use a size 12 swivel,” he said. As for flies, there is only one real choice in Willetts’s book: an egg fly. “Egg flies, and possibly stonefly and hex (hexagenia limbata) nymphs. On eggs, use size 10 or 12 hooks and 8s and 10s on stones and hexes.”
             Winter steelies are primarily in the holes and spring breaks, they’re in center water on the gravel. So if you’re fishing the wrong spot at the wrong time of the year, you’re fishing empty water.
            “Winter fish spawn as soon as the water temp creeps up to 40 or 41 degrees. So as soon as you get warm-ups starting in March or even February you’ll see hen fish on gravel,” guide Ryan White said.
            “ Steelhead are our most coveted fish and I try not to rake gravel if I don’t have to,” Willetts explains.
           
When You Go

            The PM Lodge also offers a full-service Orvis shop and plenty of advice, as well as river maps and guides. The PM has excellent access for anglers on foot; however expect plenty of company especially in early April. Closest airports are Traverse City and Grand Rapids. The river is fairly swift, so you may need a wading staff. For information, call 231-745-3972, or go to www.pmlodge.com

Tuesday, January 26, 2010



Stoked On Stokley

Canadian Cross-Country Ski Lodge is World-Class Fun




Above, Stokley Lodge invites you in after a day on the trails; trail markers are posted at all interesections; scenery on the way to the top of King Mountain.




By Bill Semion



If you want to experience breathtaking morning landscapes, when the sun glints gloriously through backlit hardwoods worthy of any artist’s palette, come to Stokley.
If you want to experience what some who’ve skated or kicked on routes from Oslo to New England call one of the top five cross-country ski experiences in the world, come to Stokley.
And if you want to experience great lodging, impeccable meals and wonderful camaraderie among fellow skinny ski devotees, come to Stokley.
Carved out of the hills that the last Ice Age created, Stokley Creek Lodge’s trails have been bringing cross-country skiers about 20 minutes north of The Soo, Ont., since 1977. Some, like Harold Feit, make it here every weekend.  The Henry Ford Health System physician has skied across the world, and calls this one of the top five cross-country experiences he’s found. Here’s why:
More than 130 kilometers of ski trails, from easy romps around some of the property’s 8,000 acres and 14 lakes, to treks up 1,880-foot King Mountain for spectacular views of the mountainous Canadian landscape.
More than 80K of groomed classic trails, 50K of skating trails, and 40k of backcountry trails also are available.
Comfortable lodge-style accommodations with surprising amenities like hot stone massages by appointment, and topped by great meals served family style, and saunas to boot.
We pulled into Stokley Creek’s parking lot about 20 minutes after making a call to the lodge notifying them we were on the way after clearing Canadian customs. Minutes later, we were greeted by lodge staff, who loaded our bags and told us we could either ski or walk the half-kilometer to the lodge or hop aboard for the short snowmobile ride to the door.
Designed by Ann Arbor architect David Osler, the main lodge and other chalets are covered in cedar shake siding. At capacity, Stokley can sleep 74 skiers. Its main lodge features seven rooms. There are three more in the clubhouse and 12 in the Ottawa, Chippewa, Cedar and Hillside chalets. Most rooms can accommodate up to three.  More rustic accommodations are available in the day skier building and the Ski Patrol cabin, Stokley’s original structure, built in 1977 by late owner Chuck Peterson, who together with a geologist friend, laid out its trails.
New owners Gaylen Byker (president of Grand Rapids’ Calvin College), his wife Susan, plus Ian and Tanya Byker, pledge to preserve Peterson’s philosophy that has kept Stokley a unique winter retreat.
Rooms are simple and really all you need since you came here to ski, right? There are shared men’s and women’s bathrooms in the main lodge, and some chalets have private baths. Wood-burning stoves throughout the lodge make for cozy spaces to look over the trail map.
Prep in the wax room, then head past the main lodge for a short 6K trip on Upper and Lower Stokley trails, which skirt the edge of several falls along icy Stokely Creek. It’s also the access to the main trail system. Follow it back to the lodge over a ridge and on to Homerun Hill, a long downhill back to the base that even beginners can handle with a little coaching.
King Mountain, the granite-topped monolith, towers above the Stokley Creek Valley. It’s the tallest in the region and at 1,880 feet, deserves its moniker.
 If you’re up to it, it’s a 9K, two-hour-plus trek up, and I do mean up, featuring a 300-foot rise in the first half-mile. More steep climbs are punctuated by less-steep climbs until you reach the warming hut and overlook. Your reward for herringboning most of the way is a spectacular view of the Algoma Country including Lake Superior from just below the west summit.
Just remember those hills are now steeps as you snowplow the 45-minute run back, so Stokley recommends you make the journey with a friend, and watch for others still heading up when returning until you’re past the last hill, a harrowing left-hander, which returns you to the river valley and a beaver pond. Afterward, look up and you’ll just pick out the overlook where you’ve just been.
After lunch, try an easy 10K trip around Evans and Walker lakes (there’s a warming hut available here, too), or take on more tough stuff such as the 19K Belleau Lake Trail. Intermediate skiers can take a two- to three-hour trek to Norm’s Cabin, a rustic former trapper’s home on Bone Lake that, like the King Mountain climb, is an annual trek for many.
 It’s been preserved by the Algoma Highlands Nature Conservancy to preserve the area’s history, and help keep it as close as possible to what nature intended. The group’s current project is raising funds to purchase and preserve King Mountain’s majestic woodlands and views.
Snowshoeing
Step out of your ski bindings and strap into some snowshoe bindings to enjoy a new addition to Stokley, nearly 10K of dedicated trails marked and laid out by Lucie Gagnon and Bob Yankus.  Bring your own shoes or try the lodge’s and take a lesson. Then step off yourself, or on a guided walk, including one route past icy cliffside waterfalls to King Mountain. There are trails for every skill level.
After all that, hit the sauna or enjoy a muscle soothing massage that’s available by appointment, or hang out in the day lodge, which offers wireless Internet service, as do some of the rooms.
Dining
 It’s a Stokley tradition to start each evening in the day lodge, where you can munch on cheese and crackers and make new friends before dinner.
Lodge guests enjoy three meals daily, and meals prepared in its compact kitchen are outstanding. A chalkboard just outside the dining room announces each menu. The dining room affords a great view of the creek and some of the valley’s permanent feathered inhabitants busy at the feeders outside. Dinner one night included filet mignon, and lunch offerings like soup and burgers always end with a visit to the dessert table.
Great skiing and snowshoeing, great food and accommodations, and making or renewing friendships. It’s no wonder so many come here every weekend. It’s what Stokley Creek is all about.


When You Go

Stokley Creek rates range from $116 per person for the log and Day Skier Cabin, to $170 for the Peter Kuhn Chalet. That gets you lodging, a trail pass, meals and many amenities. For information and reservations, call 866-786-5359, or go to www.stokleycreek.com.