UPPER PENINSULA MICHIGAN: Pristine & Isolated, It's Unlike Anywhere Else In The U.S.

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  • Опубліковано 18 чер 2024
  • We visited these towns in Michigan's Upper Peninsula: Escanaba, Manistique, Newberry, Munising & Marquette.
    Joe's Instagram: / joeysroadtrip
    Travel Vlog 249

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @willbygosh4887
    @willbygosh4887 10 місяців тому +119

    Michigan has more coastline than Florida.Terrible Winter weather but no gators,no sharks,jellyfish,hurricanes.But Michigan has some beautiful beaches.I'd rather be in Michigan than Florida during the summer without that sauna like heat.

    • @steveletson6616
      @steveletson6616 8 місяців тому +28

      I'd rather be in Michigan than Florida any time of year.

    • @jimsage1043
      @jimsage1043 7 місяців тому +10

      Took a short cut one time in the UP. Added an hour to my time. Even with fwd I had to turn around. I live in Ohio. One winter I drove up to Curtis, picked up a friend and we headed to Marquette to see another friend in the hospital. The highway went right along Lake Superior for a bit. It was very windy and very cold. The spray off the lake was freezing before it hit the car. Sounded like getting hit with small bbs. Still love the place.

    • @TheFuzzieWuzzie
      @TheFuzzieWuzzie 7 місяців тому +5

      @@jimsage1043~ Lake Superior is ice cold to the shore on a 90 degree day. Nothing like Lake Erie, lol

    • @houseofdogzz5908
      @houseofdogzz5908 5 місяців тому +9

      I’d rather be in MI instead of Florida all 12 months!

    • @profxtreme9275
      @profxtreme9275 4 місяці тому +9

      Summertime in northern Michigan, especially the UP, is heaven on Earth.

  • @ritahallam8818
    @ritahallam8818 11 місяців тому +104

    Michigan is a very beautiful state!!

    • @xman777b
      @xman777b 10 місяців тому

      I'll take Ohio or Iowa or Minnesota

    • @nicolethompson8613
      @nicolethompson8613 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@xman777b😂😂😂

    • @TheRustyones
      @TheRustyones 9 місяців тому +11

      ohio? must really like armpits too.@@xman777b

    • @forrrrestjohncave
      @forrrrestjohncave 9 місяців тому +7

      Northern Lower Michigan and the UP are beautiful. All of southern MI is a gutter with the exception of Grand Rapids.

    • @GEN_X_
      @GEN_X_ 8 місяців тому

      You don't know what you're talking about do you? The Metro Detroit Cities of Grosse Pointe, BloomField Hills and Birmingham are the Palm Beaches of Michigan. The UP has nothing on these beautiful affluent cities. And Grand Rapids is Hickville USA. @@forrrrestjohncave

  • @lindabarnes4128
    @lindabarnes4128 10 місяців тому +88

    I immigrated from England to Escanaba in 1960. It was such a lovely town - downtown was bustling, with The Fair Store, Woolworth's, Kresge's and yes, both movie theatres! For 50 cents we got a movie, popcorm, a drink, an ice cream and a candy bar. It was a weekly event. The Centennial celebration was absolutely enchanting with the parade and year long celebrations in 1963. I was sent to St. Patrick's school. I now live on the remote North Pacific coast near Canada. Thanks for those wonderful peeks back into a wonderful past and present. It warmed my soul ❤

    • @searose6192
      @searose6192 7 місяців тому +4

      If you don’t mind me asking, do you mean the Alaska end of the coast or the Washington end. I am considering the opposite move, from the Northwest coast to the UP.

    • @lindabarnes4128
      @lindabarnes4128 7 місяців тому +3

      I live on the Washington coast, near Canada. Not the sound, but the actual coast. It's very temperate here. The UP is very cold, and quite snowy. I miss the snow, but not the cold. Very natural and wild up there!

    • @zk_c8076
      @zk_c8076 4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you for sharing your story! I actually enjoyed reading this!

    • @bigdaddyrat7854
      @bigdaddyrat7854 4 місяці тому +1

      Would you happen to remember the old popcorn wagon across from the Delft Theatre or the 8' chicken outside Tim & Sally's?

    • @lindabarnes4128
      @lindabarnes4128 3 місяці тому

      Yes, I remember Tim and Sally's but I'm not sure I remember the popcorn cart. I lived above Sayklly's on Ludington too, next to Tim and Sally's.

  • @MitchJohnson0110
    @MitchJohnson0110 10 місяців тому +186

    Escanaba local here. Thanks for visiting! You actually walked past my mom's boat at the beginning of the video and passed my girlfriends grandmas house at the 12:03 mark haha. She lives across the street.
    Couple side notes. It's spelled "Yooper" and it's pronounced "past-ee" not "paste-ee" hahaha. Glad you enjoyed!

    • @NYtoNC
      @NYtoNC 10 місяців тому +17

      Lol yah pay-sties are something entirely different😂

    • @mattdosh243
      @mattdosh243 10 місяців тому +9

      To remember the difference, "pasties" the food, are from the PAST. "Pasties", the covering, is PASTED on.

    • @deb7518
      @deb7518 9 місяців тому +8

      I discovered 'Cornish Pasties' in England. They were first made for the Welsh tin miners to take to work in their lunch buckets, so that they could have a good solid meal. They would only eat down to the crusts on the outer part, then throw that part away, because their hands would be covered in toxic tin, etc, from the mine. (So, basically, they were the early homemade version of 'Hot Pockets'.) When I visited England with the English guy I was then dating, he and his Auntie thought it very funny how fond I'd grown of them as we traveled around on buses and trains during the Christmas holidays. It was cold and blustery for much of our trip, and a pastie and a 'cuppa' (tea)became my go-to station order.😊

    • @MitchJohnson0110
      @MitchJohnson0110 9 місяців тому +8

      @@deb7518 the Cornish immigrants to the U.P. worked in the copper and iron mines. They brought the pasty with them

    • @helenwenzel7603
      @helenwenzel7603 9 місяців тому +6

      Thank you for correct pronunciations.

