Picture of the Day for September 27, 2013

The harbor in Cornucopia is protected by a breakwater which provides refuge from Lake Superior’s sometimes angry disposition. But sometimes the lake’s anger disposition still wins as it sounds like there were some issues after the current breakwater structure was built in 1957.

There is a long line of older wooden posts which probably was the original breakwater but are now abandon and feeling the pounding of Lake Superior. I saw requests for a breakwater for Cornucopia in 1911 so these weathered warriors probably started their duty sometime after the request was approved.

Weathered Wooden Warriors

Weathered Wooden Warriors

Picture of the Day for September 25, 2013

While we had the autumnal equinox on Sunday and while the name equinox means ‘equal night’ in Latin, it wasn’t equal day and night on that day. The earth’s axis is not tilted away or towards the sun on the two equinoxes during the year but length of day wasn’t equal.

Since ‘sunrise’ is defined as the instant when the upper edge of the sun’s disk becomes visible above the horizon – not when the center of the sun is visible. In the same sense, ‘sunset’ refers to the moment the upper edge disappears below the horizon. At both instances, the center of the sun is below the horizon, and therefore the equinox day lasts a little longer than 12 hours.

And if the ‘center’ of the sunrise or sunset doesn’t add enough of a wrinkle, refraction and latitude play a factor also. The Earth’s atmosphere refracts sunlight and can appear to be six minutes longer in a day. And one’s latitude can vary the ‘equal day’ by days or weeks.

For me, today is the approximate date of ‘equal’ whereas the most southern cities in the United States have an extra four days before their ‘equal’ day and it doesn’t occur until October 17 if living five degrees north of the equator.

Equinox Sunset

Equinox Sunset

Picture of the Day for September 24, 2013

A babbling stream can make a very soothing sound for one to enjoy and relax. And while this seems like a nice river with water creating gurgles and ripples around and over rocks, the sound was a bit noisier with the upper falls of the Siskiwit River upstream and the middle falls directly behind me.

The sound is not roaring as larger falls would generate as the Siskiwit Falls only drops twenty feet in a series of drops and slides, with the largest cascading slide having a drop of ten feet and the other three drops and slides averaging two to five feet as it empties into the Lake Superior less than a mile away. But little falls were still impressive as you could get right up to the falls and let the water spill over your hands as it dropped over the falls but one problem of getting so close, I kept getting drops of water on the camera lens.

Siskiwit Falls

Siskiwit Falls

Picture of the Day for September 23, 2013

The autumnal equinox occurred yesterday at 3:44 PM for my area and today marks the first full day of autumn. The trees must have been like me and haven’t looked at the calendar for a while as some of the trees were starting to show color before the equinox and this lonely leaf has changed color and has fallen already and now won’t be seen by the leaf ‘peepers’ who will soon take leisurely drives or walks to view the autumn range of colors.

Autumn Begins

Autumn Begins

Picture of the Day for September 21, 2013

A sunny afternoon can change very quickly, especially on Lake Superior as she can generate squalls very swiftly in which the sun is covered by darkened skies, the wind begins to increase speed and soon you feel the pounding rain.

After a lifetime of living and working around the lake, commercial fisherman Julian Nelson described it this way…”The lake is the boss. No matter how big you are or what kind of a boat you’ve got, the lake is still the boss. Mother Nature dictates a lot of things.”

The Lake is the Boss

The Lake is the Boss

Picture of the Day for September 20, 2013

When Devils Island Lighthouse was finally activated in 1901, it became the eighth and final lighthouse to be built in the Apostle Islands.

On March 2, 1889, Congress appropriated $15,000 for a lighthouse on Devils Island, the most northern in the Apostle Island archipelago. When finished, the lighthouse would serve as a coastal light, splitting the gap between Sand Island and Outer Island. It would replace the temporary wooden structure light which was lit on September 30, 1891.

The worked started on July 1, 1897 for the new lighthouse and was completed October 1898 but had to wait for the third-order Fresnel lens to arrive from France. It finally arrived at the station on June 22, 1901 and with a range of 13 mile, was placed in operation on September 20, 1901.

In September 1928, the lighthouse was visited President Calvin Coolidge and his wife during a vacation in northern Wisconsin. The lighthouse was automated 1978.

Devil’s Island Lighthouse

Devil's Island Lighthouse