We had a fabulous 4 day trip. We took the ferry over on a foggy day, but from there on out has perfect weather--not too hot for hiking, sunshine galore--and oh my god, the scenery. We hiked in about a mile and a half from the ferry dock and the ranger station to the Weather Station Campground. Many of the campsites have a view to the South of Lake Michigan and it is just a stumble down the hill to sand-bliss for kids.
As far as kid-amusement went, they each had a moderate sized stuffed animal and we brought a small pad of paper and some mini-markers and a pencil. And that was it.
But with tiny frogs
But with tiny frogs
I got lucky and picked a really good book for myself--Lately by Sara Pritchard. It is (another) book of linked stories but all of the stories stand on their own as really wonderful examples of the fullness of the genre. The links only start about half way through the book and provide extra resonances to the stories. Each story packed in a whopper of content both in character, time, place and emotional range. It is not a huge book (light in weight, which frankly was a factor in choosing it) but the stories are so rich and packed with detail, humor and poignancy that it reads like a honkin' huge book. And the stories are eminently re-readable (an excellent feature when you tend to have panic attacks when you run out of reading material); I even read one story I liked so much, "Here on Earth", a third time out loud to Brian on the drive homeWe devoted one day to a long hike (maybe it was a little too long for the kids--about 7 miles--since Brian did end up giving Ian a piggy back ride back to camp for the last half mile) and took in the major points of the island: the old growth cedars, Lake Florence, an off-shore only partly submerged shipwreck and most spectacularly, the perched dunes:
Fiona and I sat at the top and contemplated the view which was, trite to say it, breathtaking:
But for the rest of the trip, we took it easy, exploring some but leaving plenty of time for solitude and contemplation.
Culinarily speaking we were in the "everything tastes good when you are camping mode", but I do have to say if you are going with dehydrated meals, stick with the Asian flavored ones:
Despite the truck load of trans-fats, the just-add-water Bisquick three cheese biscuits tasted really good on the last morning. I managed to "bake" them without the Outback oven, which we thrifted due to its bulk. I heated up the non-stick skillet with a little oil, dropped in lumps of biscuit dough and slapped on the lid to get them cooked through, then flipped them half way. They weren't pretty, but they tasted fine to the deprived-palate. We cut it a little close on the food front--finished all the trail mix and lunch the last day had us licking peanut butter off of a spoon--but it did make the pack of potato chips we snarfed on the ferry on the way back to the mainland taste even better.