  • @ariesempresstarotandguidance
    @ariesempresstarotandguidance 8 місяців тому +35

    We moved to the UP two years ago from Reno, NV. We love it here, it seems a world apart from the hustle and bustle of the rest of the USA. We live about 15 miles south of Lake Superior, and even though the winters can be long here, we enjoy being a part of this beautiful untamed country. So much wilderness and natural beauty up here.

    • @podunkest
      @podunkest 2 місяці тому

      It really is crazy how remote the UP feels lol, I love it and how desolate and yet beautiful it is.

    • @Veedr0
      @Veedr0 2 місяці тому

      It's like stepping back into time

  • @ottomerkwurdigchliebe7271
    @ottomerkwurdigchliebe7271 11 місяців тому +124

    My Mom lives in Laurium ( Home of the Gipper). My Grandpa came from Germany in 1923 to work in the mines in the Copper Country ( Keweenaw Peninsula). He got hurt in a mining accident where he met my Grandma who was his nurse. He recovered, they moved to Chicago to make their living, retired back to the family home in Laurium. When my Mom retired she went up with my Grandparents and lives there still. I've been going up to Laurium several time each year for my entire life. I'm 64 now and consider the UP a second home. I've seen the Northern Lights from the Beach at Eagle River and a super moon from the beach at the Calumet Water Works. Absolutely incredible! I learned to ski up there and have seen winters with almost 400 inches of snow. The winters in the Keweenaw are harsh to put it mildly but the summers are great( the mosquitos can be pretty harsh too). Check out the Copper Country it's Beautiful up there! Great Channel by the way. Hoooly Wah!

    • @mrbr549
      @mrbr549 11 місяців тому +5

      I lived in Laurium for a year or so in the seventies. Tons of snow! Like you said, it's a beautiful area in the Summer. I remember a backyard barbecue in late May surrounded by snow, lol.

    • @zoidmo3388
      @zoidmo3388 11 місяців тому +2

      Thx for sharing🥰

    • @hans-georgd.1095
      @hans-georgd.1095 11 місяців тому +3

      Laurium, home of Toni’s County Kitchen and arguably the best Finnish pasties in the Keweenaw (subjective of course 😉).

    • @andrewlemerond4374
      @andrewlemerond4374 11 місяців тому +7

      Thanks for sharing. You've probably eaten a few pieces of Trenary toast, eh? Perhaps a Cudighi sandwich or two?

    • @rockpadstudios
      @rockpadstudios 10 місяців тому

      I grew up in Laurium

  • @USAR8888
    @USAR8888 10 місяців тому +60

    I made a spur of the moment roadtrip up to the UP in mid October of 2019, driving from Illinois. It was the most beautiful, serene place I have ever seen. The fall colors were spectacular! I've traveled quite a bit and seen most of the US and I still think the upper peninsula is the most gorgeous scenery I've ever encountered, especially in the fall. Specifically the Porcupine Mountains and Lake of the Clouds, Pictured Rocks, Keweenaw peninsula and Copper Harbor, and Grand Marais. The coastline along Lake Superior was an absolute dream. I can't wait to go back.

    • @johneschelweck1880
      @johneschelweck1880 9 місяців тому +5

      The dumas making the video never mentioned that spectacular fall color season in Marquette in October. Instead he says they have 2ft of snow from October to.... I lived there 18 yrs. October is beautiful. What a goof

    • @GEN_X_
      @GEN_X_ 8 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, the upper peninsula is nice for about 2 months out of the year and then winter hits. You don't want to be there in the winter. My family has owned a private cottage in Munising since the 1960's and they get so much snow up there, that they can't leave their house and they have to shovel snow off their roof or it would collapse.

    • @johneschelweck1880
      @johneschelweck1880 8 місяців тому +10

      Bull crap. I lived in Marquette for 18 yrs. Many months of great weather to enjoy you WIMP

    • @GEN_X_
      @GEN_X_ 8 місяців тому

      LOL if you think U.P. weather is considered "great" then you must be related to the eskimos. I'll take my South Florida weather any day over that northern Michigan crappy weather Mr. Hickville USA. @@johneschelweck1880

    • @wasntme3651
      @wasntme3651 4 місяці тому +2

      @@GEN_X_
      Your name says it all 😂😂😂😂
      You have to be tough to live in the UP. Winters are awesome here and if you’re soft you can only handle two months haha.
      Mild winter this year.

  • @colemant6845
    @colemant6845 8 місяців тому +9

    Congrats!.. You Ventured into the America that 90% of Americans NEVER see. Amazing part of this Great Country.

  • @poowg2657
    @poowg2657 11 місяців тому +87

    The "a" in pasty is pronounced the same as in "pastor". The original was made with cubed beef, carrots and rutebagas . The reason Munising is full of tourists is because most come to see the Pictured Rocks national lakeshore. My family and I have taken the scenic cruises many times and can't reccomend it enough. Excellent video, liked it much!

    • @zoidmo3388
      @zoidmo3388 11 місяців тому +5

      u forgot 'onions lots & lots of onions & potatos' in Cornish Pasties.

    • @Drewzer154
      @Drewzer154 10 місяців тому +9

      It amazes me how people can mix up pasty and pastie. lol

    • @poowg2657
      @poowg2657 10 місяців тому +7

      Put pastys on your discreet areas. You'll look ridiculous but smell great.

    • @Drewzer154
      @Drewzer154 10 місяців тому +2

      @@poowg2657 lol.

    • @zoidmo3388
      @zoidmo3388 10 місяців тому +1

      @@Drewzer154 an actual Protected Food Names Popo right here? who woulda thought.

