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Cave Point County Park

Travel

Adventure 3: DOOR COUNTY, WISCONSIN – DAY 2

September 22, 2020

The second day of my Door County adventure began with a lakeside breakfast at Dairy Dean’s Family Restaurant (824 4th Street in Algoma, Wisconsin).  I recommend it for breakfast, not only because the food and service are good and the prices are very reasonable, but also because it’s walking distance from the beach.  That beach leads you to the Algoma Pierhead Lighthouse, one of the photographic targets of my excursion. 

Algoma Pierhead Lighthouse

The server at Dairy Dean’s noticed me studying the map I had splayed out across my little table as she approached to deliver my tea, and called out: “Oh, it looks like we’re going on an adventure!”  (I have never understood how some folks are so cheerful early in the morning.)  Anyway, one thing led to another, conversationally speaking, and pretty soon I had quite a bit of help identifying the best things to see and photograph from the locals among patrons at Dairy Deans. Honestly, I find that small local restaurants with friendly serving staffs are the single best place to identify great – and often otherwise unknown – targets for photography.  I just love places like Dairy Deans.  After breakfast, I followed the beach down to photograph the Algoma Pierhead Lighthouse – a rather ordinary one, as it turned out, with an elevated walkway over a concrete pier similar to the North Pierhead Lighthouse.  It was a bright, comparatively calm morning and the bright red cylinder of a lighthouse seemed a bit garish sitting placidly out there.  Somehow it brought to mind a stark white tourist sitting on a Florida beach, hoping to get some color before returning home to Minnesota.

My next official stop (I made many “unofficial” stops to photograph old barns along the way) was a recommendation of the locals, and it turned out to be one of the highlights of the trip.  It was Cave Point County Park just north of Whitefish Bay.  I visited Cave Point twice, as it turns out, because once I saw it I realized I had to return the following day for sunrise.  The park is located at 5360 Schauer Road, Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.  It’s a spectacular overlook area along Lake Michigan and very popular with both local and tourist traffic.  Tall, scraggly Birch trees reach out over cliffs above the lake, where rolling waves crash against them in a constant, thundering chorus.  The endless wash has worn deep caves in some of the cliff walls, from which I surmise the park’s name was drawn. Even at the height of a sunny day, and even in the weeks before Autumn has really lit the flaming colors of the leaves, the place is strikingly beautiful.  Sandy paths give way to white, stone-covered shorelines that the lake had scrubbed mercilessly over hundreds of years, leaving this incredible palette of textures and colors for us to experience today.  Well worth the trip, even at mid-day when the tourists are as thick as flies.

Cave Point
Cave Point County Park

After Cave Point, my next target was the 19th century Cana Island Lighthouse.  Cana Island lighthouse (located at 8800 Cana Island Road, Baileys Harbor, Wisconsin) was built and lit for the first time in 1870.  The lighthouse itself and the grounds of the compound are well kept.  The structure itself has been turned into a museum of sorts, and is staffed with someone to answer questions about the history of the place and about the exhibits there.  But access to the place is quirky.  Although it is intended to be accessible to the public between May and October, it’s only open sometimes – especially during the craziness of 2020 and the COVID misadventure.  Adding to those factors, though, is the fact that Cana Island is an island.  One gets there either by wading through the water or riding in a wagon drawn by a John Deere tractor through that water over a submerged stone causeway.  (You’ll need to buy a ticket for that ride at the nearby gift shop.) 

Transportation from shore to Cana Island, and the Cana Island Lighthouse

It is said that the highlight of the place is climbing the 97 steps in the lighthouse’s spiral staircase to look out over Bailey’s Harbor.  But alas, the spiral stairs are closed off these days due to COVID concerns, so the best I could do was photograph the spiral staircase.  The lighthouse itself is a real beauty, and it was worth the quirky journey for me.  But for those who don’t want to do a lot of walking and clambering around tractor-pulled wagons, it might not be worth the trouble and expense. 

Cana Island Lighthouse
Inside the lighthouse
Inside the lighthouse
Spiral staircase inside the lighthouse tower
View from the second story of the Keepers house.

The combined drive time, wait time for the tractor, and actual exploration took most of the afternoon and it was early evening as I moved on to my next stop.

