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Lost in Yooperland

Sometimes we get off the paved path and take the beaten path -- the path beaten long long ago.











Agate Falls











Hiawatha: The World's Tallest Indian

In the Michigan Upper Peninsula town of Ironwood stands a giant -- a 52 foot tall fiberglass statue of Hiawatha, leader of the Iroquois Confederacy.  This statue was erected by the Ironwood Chamber of Commerce in 1964 in hopes of attracting visitors to Ironwood's downtown businesses.










The Big Indian is one of the few roadside attractions I remember from my childhood. It probably helps that there are photos to help me remember. Maybe I remember the photos more than the visit itself. I do, however, remember walking up those stairs. Like many things from my childhood, they are bigger in my memory than in real life.


Ben standing on Hiawatha's foot in 1974.

Regardless of whether the photos of the childhood visit or the visit itself are stronger in my mind, they do example the value in photographing the places one visits. Take photos. Put them somewhere you and the others involved can see them. Photos are great cognitive aids that can help retain and recall memories -- memories of both what's in the photo and the experiences around it.


Sophia standing on Hiawatha's foot in 2015.

Although the Hiawatha statue was not exactly on the way to our next destination, memories of the childhood visit begged me to make a detour to Ironwood. Hiawatha was still standing there as I remembered from my visit four decades ago -- only this time, a little bit less magical. I am happy to have gone out of the way for a new visit and new memories.






Miners Memorial Mural





The Miners Memorial Mural in Ironwood, Michigan, pays tribute to the town's iron mining heritage with depictions of actual miners. The mural is the work of artists Kelly Meredith and Sue Martinsen and was unveiled in 2012.



Paul Bunyan's Cook Shanty



A giant billboard enticed us to stop... or maybe it was that it was that we should have eaten hours before.



In the Great Northwoods of Wisconsin, in the town of Minocqua, is a tourist trap of a restaurant that lures hungry travelers off the highway with a giant cutout billboard and giant fiberglass figures: Paul Bunyan's Cook Shanty.

Giant fiberglass figures are a common art medium of the Great Northwoods 

Some view the figures as playground equipment... or maybe mountains to be conquered.

Sophia poses with Babe. I wonder if they have blue ox on the menu.

I pose with babe.

This sign said to pay as we enter. We paid as we left.

The dining room was mostly empty; as might be expected for late on a Sunday night.

The Lumberjack Feast provided both quality and quantity nourishment.