  • @WWeronko
    @WWeronko 9 місяців тому +15

    You missed my favorite Upper Peninsula haunt, Houghton, Michigan. It is the home of Michigan Tech University and a truly wonderful place.

  • @johnm.lashmit8855
    @johnm.lashmit8855 8 місяців тому +19

    We live in the northern lower peninsula, about 60 miles south of the Bridge. There is nothing anywhere that can match up to the U.P. There is so much to see up there, lots of waterfalls to hike to, old copper mines to tour, and a lot more. There is so much history in that peninsula. Once you cross that bridge, it's like a whole different world up there.

  • @avlisk
    @avlisk 10 місяців тому +22

    3 years ago this September, I drove through the UP just to see what it was like, as it was way out of my way. If I had any family even close by, (they all live on the east coast), I would have bought a home there in a second. It felt so good just being there.

  • @BaconIsNotBiceps
    @BaconIsNotBiceps 9 місяців тому +19

    Mid-80s I recall driving from Massachusetts to Washington State with my uncle, something very unfamiliar to me, and passing by a massive body of water. Perplexed, I inquired as to what ocean this was only to be laughed at by my uncle who responded, "That's Lake Erie." I said, that's a lake??? He said, yes, and one of the smaller great lakes at that. Most people will never understand how utterly massive the Great Lakes are until they see with their own eyes. This is an amazing video, my friend. Thank you for taking us along with you into a gorgeous part of our country. I enjoyed it very much. Stay safe out there.

  • @hakes187
    @hakes187 9 місяців тому +17

    Love living in the UP, a great place to raise kids. The economy is a bit lacking, and winter is long, but if you work hard, it's a peaceful living

  • @gtingaming716
    @gtingaming716 11 місяців тому +74

    In the UK we have a Cornish Pastie, it’s a traditional dish from the southwest area of the country. It looks incredibly similar to the one you had there. It was a meal made for the miners. The pastry handle was designed to be thrown away after being handled by coal covered hands.

    • @zoidmo3388
      @zoidmo3388 11 місяців тому +9

      Oh my! My Gran was the best pastie maker ! Yes, I'm bias lol. How I miss them. Grandad came to Canada wanting work, sent to mines in Timmins, Ontario. Gran back in Cornwall waiting waiting with 2 young'ns. She finally packed up bags got on the ship & came to him. He wanted her to wait so as to have a house to come to but she wasn't having non of that ! LOL.

    • @nathant17
      @nathant17 11 місяців тому +5

      yeah looked like a deluxe version of a British meat pie to me. They have them in Jamaica too. They are pretty good.

    • @mothernorthsforest
      @mothernorthsforest 11 місяців тому +32

      Pasties in the UP are derived from the Cornish pasty, but distinctive in its inclusion of rutabaga and some Finnish influence. Pasties were brought to the copper and iron mines from the UK, but quickly adjusted to suit the growing Finnish population :) so while similar, a yooper pasty is its own dish

    • @zoidmo3388
      @zoidmo3388 11 місяців тому +8

      @@mothernorthsforest We had many Finnish working in the mines. My school chum's Gran made awesome pulla braided bread. Thx for bringing sweet memories back. Like their homemade back yd sauna & intro to branches wrapped together to swish over your skin to clean pores. The good 'ol days.

    • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
      @jollyjohnthepirate3168 10 місяців тому +8

      My mom worked at Joe's Pastie shop in Ironwood, Michigan. She said the traditional pasties were made for Tin miners. Since tin usually has arsenic in it the pie was designed to allow the miner to eat it without poisoning themselves.

  • @Faithful10415
    @Faithful10415 8 місяців тому +15

    I want to visit now. This looks spectacular. Also seems like a very low crime area, clean neighborhoods, and not a lot of people, lots of nature. This introvert’s dream.

    • @bonniethompson610
      @bonniethompson610 3 місяці тому +1

      I'm from a southern family. I can't bring myself to leave Michigan. It's a beautiful state. The coastline is amazing, well the parts that are not hidden by buildings and homes. The UP is amazing! There is a ton of history here. Enjoy your visit. Stay away from the inner city areas,it's rough.

    • @grimsonforce7504
      @grimsonforce7504 3 місяці тому +2

      For now, unforunatley people have started moving in only a matter of time before it becomes a another toursity cesspool of crime.

    • @Polksalad615
      @Polksalad615 2 місяці тому

      Perfect for me!

  • @gatorgogo2742
    @gatorgogo2742 11 місяців тому +31

    Now I inderstand why my friends love living up there so much! It's beautiful. The jail and sheriff's residence really caught my eye. The home for sale in Newberry is 2/1 and is listed at $50,000. Nicole, you looked a bit chilly there at the end. lol Thanks guys.

    • @minime8048
      @minime8048 10 місяців тому

      yes Nic doesnt look well

  • @michaelporter3555
    @michaelporter3555 11 місяців тому +35

    Great video. As popular as the Upper Peninsula is it's another place that outside of the region you rarely see much about it. It really is a beautiful place.

  • @carolb9234
    @carolb9234 10 місяців тому +32

    As a Michigander who lives "down state" I can say I truly love Michigan. We have the cleanest lakes and beaches around! The people who live in northern Michigan call those of us who live down state "fudgies", because we go up North for the fudge, lol. I've also heard that the pasty was developed by the wives who used to pack their husbands lunches when they went off to work in the copper mines. It was a full meal and they were able to eat it with their hands.

    • @lauravictorious4670
      @lauravictorious4670 10 місяців тому +13

      We also call them "trolls" because you live "under the bridge," so to speak.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 10 місяців тому +5

      This was a mining tradition in England. My grandfathercwas sent to the British coal mines at age 10. He hated it, but talked about his pasties as his days highlight. He lied about his age and got into the WW1. Then after the war he and my Grandmother immigrated to Toronto, Canada. So many immigrants brought the mi ing traditions with them, passed it on.