My next stop was the Eagle Bluff Lighthouse (10249 Shore Road, Fish Creek, Wisconsin) in the Peninsula State Park.  This historic lighthouse-and-museum is a gorgeous edifice.  It was constructed in 1868, and sits on a stretch of scenic overlook that is just beautiful. 

Unlike the roaring waves that crash against the shore at Cana Island, though, the setting here is almost bucolic.  It’s a wonderful backdrop for photographers, and I noticed someone having senior pictures taken on the grounds as I approached. 

Eagle Bluff Lighthouse

I had a nice conversation with some of the locals who – like me – had planned their visit to coincide with sunset over the lake.  They not only told me about the history of Eagle Bluff, but also provided much more cogent directions to the elusive Sherwood Point Lighthouse.  Eagle Bluff is perched about 75 feet above the lake.  It’s a brick structure surrounded by well-manicured grounds and a low stone wall that practically begs you to sit for a while and watch the ships in the distance.  It was manned between 1868 and 1926, at which point it was automated.  These days it is still appointed with some of the lighthouse keeper’s original furniture and authentic period antiques, and – should the COVID craziness ever subside – it will likely be staffed once again by knowledgeable tour guides.  I did, indeed, watch the sunset before moving on.

Sunset over the low brick wall in front of the lighthouse

For the second time, I began my search for Sherwood Point Lighthouse.  Since the sun had set, my journey – which took me back, deep into the woods, became darker with each turn down the narrow, winding roads.  Sherwood Point Lighthouse was officially established in 1883, after a two-year battle over title to the site. Situated on the west side of the north entrance to Sturgeon Bay, the point is named for Peter Sherwood, who settled there in 1836.  The Lighthouse Board installed a fog signal at Sherwood Point in 1892, since the red and white lights were barely visible in thick weather.  Sherwood Point Lighthouse was the last manned lighthouse on the Great Lakes, not becoming automated until 1983, one hundred years after its initial construction. Today, a light still shines from the lighthouse. The coastguard continues to maintain the lighthouse and grounds, and – as I first discovered at the North Pierhead Lighthouse, they aren’t particularly interested in visitors.  By the time I located the place (which appears to have no street address, but has GPS coordinates of 44_53_34N by 87_26.36W) it was full dark and my new driving lights were once again demonstrating their value. 

When I swung onto the property at last it was probably about 9pm.  A big, beautiful sign adorned the property proclaiming that it is a Homeland Security installation.  Wow; we spend a LOT of money on signage for these places! Anyway, the intrepid little Ridgeline climbed along the road until I could see the building itself, and I swung in behind it to see the light clearly.  I discovered that the Coast Guard members manning the facility and some of their friends were sitting around a fire pit and enjoying what looked to be a marshmallow roast.  After a very brief conversation where I was informed that this is private property, I was granted permission to photograph the building – as long as I did it quickly – and moved on.  Clearly, these folks take their marshmallow roasts almost as seriously as their lighthouses, and I guess I must look more like a Russian spy than I realize.  So, I took a few photos and once again turned back toward civilization where I could retire for the evening.

Sherwood Point Lighthouse
Starscape over the Sherwood Point Lighthouse

Travel

Adventure 3: DOOR COUNTY, WISCONSIN – DAY 3

September 23, 2020

The sunrise at Cave Point County Park is nothing less than spectacular.  Even though I had to get up that morning MUCH earlier than I wanted to in order to be in position for the sunrise, I will never regret it.  Wow.  I got a few photos that I think are pretty good, but honestly I have to say I can’t do the place justice.  I’m not really sure anyone could.  Just before sunrise, I picked my way carefully along a cliff top where enormous root systems from the overhanging trees have been exposed, feeling as though I was walking through some medieval forest overlooking a tempestuous sea. 

The woods at Cave point – dawn

It was almost ethereal.  All of the overlooks are amazing, and there are a few places where the bluff itself had been knifed through in huge gashes, allowing me to look down though them to the roiling waters of the lake a hundred feet below. 

Looking down at Lake Michigan through a gash at Cave Point

I moved around some to get different photographic perspectives, but not that much.  Mostly I just wanted to drink it all in.  The chill of the wind, the sound of the waves, the changes in the emerging sunlight as it illuminated the cliffs and finally the water, the freshness of the air washing in over Lake Michigan. There were very few people at daybreak; I was greeted by one other hardy photographer, schlepping his tripod and camera equipment through the trees behind me to scout a location of his own.  Otherwise it was deserted; a perfect morning that once again made me grateful to God for the opportunity to just be there.  I arrived about 5:30, I think, and finally left around 8am. 

