Is anybody here very familiar with the Black River area, north of Ironwood in the UP?
I have a trip planned for February. We'll be staying near Black River Harbor -- that's on the west side of the Black River, just away from Lake Superior.
This year we want to experience 'Lake of the Clouds.' As near as I can tell, we will have to ride south to Bessemer, go east to Wakefield, and then ride straight north again, back up to the big lake. That's about a 45 mile 'detour' -- 45 miles of trails and road to go about 5 miles east. That will make our trip almost 70 miles each way, and that's a lot of riding for relative newbies.
My question: "Is there someplace that one can rationally cross the Black River without having to go clear down to Highway 2? By rationally, I suppose I mean "Without needing to be extensively airborne, and without having to ride on ice over a running river." And for guys as green as us, 'extensively airborne' probably means anything more than a foot. (Beside being rookies, a couple of us are old -- I'm 66, and I'm not the oldest in the group.) I do have 50 years of motorcycling in the midwest -- in recent years on a Sportster -- so I'm not unfamiliar with crappy weather, cold, monkeybutt, frozen glasses, numb butt, vibration-numbed hands, et cetera.
Any veterans know where we can find a shortcut? There's a suspension bridge -- a footbridge -- very near the mouth of the river. A guy might be tempted to cross there -- but the east side looks inhospitable.
Any and all advice that does not involve anatomically impossible acts is welcome.
Thanks in advance,
Paul in Wisconsin
I have a trip planned for February. We'll be staying near Black River Harbor -- that's on the west side of the Black River, just away from Lake Superior.
This year we want to experience 'Lake of the Clouds.' As near as I can tell, we will have to ride south to Bessemer, go east to Wakefield, and then ride straight north again, back up to the big lake. That's about a 45 mile 'detour' -- 45 miles of trails and road to go about 5 miles east. That will make our trip almost 70 miles each way, and that's a lot of riding for relative newbies.
My question: "Is there someplace that one can rationally cross the Black River without having to go clear down to Highway 2? By rationally, I suppose I mean "Without needing to be extensively airborne, and without having to ride on ice over a running river." And for guys as green as us, 'extensively airborne' probably means anything more than a foot. (Beside being rookies, a couple of us are old -- I'm 66, and I'm not the oldest in the group.) I do have 50 years of motorcycling in the midwest -- in recent years on a Sportster -- so I'm not unfamiliar with crappy weather, cold, monkeybutt, frozen glasses, numb butt, vibration-numbed hands, et cetera.
Any veterans know where we can find a shortcut? There's a suspension bridge -- a footbridge -- very near the mouth of the river. A guy might be tempted to cross there -- but the east side looks inhospitable.
Any and all advice that does not involve anatomically impossible acts is welcome.
Thanks in advance,
Paul in Wisconsin