    • @Shamustodd1
      @Shamustodd1 8 місяців тому

      @@lauravictorious4670 Ouch! And I always thought so fondly of Yoopers, it kinda hurts to know we are just trolls to you.

    • @lauravictorious4670
      @lauravictorious4670 8 місяців тому +4

      @@Shamustodd1 I never said "just trolls." I simply pointed out the nickname. I have lots of family in lower Michigan.

    • @Shamustodd1
      @Shamustodd1 8 місяців тому +2

      @@lauravictorious4670 It's cool I was only joking. Last week we were in Eau Claire Wisconsin and decided to take the long way home through the U.P. We absolutely love it and would love to live in the U.P. but both work in Muskegon and are kinda tied here. Maybe someday.

  • @dianacanales2526
    @dianacanales2526 9 місяців тому +16

    Michigander here from the Lake Michigan shoreline of the lower peninsula. Fun Fact: We in the lower peninsula are nicknamed "Trolls" because we live under the Mackinac Bridge. Thank-you for visiting and filming our beautiful state, but I feel you missed out on all the gorgeous natural scenery pretty much everywhere you go by sticking to the downtown and residential areas. Waterfalls! The Upper Peninsula is famous for it's numerous and stunning waterfalls. Some do not require too much of a hike, and some do, of course. Tahquamenon (Tah-kwa-me-non) Falls State Park is located at 41382 W. M-123, Paradise. There is also an entrance to the park on M-123 in Newberry. Highly recommend if you venture back someday. In Munising, you missed the opportunity of a lifetime to take one of those tour boats to see Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore with its stunning cliffs of colorful, geological layers of rock and sediment lining the shore of Lake Superior. How many waterfalls does the Upper Peninsula have? There are 300+ waterfalls scattered across the U.P., ranging in size from under 5 feet to 48+ feet vertical drops. So, lots of scenic opportunities to see that our state is blessed with. I could write pages...But again, Thank-you! Wishing you & your wife safe & lovely travels!

  • @ms.m9337
    @ms.m9337 11 місяців тому +35

    Nothing like blue skies and green countryside…thanks Joe for the great tour! 😊 PS love that you show us awesome treats too ❤

  • @michelerosevear7466
    @michelerosevear7466 8 місяців тому +5

    Born and bred "Yooper" here...I've lived in/near the big cities (Chicago/Detroit) and living here is so much nicer. It's great to see someone appreciate the beauty of the Upper Peninsula. Here's an interesting fact that you probably don't know...there's a town called "Paradise" in the U.P. and a town called "Hell" in the Lower Peninsula? Accurate, I believe...great video.

  • @dougholtz730
    @dougholtz730 10 місяців тому +22

    The Delft Theatre has a solid future as am event center. Some solid backers are getting ready to move forward on the project, so there is great hope! The Michigan continues to languish, but it is owned by a couple who have plans to renovate it to its former glory by 2026.

    • @lauravictorious4670
      @lauravictorious4670 10 місяців тому +1

      I saw movies there when I attended NMU. Sad that it's not a movie theater anymore.

    • @msudoc
      @msudoc 9 місяців тому +1

      I saw Star Wars premiere at the Delft! 🙂

    • @michelerosevear7466
      @michelerosevear7466 8 місяців тому +2

      It was great, as a kid, seeing movies at The Delft...the interior of the theater was incredible. The Nordic theater was across from it--now it's a called "The Honorable Distillery"; miss seeing movies there too but not as much as The Delft.

  • @homesteadprowlers8388
    @homesteadprowlers8388 10 місяців тому +11

    LOL! It's YOOPER. I love Manistique, it's so mysterious. It's always 10 degrees colder than the surrounding area and always misty when we go there. I love Marquette, too, but it's quite the weather there! Wonderful video, love your content! Thank you for publishing so regularly, we really enjoy your videos so much!

  • @johnnymidas5879
    @johnnymidas5879 11 місяців тому +19

    MAN YOU GET AROUND BROTHER!! 😃👍🌴

  • @stinahokenson4161
    @stinahokenson4161 10 місяців тому +14

    The pasty is pronounced “PASS-tee”. Some of us
    Yoopers want it with ketchup. There was a thought that only Trolls (those who came from south of the Bridge) ate them with gravy. It is a Cornish adoption very useful for miners to keep warm wrapped until lunch breaks in the Copper and Iron mines.

    • @lauravictorious4670
      @lauravictorious4670 10 місяців тому +1

      Gravy 🤮not on my pasty. Was eating one, at a family member's home, and the ketchup was low. I used Worcestershire sauce and that wasn't bad.

  • @robatsea2009
    @robatsea2009 10 місяців тому +15

    Gorgeous houses! That particular one at the corner of E. Michigan & Cedar in Marquette last sold in 2022 for $1.1 million. Built in 1882, 6186 square feet on a bit over a half-acre lot, 6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. It's flat-out beautiful inside.

  • @amberhansen3806
    @amberhansen3806 10 місяців тому +6

    My friend lives in the UP. Gwinn. She was living in Houghton for years. She seems to love it. She has all animals eating from her hands. They're so friendly up there

    • @theresehill1660
      @theresehill1660 8 місяців тому

      There are a.lot of.Finnish peop!e in the UP.
      Actually my father in law was born in. A.little town called Febron Quarry.
      His parents did not speak English. As they were Finnish..so the mid wife na!ed.him GWINN after the town she was from.!

  • @ryanvanderark1168
    @ryanvanderark1168 11 місяців тому +9

    The house at 204 E Harrie St in Newberry Joe mentions is listed on Zillow for $50,000. 2 bed, 1 bath, 1,020 square feet.

