2021-03-24 42 -82

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Revision as of 03:00, 1 April 2021 by Alison (talk | contribs) (Photos: add some photos to gallery)
Wed 24 Mar 2021 in 42,-82:
42.5911091, -82.5929936
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Location

In a marsh in Harsens Island, Michigan. Harsens Island is a rural, marshy island in Lake St Clair off the coast of Algonac, accessible only by boat and car ferry. While there are some houses and businesses on the island, most land there is owned by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and it's a popular spot for hunting and fishing.

Participants

Alison (talk)

Plans

MusicalMitten pointed out on Wednesday morning that the day's hash in the Windsor graticule was on Harsens Island. He, Nixill, and I briefly discussed plans for a group trip out to the island, but ultimately I was the only one who had time for the trip. (It's at least a 2.5 hour round trip from any of our houses by car, impractical by bike, and impossible by public transit.) I planned on leaving home around 16:30 to arrive at the island about 18:00, visit the hash before sunset (19:45ish) and have dinner on the island, then leave the island and drive home. The car ferry runs every fifteen minutes from 04:30 to midnight, so I was reasonably confident I wasn't going to get stranded on the island.

As for planning my route to the hashpoint, I relied on satellite imagery because there is no Google Street View on the island and I had never visited before. Raised berms make a network of pathways through the island's marshy interior, and I found what looked like a parking area about 1.2 km north of the hashpoint. I planned on parking at the parking area and walking the rest of the way.

Expedition

I left my house about 16:55 to drive to the entrance of the car ferry. The drive went pretty smoothly except for traffic that quickly backed up near the I-696 exit to eastbound I-94. I've gotten into crashes in sudden traffic jams before, so that had me on edge until I got onto M-29 in New Baltimore around 17:37. Driving up M-29, I saw a lot of Trump flags and one trans flag in front of houses, a Blue Water Transit M-29 bus, and the Bouvier Bridge, a pretty neat pedestrian bridge that links a marina and RV resort across M-29.

It was pretty easy to spot the car ferry due to the short queue of cars that had built up in the turning lane, and I reached it at 17:52. It was interesting to discover that my car's factory satnav knew about the ferry route.

Driving off the ferry and onto the island, I got slightly lost and had to drive around aimlessly a bit until I found a place to turn off and check maps on my phone. I didn't think to do it in the ferry parking lot, and most roads on the island are too narrow and bordered too closely by marshland to pull off on the shoulder. Once I did that, I was able to find the parking area I planned to park in. A sign identified it as the Ames Road Boat Access Site. I parked up, got out of my car at 18:13, and perused the various signs posted at the boat ramp and at the gate to the berms to the hashpoint. Signs posted next to the gate read Authorized Vehicles Only, Hunting/Entry by Permit Only Sept. 1 -- Jan. 1, and No Motorized Vehicles. I was confident that that meant pedestrian access to the berms on 24 March was unrestricted, so I continued to the hashpoint.

After a brief walk with the sounds of various wild birds, I reached the hashpoint at 18:31. (Well, within 5m of the hashpoint, as the point itself lay just on the other bank of a canal. I'm still calling this "coordinates reached", though, because I got within 0.001 degrees.) Then I walked back to my car and began the drive off the island.

I had originally planned to get dinner and eat outside on the island, but I pulled into a small commercial strip just as the konbini was closing, and both restaurants were closed and for sale. Covid must have really hurt Harsens Island businesses. With no dinner options on the island (at least that I knew of; checking Google Maps after the fact I see that Brown's Bar was open on the other end of the island), I decided it was time to take the ferry back to the mainland and get dinner there.

I parked up in a strip mall in Algonac (slightly east of the ferry docks) to consider my dinner options and eventually settled on the Marine City Fish Company about nine miles (14 km) north along the coast. I ordered a cod sandwich and a Bing cherry pie and headed up there. The soundtrack for this part of the trip was CFRZ 98.3, the radio station of the nearby Walpole Island First Nation. My friend who had done US Census outreach work on Harsens Island last year recommended it to me.

After I finished eating my dinner (in a covid-safe manner in my car) I planned my trip back home. I tuned into CFRZ's web stream and took Marine City Highway west to I-94, then I-94 to I-696, and I-696 to home.

Tracklog

Photos

Achievements