Sunrise at Cave Point
Sunrise at Cave Point
Sunrise at Cave Point
Just after sunrise at Cave Point
The caves at Cave Point

Along the way, although it wasn’t a particular target, I stopped off at the Ellison Point Overlook. It’s just a spot along Ellison Bluff Road, but it was a pretty landscape and worth the investment of 10 minutes to see if you find yourself in the vicinity of the Ellison Bluff Natural Area.

Ellison Point Overlook

One of the primary targets for me on this excursion was the photographing of Potawatomi Lighthouse, the oldest lighthouse on Lake Michigan.  I never made it.  Potawatomi   Lighthouse, also known as the Rock Island Light, is located in Rock Island State Park, on Rock Island in Door County, Wisconsin. Lit in 1836, it is the oldest light station in Wisconsin and on Lake Michigan. It was served by civilian light keepers from 1836 to the 1940s, at which point it was taken over by the US Coast Guard.  In order to get to Potawatomi  Lighthouse, one must take a ferry to Washington Island (typically that ferry carries you in your vehicle) and then another ferry (which only carries pedestrians) from Washington Island to Rock Island, the home of the Potawatomi  Lighthouse.  Unfortunately for me, no ferry is running to Rock Island and the Potawatomi  Lighthouse at all during 2020 due to concerns about COVID.  I was able to make it to Washington Island, and as a result, had the opportunity to explore and photograph several interesting farms.  I also saw and photographed a Stavkirke Chapel on the Island, the second one I have seen in my lifetime, both of which I have seen on excursions in 2020.  Quite a coincidence! 

Stavkirke Chapel
Stavkirke Chapel interior

I also had the opportunity to study a number of interesting maritime exhibits at Jackson Harbor

Jackson Harbor on Washington Island
One of the maritime exhibits displayed at Jackson Harbor

On the ferry ride returning from Washington Island, I was able to photograph the Plum Island Rear Range Lighthouse, first lit in 1897. 

Plum Island Rear Range Lighthouse (Taken from the Washington Island ferry.)

According to historical records, the tower contains a center tube that houses the spiral staircase. Atop the tube lies a cylindrical watch room topped off by an octagonal lantern room. Four iron legs, braced between each other, support the watch and lantern rooms. The lantern room, filled with a fourth order Fresnel lens, displayed a fixed red light. To make sure the light was only visible to ships either down range or already in the passage, it was restricted to an arc of 231 degrees.  The station also had a fog signal building that was made of brick, which was located a quarter mile westward from the residence. Both the keeper’s dwelling and the fog signal building are still located on-site; however, they are in terrible condition.  The roof on the keeper’s dwelling has reportedly fallen through. The station was automated in 1969, and the fog signal was discontinued six years later.  The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are now in possession of the island. The lighthouse sits on Plum Island which is also owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Access is prohibited.

On my way back into town, I stopped at several more interesting buildings and barns to photograph them.  I eventually made it to my next photography target, the Kewaunee Pierhead Lighthouse (again, no street address is available, but the GPS coordinates are 44_27_26.67N by 87_29_34.4W). 

Now owned by the city of Kewaunee and assisted by the Kewaunee County Historical Society.  The lighthouse is described as one that personifies early twentieth century lighthouse architecture and engineering.  It exemplifies design and construction methods used in building lighthouses and fog signal buildings on piers during that time period. The lighthouse was constructed to replace range lights constructed in 1891, and is located on the same pier.  The fifth order Fresnel lens used in this facility came from the original front range light, and is one of less than 80 remaining in service.  There is public access along the pier – which I followed to its end – but walking out there will likely mean dodging a few fishermen along the way.  It was pretty brisk out there the evening I went out to take photographs, but I still enjoyed it a lot.  This pier is much wider than most, and affords a lot of safety and confidence to those who stroll out to see the lighthouse. 

The lighthouse end of the pier also offers a nice view of the evening skyline of downtown Kewaunee, and small city that I found charming.  My favorite hotel on this trip was the Karsten Nest Hotel, which is walking distance from the pier and a great value.  It’s located at 122 Ellis Street in Kewaunee, Wisconsin.