  • @BGNOLA
    @BGNOLA 10 місяців тому +8

    Being in Louisiana now, 55 degrees in July sounds like heaven

  • @pbegich4235
    @pbegich4235 11 місяців тому +25

    I'm Croatian by birth and originally from Minnesota and my Mom used to make beef Pasties all the time, so my mouth started watering at the sight of the one you bought! Pasties (pronounced "paaasties" as in nasty, not "paysties") were the favorite lunch food of iron
    miners as they could wrap them up and carry them in their pocket due to the (purposely)
    tough crust. It was said that the best pasties could be dropped down a mine shaft or
    carried in your pocket without affecting them in the least! Love your travelogues!
    Pete from Prescott

    • @steveib724
      @steveib724 10 місяців тому +1

      That's one tuff meat pie lol

    • @rockeerockey6941
      @rockeerockey6941 10 місяців тому +1

      Favorite of loggers

    • @janetbassett5657
      @janetbassett5657 4 місяці тому +1

      I live in Northern California gold country where a lot of Cornish miners worked the mines here. Pasties were/are a local favorite and I grew up eating them. You can still buy them downtown here or sometimes I make my own. BTW, my grandfather was also Croatian---born and raised on Olib, off the coast near Zadar. Such a beautiful island!

  • @AldousTyler
    @AldousTyler 11 місяців тому +20

    So glad you found Newberry! I would have recommended Ontonagon and Grand Marais, Michigan as well - both gorgeous Lake Superior towns.

    • @davidmackie2901
      @davidmackie2901 11 місяців тому +1

      We went to North Manistique lake every year while I was growing up. Always made a trip to "Grandma Ray's" when we were there.

    • @Frannieville
      @Frannieville 8 місяців тому +1

      Soo locks!!!!

    • @barbarabavier675
      @barbarabavier675 4 місяці тому +2

      My husband and I retired to Curtis, MI for about 2.5 years for him, 5 years for me. Sadly, he passed in 2019, and I had to move to an easier winter climate in 2021. Curtis is about 30 miles southwest of Newberry, and has a population of 903. My dad’s family had a lot to do with establishing the fishing industry in the eastern part of the UP, from St. Ignace to Manistique and Lake Michigan to Lake Superior. My great-great-grandfather is named on a historical marker in Epoufette.
      My mom’s family farmed in Skandia, MI, about 15 miles south of Marquette.
      And it’s pronounced PASS-tee, not pasty.

  • @LIVERPOOLandFARBEYONDNEWS
    @LIVERPOOLandFARBEYONDNEWS 11 місяців тому +11

    I have just been a nerd and checked on the price of the house on Harrie Street and on 2 different sites it says $50.000. I'm from Liverpool which is prob about 4 000 miles away but it's cool that I can check straight away how much properties are in your lovely country. I'm jealous every day that I don't or can't live in USA. If I could I would be there in around 11 hours whatever time it takes on a plane. I can never decide on my favourite part of 🇺🇸 cus each time, I see something new to me and also as beautiful as the last boss I have seen on vids from USA

  • @FrancesBraam-et1wx
    @FrancesBraam-et1wx 10 місяців тому +11

    I've been to Escanaba many years ago, in winter, and it was pretty bleak. But you've given another whole outlook on the UP. I think its so beautiful! For myself, you can have that hot Texas sun. Our grass gets pretty green in summers and the flowers are gorgeous. Those Great Lakes are precious. You'd never know they were lakes, thinking it could be the ocean. Thanks again for another great video on the upper Midwest States!

    • @FrancesBraam-et1wx
      @FrancesBraam-et1wx 10 місяців тому +3

      @@foresthiker6707 There is nothing more refreshing that cold crisp air. I've been to AZ in September and it was 110 out! Even when the sun went down! Couldn't wait to get back to WI where I could breathe. There is plenty of winter sports to enjoy. Hiking is good exercise. One has to learn to dress appropriately. You can always put clothes on to warm up, but you can't take your skin off in the heat!

    • @FrancesBraam-et1wx
      @FrancesBraam-et1wx 10 місяців тому

      @@foresthiker6707 Sure, some people think winters here are brutal, but the Summer and Fall months really make it worth it. Besides, if you have someone to snuggle in front of a nice fireplace with and a good bottle of wine......Ecstasy!

    • @GEN_X_
      @GEN_X_ 8 місяців тому

      Yeah, the upper peninsula is nice for about 2 months out of the year and then winter hits. You don't want to be there in the winter. My family has owned a private cottage in Munising since the 1960's and they get so much snow up there, that they can't leave their house and they have to shovel snow off their roof or it would collapse. @@foresthiker6707

  • @kennethberger5864
    @kennethberger5864 10 місяців тому +5

    So glad I live in Michigan! “Da Yoop” is such an amazing part of our state.

  • @jmichna1
    @jmichna1 6 місяців тому +4

    Joe & Nic,
    Your next visit, come travel the less populated, more isolated, western end of the UP... west from Marquette, up the Keweenaw, then on to Ontonagon & Gogebic counties.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  6 місяців тому +3

      We will be doing that. We plan on 2 more UP videos. Stay tuned.

  • @profxtreme9275
    @profxtreme9275 8 місяців тому +8

    To those of us from the southern half of the lower peninsula, the UP is known almost universally as God's country. Northern Michigan for us means the northern half of the lower peninsula, and it is absolutely gorgeous there, a slice of heaven, but the UP is even higher in the heavens. Been a couple years since I was in the UP and it feels far too long... really need to go back and explore more. Can't wait to see the Porcupine Mountains and Copper Harbor.

    • @laurie9913
      @laurie9913 8 місяців тому +1

      I was born and raised in the U.P. Lived there until age of 40 then moved to the lower Michigan and I've lived for over 20 yrs. now. All my family who is left still live in the U.P. I was raised in a small town called Dodgeville which is 1 to 2 miles from Houghton.

  • @W.Michigan
    @W.Michigan 10 місяців тому +5

    Lived in Marquette for many years. Perfect little city in paradise.

