Saturday, July 13, 2013

Wham Bam Thank You Ma’am

 

Stepping back a bit in time to Temperance River I found another use for my bike basket.

Sock Rack

It makes a great sock dryer!

Before leaving for Bear Head Lake State Park the next morning I made a batch of tacos for dinner. And was joined by a guest.

Temperance Tacos

Bug 1

He didn’t eat much so there was plenty for me.

The weather continued to be nice so once again I camped topless.

Temperance Tent View

I fell asleep staring at the stars, dreaming of the fun times ahead at my next stop. Right?

Route 1 leads from the shore of Lake Superior northwest to Ely, gateway to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness as well as Bear Head Lake, about 20 miles southeast.

It was while loading supplies into my car that a suburban decided to play a game of tag. I am now it.

Trailer Ding 1

Great. I took care of business and headed for the campground.

Bear Head Lake Sign

After setting up camp in a nice spot (#9) I fixed the trailer. A little hammering with a piece of wood and some duck tape and it looks as good as new.

Bear Head Campsite

Trailer Fixed

I don’t think Glenn will even notice…

The next day was the Fourth of July so I made an All-American campers breakfast.

4th Breakfast 1

4th Breakfast 2

Yummy! (once a year)

Oh, and I had another guest who sat in the exact same spot on my camera bag.

Bug 2

I called him Spot.

After eating I took a stroll around the campground.

The park has 73 sites, 45 having electricity. They mostly look like this one, number 58.

Bear Head Lake_058

In 2010 Pepsi ran a contest for campers nationwide to vote for their favorite National Park. The winner was Bear Head Lake, a State Park.

Go figure.

I walked a trail down to the lake.

Bear Head Lake Trail

Bear Head Lake

I found some rental boats and a fishing pier.

Bear Head Lake Boat Rentals

They are on one side of a peninsula and on the other side is a great beach.

Bear Head Lake Beach

A picnic area and a new visitor center round it out.

Bear Head Lake Picnic Area

Bear Head Lake New Visitor Center

Because spring did not hit Minnesota until late June the trees were behind schedule in the seed dropping department. So they made up for that starting on the afternoon of the fourth. It looked literally like a snowfall of fuzzy brown rice crispies. as the fir trees shed.

I shook off the mat by my tent and 10 minutes later it was covered again.

Fir Seeds

I made a campfire and headed west Friday morning.

Bear Head Campfire

I stopped for a couple of nights at McCarthy Beach State Park. There are two campgrounds here and I visited Beatrice Lake first.

Beatrice Lake Sign

There are 30 sites, some right near the lake like number 3.

Beatrice Lake_003

This is considered a primitive campground. Vault toilets and no reservations. It was pretty much full when I stopped by.

5 miles south is the main campground, Side Lake.

McCarthy Beach Sign

There are 59 sites, 17 with electricity. There is also no 10mph speed limit like Bear Head Lake so there were lot’s of boats pulling people around on things until they fell down.

I arrived around 4pm on Friday and found just one available spot left. I only needed one so it worked out fine.

Saturday morning was overcast and drizzly as I walked the campground. It is set on a sliver of land between two lakes, Side and Sturgeon. The campground is on the former and the day use area and beach on the latter. All within walking distance.

So lets walk.

There are at least a dozen sites next to the lake along with several small docks to tie your boat up. I liked site number 19.

Side Lake_019

They lake is just to the left along with the boat ramp and fishing pier.

McCarthy Boat Ramp

McCarthy Beach Fishing Pier

Across the road is the beach.

McCarthy Beach

Neat.

I walked back to my site to write last week’s blog post.

Typing Blog

The rain picked up a bit.

Rainy Office

But at least my firewood stayed dry.

Dry Firewood

I think the time has come to get a small RV…

I was in the bathroom on Saturday night when all of a sudden I heard a strange feathery flapping rustling noise.

I saw something strange and ran back to get my camera. I popped up the flash and took a photo of Mothra. (If you don’t know who Mothra is, go watch some old Godzilla movies)

Mothra

The body alone was over 4 inches long, the wings about 6 inches each. It was plain scary looking. Imagine that thing flying into your hair and thrashing around. Jeepers Scooby.

I left there Sunday morning for a stay at Scenic State Park.

Scenic Sign

There are two campgrounds here as well. Chase Point is the larger one with 68 sites. Almost half have electricity.

Chase Point_013

There is a boat ramp and rentals.

Chase Point Boat Ramp

Chase Point Boat Rentals

And a nice trail along the lake which you can barely see on the left.

