As the autumn colors begin showing on the trees, the flowers are slowly disappearing with only a few varieties still blooming in the shortening days but they add some contrasting colors from asters and clematis. And with over 300 species of clematis, there is a range color displayed like these pink ones.
On a sunny October day, a flock of sheep are grazing on the green grass before it freezes as the colors of fall marches towards the white of winter. And like many families, there is a ‘black sheep’ in the flock which sticks out among the rest of the group. Black sheep in the past were used as marker sheep, often one black per hundred head, to give the sheepherder a quick estimate count if all the sheep were present and not lost.
Landscapes can change in a very short distance and it is interesting how one beach may be all sand and around the bend it is solid rocks or small rocks. And if there are small rocks on the beach, there has to be at least one “pretty” rock that hops into your pocket although sometime that pretty one may be elusive when a wave takes it out of your reach.
This old lighthouse seems a tad bit weathered and worn out. The Grand Island East Channel Lighthouse has seen a lot of seasons even though its service years were few. The ‘schoolhouse’ style lighthouse was built out of wood instead of brick or stone, but stood proudly in it white coat of paint and first displayed its light in 1868. But being close to the water edge was a maintenance nightmare and the foundation was in constant danger of being undermined. The tower was stuck by lightning in 1891 and the lighthouse was becoming expensive to maintain.
The poor old lighthouse was last lit in 1908 after two range lights were constructed in the town of Munising since the old lighthouse wasn’t visible to Lake Superior traffic with its location at the southernmost point of the island and the light remained completely invisible to vessels entering through the eastern passage until they were almost abreast of the light itself.
A hundred years ago, the lighthouse was sold to a consortium of 20 individuals. The white paint soon turned to a driftwood gray, but thousands of tourists taking the Picture Rocks cruises, photograph this lighthouse which is no longer in it glory days but still has it own unique charm.
Every sunset and sunrise is different, although some days they may be very similar without much variation or color, but then other days the light reflects off the clouds to give an red, orange, purple or pink glow to the sky.
The Seul Choix Point Lighthouse took its name from the point called Seul Choix Point, named by French sailors, who found that the protected bay formed by the point was their “only choice” for shelter along that stretch of northern Lake Michigan’s shoreline along the 75 mile stretch, from the Straits of Mackinac to today’s Manistique. The French pronunciation is “Sel-Shwa”, while locally the name is spoken as “Sis-Shwa”.
Seul Choix’s lighthouse, consisting of a stone foundation, brick tower, and metal lantern room, measures seventy-eight feet nine inches from base to ventilator ball, and its third-order Fresnel lens was placed in operation on August 15, 1895 exhibited a fixed red light, varied by a red flash every fifteen seconds, and its beacon was visible for thirteen miles. (A temporary fourth-order light was placed in service on April 15, 1892. The Fresnel lens was replaced in 1972 with a modern rotating airport-type Aerobeacon and the station was automated and abandoned in 1973.)
The lighthouse and keeper house are open to the public, operated by the Gulliver Historical Society, including being able to climb the tower which gives you a good view of the huge limestone shoal which reaches out and cuts through the clear water to almost 100 yards from shore. The shoal plus the land mass of the point itself, which slopes down into the waters of Lake Michigan for nearly three miles, adds up to a very dangerous area for navigators.
Seul Choix Point Lighthouse
A short video showing a 360 view from top of the lighthouse. Some window reflections are in the pictures since I wasn’t sitting up on top of the red ball above the light but was in the lantern room.
Cliffs rising 50 to 200 feet above Lake Superior for 15 miles south side are decorated or ‘painted’ with colorful streaks and are part of the Pictured Rock National Lakeshore. The 500 million-year-old sandstone are stained from mineral filled groundwater leaching out of the rock. Minerals like iron, copper, manganese, and limonite create the red, orange, yellow, blue, green, brown, black, and white colors.
With a dry week of weather, the farmers are busy harvesting crops during the day and under the harvest moon. But today’s big tractors don’t need the moonlight to harvest at night like this old McCormick-Deering tractor but this old tractor wouldn’t have harvested as many acres either, although it would have seemed like at lot at the time.