  • @patriciapritchett5071
    @patriciapritchett5071 11 місяців тому +7

    I lived in Escanaba some years ago. I absolutely love the UP. I have studied so much of the history, from the Christmas Tree ship in Thompson to the mining wars of Copper Country. I go back every year.❤❤❤❤❤

  • @yashathebelgianmalinois348
    @yashathebelgianmalinois348 10 місяців тому +5

    I’m from northern WI and we’d cross the border into the UP every summer. It’s the only place we could purchase Vernors Soda. I always noticed nearly all homes have sharp pitched roofs. Most likely due due to the amount of heavy snow they get. Wonderful memories of hanging with friends and exploring.

    • @Frannieville
      @Frannieville 8 місяців тому +3

      Vernors is pop.

    • @michelerosevear7466
      @michelerosevear7466 8 місяців тому

      @@Frannieville I noticed that too; it's called pop here--not soda 🤣...I've always wondered if the U.P. is the only place to call it that.

    • @Frannieville
      @Frannieville 8 місяців тому +2

      @@michelerosevear7466 here in the lower peninsula we call it pop too. A soda is a drink with pop and a scoop of ice cream.

  • @Silverhaired59
    @Silverhaired59 10 місяців тому +4

    You missed a lot by stopping at Marquette. If you had kept going and turned right, you would go up the Keweenaw Peninsula to Copper Country. They mined mostly iron ore down by Marquette, and copper in the Keweenaw. I attended Michigan Technological University there in Houghton in the late 1970s. The twin towns of Houghton and Hancock are on either side of a canal and lake that bisects the peninsula. A lift bridge goes over the canal and can stop traffic for the whole area for a while. There are steep hills going down to the water front on both sides and the Tech ski team has a ski hill on the northern slope, in Ripley. You can tour a copper mine in Ripley, too. The shores of the peninsula are beautiful and somewhat rocky. Copper Harbor, at the tip, is a little touristy. Our Chemistry professor had a rock shop up there. The cafe in Laurium has the best pasties, as mentioned by another commenter, above, and I remember it for ice cream, too. The Memorial Union at MTU has vegetarian pasties that are SOOOO good. I used to get them with beef gravy! Calumet is a city on the Keweenaw that is known for its opera house, pipe organ, and a terrible 1913 tragedy in which 73 people from union families (59 children) were trampled to death when everyone was celebrating Christmas Eve inside a union hall while the miners were on strike. Woody Guthrie wrote a song about it. I guess there is a historical site there today that debates the facts and rumors about what really happened.
    Sometimes, on a trip, you decide to turn back a little too early, and I think this was one of those times.

  • @peanuttube605
    @peanuttube605 11 місяців тому +4

    I used to ride thru Escanaba late at night on the Greyhound bus going home from Mich. Tech U. way up north. Been nearly 40 years since I was last in the U.P.. Thanks for the memories.

  • @muffassa6739
    @muffassa6739 4 місяці тому +2

    😊 I just wanted you to know how much I enjoyed this video I'm a life long resident of my home state and the lower part but we've been to the UP many times. Thanks again and keep warm 😊

  • @grantdubridge7995
    @grantdubridge7995 7 місяців тому +2

    In Manistique, when you were looking at the water tower, the bridge right next to it has the road level lower then the water in the channel.
    At least it used to have when the paper mill was running full tilt in the 70s and 80s. You could reach over the wall and touch the water that was at your shoulder level.

  • @senatorjimdracula1603
    @senatorjimdracula1603 10 місяців тому +6

    You think it's chilly there in July, the winters are BRUTAL. Still, beautiful country. Somewhere near L'anse is a crumbling cabin (it may have collapsed by now) that was owned by my grandfather. I haven't been there since I was a kid.

  • @jdwilkins2000
    @jdwilkins2000 4 місяці тому +3

    What a well made and interesting video! I was stationed at K.I. Sawyer Air Force Base outside Marquette in 1964-1966, working in the S.A.G.E. computer building (thousands of vacuum tubes in that facility), The downtown area still looks very much the same, it's like time stopped up there. If you can deal with really harsh winters, it would be a great place to retire to.

  • @Fatima-et8vt
    @Fatima-et8vt 10 місяців тому +8

    Hello sir im from thaialnd i love rural road and countryside in america thank your video✌️✌🏾✌🏽✌🏼✌🏻🥰😘

  • @coldwindblowing
    @coldwindblowing 11 місяців тому +10

    Love so much your channel!! Thank you for existing from Brazil!!! 👏🏼👏🏼

  • @200PercentRad
    @200PercentRad 10 місяців тому +8

    I appreciate you checking out the upper peninsula. Though I wouldn't say Newberry is in the center, it was nice to see it get some spotlight. I'd definitely recommend checking out Houghton/Hancock, Copper Harbor, and Grand Marais. There's so much natural beauty here, but I feel like housing has gotten very expensive in the past decade.

  • @edwardpincus
    @edwardpincus 11 місяців тому +22

    The Manistique water tower is unique. It’s not like any structure you’ve shown before in your various travels. Thanks, most intriguing.

  • @MultiPizzapizza
    @MultiPizzapizza 5 місяців тому +3

    The UP is a gem!!

  • @69toocool420
    @69toocool420 24 дні тому +1

    my home, love the UP. The community is very welcoming too, very safe. Some don't like tourists but many of us do not mind 🙂The only thing that we ask is that you pick up your trash, our community has so much respect and love for the land as there are not many places like it. Best things to do is definitely go swimming (go to Black rocks!) it's a little bit cool but you get used to it, there's pictured rocks where you take a cruise on a boat and sightsee. Lots of different restaurants but I do have to say there's very little places to go when it comes to indoor activities, biking trails that I've heard are pretty good as well as hiking trails, star gazing(!!!), and many cool events that they hold during July-September in Marquette or around the area. If you're looking for a quiet vacation mixed with nature, this is the best place for you!! Also do not leave food out during the night or you'll surely have a bear friend show up.

