Photo Journal

Seeing Mackinac Island With Mom

This is our island. It's a good island. Until the grownups come to fetch us we'll have fun.

William Golding

View of the Grand Hotel and a section of the Island from a trail above

A gift

For you, we said

And the three of us pitched in.

And took our mom on a ferry to Mackinac

Island. We dragged her around from sight to sight:

forts, shops, restaurants, on carriage rides and through gardens

It seemed like we were always climbing or descending hills

Or stairs whenever we wanted to get anywhere

But mom kept up and never complained

and we laughed and said,

“What a gift”

Fort Mackinac during a cannon firing demonstration- one of the soldiers runs to get a new match to light the cannon after the first one failed

Success on the second try! The ground shook.

Arch Rock Trail winding through the woods in the Mackinac Island State Park

Arch Rock in the early morning light

Beautiful dark trillium in bloom in the Secret Garden on The Grand Hotel grounds

Bridge over a river of grape hyacinths in the Secret Garden overlooked by the Grand Hotel above

Masses of tulips bloomed everywhere on the island.

If you look the right way, you can see that the whole world is a garden.

Frances Hodgson Burnett

For those of you who don’t know about Mackinac Island, it is a small Island where Lake Huron and Lake Michigan meet off the northern coast of Michigan’s lower peninsula. They don’t allow cars on the island, so transportation is by horse drawn carriage, bicycle or on foot. If you’d like to know more about the island and it’s history, check out their website here.

If I were to go again, I would love to run the entire circumference of the Island (I think it’s about 8 miles) and spend a lot more time exploring the natural areas of the state park, which makes up about 80 percent of the island. The carriage tour was fabulous, funny and gave our feet a welcome rest. The only stop on the tour I would recommend seeing on your own instead is Arch Rock. It’s much better to see without a crowd. That is only possible in the early morning, or in the evening after the tours stop running. I would also definitely recommend seeking out the Secret Garden on the grounds of the Grand Hotel. It was magical. I don’t know what it’s like at other times of the year, but it wasn’t too crowded for our early season visit and the flowers were blooming wildly everywhere.

This was the first trip my sisters and my mom and I have ever taken together as adults, with just the four of us. Mom flew in from Texas, my sister Rita drove up from Alabama, and I drove across the state to spend the night in Lake Orion, Michigan, at my sister Becky’s house, on a Sunday. Monday morning, we rose early and piled into Becky’s car for the four-hour drive to Mackinaw City, where we took a ferry ride to Mackinac Island. It was fun right from the start. We walked and shopped, tried the famous fudge, visited historic buildings and gardens, took an afternoon carriage tour and got dressed up for dinner every night at the Grand Hotel. We played cards after dinner in the trophy room, gave each other lots of grief and laughed until we cried. We went to bed late and got up early. It was exhausting and absolutely lovely. We’re already thinking about the next trip we’ll take together.

Thank you so much for being here. See you next week!

My crew of fellow troublemakers: from the left: me, my sisters, Becky and Rita, and my mom, Janet.

No man needs a vacation so much as the man who has just had one.

Elbert Hubbard

P.S. The poem was meant to be a “shape” poem (a diamond) which is a bit of a risk because I’m not sure if the format will come through when this page is converted to email by th messaging system.

A brief pause

Rejoice with your family in the beautiful land of life.

Albert Einstein

This picture was taken at the Secret Garden at Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island.

I visited the island with my sisters and our mom this week, as a celebration of my mom’s 80th birthday. It has been so much fun being together, laughing, playing games and talking for so much more time than we usually have with just the four of us. It didn’t leave a lot of time for writing, however, so I will keep this post short.

I hope you have a wonderful week! Thank you for being here!

Mackinac Bridge, a five mile long suspension bridge that connects Michigan’s Upper and Lower Peninsulas.

Wandering With Wally

I haven't been everywhere, but it's on my list.

Susan Sontag

Wandering With Wally

Wally is a tiny walrus

A plastic one at that

He doesn’t speak, but he captures hearts-

My silent diplomat

 

I have to carry him everywhere -

His feet were not made for walking

He soulfully stares as we wander the world

from the corner of my pocket.

 

He probably wishes it was cooler

In the places we go together,

But he doesn’t complain; he just goes along

No matter what the weather.

 

A diplomat, my Wally is -

He’s always making friends

So I always take him with me

When I go to explore new lands.

Overlooking the Atlantic on the way to A Guarda in Spain along the Portuguese El Camino

Resting on a cliff in the Cies Islands National Park in Galicia

Wally carrying a little burden on the Portuguese Way…

Sitting on a signpost along the Portuguese El Camino.

In Italy - sitting on a terrace overlooking the mountains in Emilia Romagna

Resting among the leaves on a sidewalk in Fort Worth

Wandering through a unique historic district of Fort Worth, Wally posed on an outdoor tap dance stage, and beneath the eggplant at a community garden.

We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.

George Bernard Shaw

I’ve been traveling a lot this fall - to Europe for three weeks, then a quick trip to Indiana and then Texas for my mom’s 80th birthday. Everywhere I go, I bring Wally with me. I found him in a rest area parking lot on a road trip a couple of years ago - he was a little dirty, a little banged up, but adorable. (Click Here to see the first Wally post). Over the past couple years, he’s been stuffed in my luggage, backpack; purse, pockets and/or camera bag - sometimes I just carry him in my hand while I’m walking or running. I’m always looking for photo ops for him while I’m out wandering. He’s very photogenic. He lightens my mood and makes other people smile. Maybe they just think I’m crazy. Either way, it’s ok - I learn a lot by trying to put him into a scene; to have a little fun with perspective, to inject a sense of humor into my travels. I hope you enjoy the results.

Thank you so much for being here! I will see you next week!

Wistfully watching the sun rise over the mountains in Emilia-Romagna, Italy.