Chase Point View

I stayed at the other campground here, called Lodge. It’s only about a mile away. There are 25 sites and they are much more open and closer to the lake than Chase Point.

Lodge_022

It has it’s own boat ramp and fishing pier.

Scenic Boat Ramp

Scenic Fishing Pier

And also several little docks to keep your boat handy.

Scenic Dock

I walked around a bit a Monday morning to take some photos of the lake. It was very scenic. Get it?

Scenic Lake View 1

Scenic Lake View 2

Below is the swimming beach.

Scenic Lake View 3

Super.

There is also an old lodge-type building from the 30’s they use as a nature center.

Scenic Lodge

Scenic Lodge Inside

I made some of the usual for dinner.

Scenic Tacos

I left on Tuesday with a plan to spend the night at Zippel Bay State Park. It is in the northwest corner of the state on Lake of the Woods. In fact, most of the lake is in Canada.

The clouds starting building as I headed north, eventually turning to sheets of rain.

Rainy Road

I glimpsed a sign and had to turn around to see if it said what I thought it did.

Paul Bunyan Sign

It did.

I finally arrived at Zippel Bay.

Zippel Bay Sign

They are 57 sites here but none with electricity.

Zippel Bay_042

This campground is mainly used by folks looking to drop a line in the lake. If Mille Lacs Lake was the walleye capital of Minnesota, this lake takes worldwide honors.

This is how fast the weather changes here..

1pm-Lake of the Woods photo.

Zippel Bay View

1:05pm-Zippel Bay Marina photo.

Zippel Bay Marina

1:07pm-Zippel Bay boat ramp photo.

Zippel Bay Boat Ramp

Amazing.

I decided not to stay as the skeeters were bad. I had driven 140 miles from Scenic State Park and decided to go another 100 to Lake Bronson State Park.

I saw a big patch of yellow next to road and stopped.

Yellow

Hopefully a good omen. I arrived at Lake Bronson.

Lake Bronson Sign

Here are the odds I was dealing with. There are 158 sites here. There are only 48 in the Lakeside Campground. There are only 6 sites right on the water. Only ONE is not reservable.

Number 45.

Lake Bronson Campsite

I finished setting up just before sunset.

Sunset 3

I even put up lights in the screen house.

Lanterns

Flashy.

Wednesday morning was sunny.

Campsite 2

I decided to look around the campground.

I found a boat ramp and a large swim beach.

Lake Bronson Boat Ramp

Lake Bronson Beach

(That beach is packed right now as I write this on Saturday afternoon in the picnic shelter)

A visitor center.

Lake Bronson Visitor Center

Inside Lake Bronson Visitor Center

And an old observation tower.

Lake Bronson Tower

Back at camp I had a hearty lakeside breakfast.

Taco breakfast

People come from all over to stay here. My neighbors told me that it’s only a seven hour drive from the Twin Cities and well worth it. Must be because the campground filled up on Friday.

My site (number 45) is not reservable but number 40 is.

Lake Bronson_040

It is on a small spit of land jutting into the lake, with shade and power. This one will definitely be listed in “The Best Campsites in America Part 2”.

There is a section called “Lakeside Extension” with 13 sites that can be rented for the summer season, which I think lasts about nine days.

Lake Bronson_051

Thursday was mostly spent on the computer processing photos. I went into town later for some ice and found this.

Snow Trucks

Yep, definitely snow country.

Friday was kinda cloudy all day but that changed in the evening.

Friday Rain

Rain.

Rainy Lake

Quite heavy actually. It flooded around the screen house. My own mini-lake.

Screenhouse Fllod

This morning, Saturday, was foggy and packed with trailers.

Foggy and Crowded

The sun came out around 9am and the sounds of fun echoed across the lake.

Fun. That reminds me about another fun thing to do while camping.

Rotate your tires. It’s very simple.

Jack up the rear.

Rotate 1

Remove the tire.

Rotate 2

Attach the spare tire.

Rotate 3

Jack up the front and swap the rear tire with the front tire.

Rotate 4

Jack up the rear again.

Rotate 5

Attach the front tire to the rear and then repeat on the other side.

Rotate 6

Helpful Hint: Make sure to loosen the lug nuts just a bit before you jack up the car.

So when you are tired of hiking, fishing, biking, sewing, etcetera, try rotating your tires for a new camping thrill. Better yet, go rotate your neighbors tires. The look on their faces when they return and find you holding one of their tires in your hands will be priceless.

Regards,

Greg