Cruising_World_2016-06-07

(WallPaper) #1
cruisingworld.com

62


june/july 2016

My 


wife, Jennifer, and I sail our Caliber 38, Catamount, out
of northern Michigan and spend our summers on Lake
Superior. We had been to the Apostles once before, and frankly,
we were not impressed. The islands are touted as one of the pre-
mier cruising grounds in the country, with reliable winds and
accessible wilderness in the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore.
But we had found lots of crowds and mostly round islands with
virtually no protection. Swells rocked us mercilessly all night,
every night. Midnight wind shifts resulted in a mess of boats
hauling anchor and moving to the other side of the island or the
lee of an island nearby, neither of which was really any better. We
vowed we would never come back.
We preferred the remote and dramatic Canadian shore of Lake
Superior, but the previous year we’d ended our summer in Duluth,
Minnesota, at the westernmost end of the lake, and were now
working our way back east. Since the Canadian shore was just
barely thawed out after a very cold winter,
we reluctantly decided to spend a few days
back in the Apostle Islands, on the south
shore. It would be warmer there, we could
get last-minute chores done, and we needed
to buy Leinenkugel’s beer, which is brewed
in Wisconsin and one of our summer staples
when we can fi nd it.
Long home to Native Americans, the
Apostles were fi rst visited by French Jesuit
priests in the 1670s; they thought there were
12 islands — hence the name — but actu-
ally there are 22. Subsequent centuries saw
the islands logged, farmed, quarried, fi shed
and fi nally opened to tourism. The Apostle
Islands National Lakeshore was created
in 1970, when the National Park Service
acquired 21 of the islands and started the process of letting them
revert to wilderness.
On our fi rst day out of Duluth, we reached on lovely south-
west winds for more than 50 miles and anchored in the lee of
Sand Island, the westernmost in the group. A nice sunset was the
perfect backdrop for cold chardonnay, guacamole, and steaks on
the grill. As we crawled into bed for the night, we wondered if
we had been wrong about this place. Then came the noise. The
wind had suddenly swung to the northeast. The school children
scraping the blackboard was our anchor chain rolling across
small rubble that lay under a thin layer of sand; the thunk was

Catamount fetching up hard at the end of
our swing. What a crummy start in an area
we hadn’t wanted to visit in the fi rst place.
But then, slowly, the Apostles started to
work their spell on us. After a few hours, the wind backed to the
northwest and the seas went fl at. In the morning, we launched
our dinghy and explored the north end of Sand Island, where Su-
perior’s incessant pounding had carved out sea caves in the sand-
stone cliff s, just big enough to row our dinghy into. We marveled
at the intricately sculpted pillars and arches, the variegated col-
ors of the stone, the ferns growing downward from the ceilings.

Jen n ifer


and I sailed into the heart of the islands
later that day, settling in at popular Stock-
ton Island, where sailboats outnumbered powerboats in the
anchorage by almost 10 to one. Blessedly, the Park Service has
banned personal watercraft everywhere in the national lakeshore.
Stockton Island has miles of white sand beaches in Quarry,
Julian and Presque Isle bays. Hiking trails meander through
cranberry bogs and pine forests, then break out to commanding
views from open headlands. We hoped (sort of) that we would
encounter one of the many black bears that inhabit every one of
the islands, but we only saw tracks. In all our hikes on trails and
on beaches, we never saw a single piece of trash or even any fl ot-
sam. It did indeed feel like wilderness.
Stockton Island also reminded us of what it’s like to anchor
over hard, rippled sand. In our more familiar waters on the
Canadian side, we never see our anchor hit bottom (the water is
just too dark), and we are never sure what the anchor grips onto.
In the Apostles, we could watch our anchor drop 20 feet through
the gin-clear water, sploosh onto the sand, and sink its fl ukes to
engage Mother Earth. Then we could watch the chain pay out,
snub it off at 60 feet, and know that Catamount wasn’t going
anywhere with that grip. We reminded ourselves that we hadn’t
dragged even on the fi rst night, when we were caught by the sud-
den wind shift at Sand Island.
One morning we hiked to an old quarry on Stockton. After the

La Pointe

Bayfield

Madeline Island

Michigan
Island
WISCONSIN

0 5 10

Nautical Miles

46.8º N

90.8º W

47.0º N

90.6º W

Outer Island

Devil’s
Island

Sand
Island
Oak Island

Lake
Superior

Apostle +
Islands

Apostle Islands National Lakeshore

Raspberry
Island

Stockton Island

Anchoring at Sand Island (above) might
not off er all-around protection, but
the vista makes up for it. Racers in the
annual Bayfi eld Race Week inch past
the north end of Devil’s Island in barely
a breeze (left). Port Superior Marina
(opposite) is a popular launching point
for sailing the islands.

june/july 2016

cruisingworld.com

62


MARIANNE G. LEE (TOP); FRED BAGLEY; MAP BY SHANNON CAIN TUMINO
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