  • @rileylutz69
    @rileylutz69 10 місяців тому +3

    Love my home state and yes it does not get hot in the summer in the UP but pleasantly warm. Michigan has a lot to offer and is a hidden gem

  • @tallboy2234
    @tallboy2234 10 місяців тому +5

    Could sure use some of that 55 degree weather here right now! It’s hotter than blazes!!🥵

  • @johngibson7001
    @johngibson7001 11 місяців тому +3

    Hello Joe! always good to see a new vid in the morning! Good stuff man!

  • @user-jn9gv9ve6e
    @user-jn9gv9ve6e 10 місяців тому +5

    anatomy of a murder 1959 . was very good movie. it actually was a true story. the murder happened in big bay michigan. michigan is a beautiful state. summer and fall are wonderful. winter is a different story. nice that you came to the u.p. we can make you an honorary yooper. i hope you enjoyed your stay.

  • @deloiscallaway9442
    @deloiscallaway9442 11 місяців тому +3

    This Video Was Everything Thanks For Taking Us Along

  • @catlover614
    @catlover614 11 місяців тому +11

    A wonderful video, as always. All beautiful towns, with lots of interesting and historic buildings, and amazing houses. I love old lighthouses, so it was great to see inside, and the beach at Manistique was gorgeous, even though it looked really cold !!! Thanks so much, Joe and Nic, a really enjoyable video.😊💕

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  11 місяців тому

      Thank you, CL!!

    • @heatherfulmore3412
      @heatherfulmore3412 11 місяців тому

      The towns are really nice and clean. A young man went to the Upper Peninsula a few years ag to be a missionary.

  • @thejerseyj5479
    @thejerseyj5479 8 місяців тому +2

    A must see destination. Sad though to see another old vacant downtown main street. I'm old enough to remember when "downtown" was where we shopped, went to movies and enjoyed other entertainment such as restaurants and bars and just, everything. Thanks for giving a glimpse into the UP, I now have another road trip destination.

  • @slaybomb96
    @slaybomb96 10 місяців тому +15

    My other paternal great grandfather was born up Calumet, Houghton County in the Upper Peninsula. My dad has told me stories of how my great grandfather would deliver groceries on snow shoes. When the mining dried up they moved down to Detroit where the auto jobs where booming in the early 1900s. He was Swedish and English and there are a lot of Swedes/Norweigians in the northern part of the midwest so you are right about people who like the cold wanting to stay there. My parents and I went and stayed in Munising in 2017 and we visited Marquette and did the pictured rocks tours as well very amazing natural scenary. I definitly reccamend a tour if you go back there.

    • @user-lz7su6ex4l
      @user-lz7su6ex4l 8 місяців тому +1

      Calumet was the first town in mich with paved streets it was during the copper boom

    • @slaybomb96
      @slaybomb96 8 місяців тому +2

      @@user-lz7su6ex4l I'm pretty sure Woodward was the first paved road in the country

    • @ahlkazar7227
      @ahlkazar7227 8 місяців тому +1

      Portland Street in Calumet was paved in 1906 and it is still paved with the same concrete. The first one mile section of Woodward was paved in 1909.

    • @slaybomb96
      @slaybomb96 8 місяців тому +1

      @@ahlkazar7227 Woodward was the first paved road there's a difference. Portland street was the first concrete road in Michigan but not the first "paved road".

    • @ahlkazar7227
      @ahlkazar7227 8 місяців тому

      @@slaybomb96 what are you saying is the difference?

  • @jackies5481
    @jackies5481 11 місяців тому +5

    I notice that many of the small-town grocery stores that you're coming across are IGA stores. I haven't seen any of them in several decades since I moved out of real Upstate NY - near the Adirondack Mountains. They're Independent Grocers Alliance. All these small family-owned grocers throughout many regions of the country went in together to provide the freshest goods to customers that otherwise a small grocer wouldn't be able to provide. Anywhere you see the IGA logo, they're considered IGA stores rather than known by the actual name of the store. Love your videos!

    • @daviddecelles8714
      @daviddecelles8714 11 місяців тому +1

      Those shown, though, besides IGA, had a larger local name that was highlighted.

    • @jackies5481
      @jackies5481 10 місяців тому +1

      @@daviddecelles8714 I realize that. But growing up around those kind of stores, they were referred to by locals as "IGA stores" instead of the actual names.

    • @gerarduebbing3121
      @gerarduebbing3121 8 місяців тому

      We still call it IGA’s in Newberry @@jackies5481

  • @michelledryden4378
    @michelledryden4378 9 місяців тому +3

    Thank you!! I think I've found my new escape from the GA heat next summer😊

    • @TacoTraveller
      @TacoTraveller Місяць тому

      I’ve traveled to Michigan a few times from Atlanta. I find it to be a very pleasant place. Especially when you get north of Flint and the UP. Sometimes I think I would like to live there. Of all the places I’ve been it’s the only place that I feel comfortable being in. I know nowhere is perfect but it’s close to me.

  • @joannadee3565
    @joannadee3565 10 місяців тому +2

    I grew up in Wisconsin and we always went to Manistique for summer vacations. Beautiful place!

  • @mistyvalley3853
    @mistyvalley3853 10 місяців тому +1

    Absolutely love your videos....spent all day driving around with you through all those small towns, love small town drive throughs....you make them very interesting...

  • @WaskiSquirrel
    @WaskiSquirrel 10 місяців тому +10

    This was fun to see. I've been thinking a lot about where to retire to, and Michigan turns out to be amazing in that way. The upper peninsula is rural like my current state of North Dakota.
    I'm planning to teach for a few more years, so I'm glad to see there are people there. Who knows...you may run into me in UP Michigan in a few years!

    • @user-jn9gv9ve6e
      @user-jn9gv9ve6e 10 місяців тому +2

      i like n dakota. michigan has much more water and trees. marquette is the best town is you need health care in your old age.

  • @LyleFrancisDelp
    @LyleFrancisDelp 11 місяців тому +10

    I love small towns with NO “cookie cutter” houses.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  11 місяців тому +3

      Right!!

    • @Silverhaired59
      @Silverhaired59 10 місяців тому +1

      Sorry to disappoint, but in some towns, the houses are “cookie cutter” because they were mostly built by mining companies for the workers. Those big houses in the bigger towns were likely owned by lumber barons, mill owners, and mine owners. All over northern lower and the the UP of Michigan, the natural resources were stripped away, money extracted and sent south, and workers left to migrate or live in poverty. It is hard to see the towns now and imagine them with passenger rails, luxury cruise boats, and thriving economies.

    • @LyleFrancisDelp
      @LyleFrancisDelp 10 місяців тому

      @@Silverhaired59 I realize that, as I grew up in one.

  • @SteveTheFordGuy985
    @SteveTheFordGuy985 11 місяців тому +1

    Thank you Joe & Nic, for another wonderful video. ❤

  • @tumbleweed57
    @tumbleweed57 10 місяців тому +2

    On my bucket list! Thanks for the tour!

  • @janefinley-english1051
    @janefinley-english1051 11 місяців тому +4

    Thank u for going to the UP! My Dad was raised up here & I had never seen it before. Safe travels. ♥️✌🏽

  • @badguy5554
    @badguy5554 10 місяців тому +5

    I was stationed in the USAF just south of Marquette, Michigan (in the early 1970's). Loved the town. Loved the area. I went back (after 50 years) just last year. The city has expanded a lot since we lived there. I had dinner in an Italian restaurant we used to frequent back then. Same family still owns it. Same very good food. You may want to watch an old classic movie "Anatomy of a Murder" that was filmed there. Otto Preminger was the director, with Jimmy Stewart and George C. Scott as just SOME of the famous actors in the movie.

    • @MitchJohnson0110
      @MitchJohnson0110 10 місяців тому +4

      Stationed at ol K.I. Sawyer eh?

    • @badguy5554
      @badguy5554 10 місяців тому +1

      @@MitchJohnson0110 You bet!

    • @garyzink1927
      @garyzink1927 8 місяців тому +1

      My deceased supervisor teacher had classmates from Northern Michigan University who were extras in the movie you mentioned. He later owned a place in big bay almost next to the lighthouse. I love the u.p. and miss it. Peace from a troll, Cadillac, mi.

    • @badguy5554
      @badguy5554 8 місяців тому +1

      @@garyzink1927 Oh you live "under the bridge"!

    • @badguy5554
      @badguy5554 4 місяці тому

      @@MitchJohnson0110 Eh!

  • @stratcat4450
    @stratcat4450 10 місяців тому +2

    Nothing like listening to the Yoopers famous song " second week of deer camp" every fall before hunting season!

  • @semiexistent
    @semiexistent 10 місяців тому +2

    YEASSSSS i have loved watching these videos for the past month or so and the UP is my favorite place and i'm so excited to see the other michigan videos, i saw your route went right through everywhere i've lived!!!!

  • @zerog5041
    @zerog5041 10 місяців тому +5

    Hi Joe and Nicole from a cool London where it is a sunny 17C, the last two towns you visited are fantastic from an architectural point of view, that deceptively small house in Munising had an amazing garage hitched onto it. Yes, if it wasn't for the freezing winter conditions I think I could quite easily live there.

  • @bleepblabloop
    @bleepblabloop 10 місяців тому +5

    The winters in the UP are brutal. Many don’t realize that.

    • @doninmichigan
      @doninmichigan 10 місяців тому +6

      Keeps the riff raff out 👍

  • @yoopermary
    @yoopermary 9 місяців тому +10

    On the stretch between Escanaba and Manistique you crossed the river that Longfellow, in his poem The Song of Hiawatha, called The Mighty Nahma. Nahma is the Ojibwe word for Sturgeon and that's what the river is known as today, the Sturgeon River.I used to take my dogs on the three hour walk to the Sturgeon and back. You passed within a horn honk of my place. Keep up these wonderful videos you produce.

  • @kenseger5684
    @kenseger5684 10 місяців тому

    Architecture in the homes was spectacular. We are packing our suitcase as I am typing. We just keep rewinding looking at those homes. truly breath-taking... thanks for another great video.

  • @FixIt1975
    @FixIt1975 10 місяців тому +4

    Turret is the word you were looking for in regard to that 4 story thing on that fancy house. The 2 old cars just before that were Ford Falcons, a convertible and a Falcon Ranchero, that your wife referred to as a "truck thing." 🤣🤣🤣🤣. Off this week from work, trying to catch up on your videos.

  • @carriepinski8582
    @carriepinski8582 10 місяців тому +3

    Widows watch tower is what we call them, the wives would sit up there and watch for her husband's boat to return. There are tunnels from building to building at the university also, so the students don't have to go outside in the winter.

  • @rhondatanner1157
    @rhondatanner1157 Місяць тому +1

    Lake Superior is so beautiful.thank you for showing me this and the lighthouses

  • @ShowCat1
    @ShowCat1 8 місяців тому +2

    I too am from Texas (Ft. Worth) and I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I spent some time in the UP and this brought back great memories. I liked the slow pace in the towns there. Thanks for sharing.

  • @lorencain8926
    @lorencain8926 11 місяців тому +8

    It was a very nice video, as I enjoy all yours. Someday I recommend going north and west of Marquette to the Ironwood area and up to Houghton and the Kiwanau peninsula, but in the "summer" you would die there in the winter if you could get through the snow to reach it. Of course, as a Texan you were known as a foreigner, your accent. But you did the unforgivable in the pronunciation of pasty. Yous guys are lucky no local heard that and sicked a mad beaver on yeh. Ya sure eh?

    • @doninmichigan
      @doninmichigan 10 місяців тому +1

      Especially be aware not to mispronounce it in front of a stocky, ruddy faced, female cook at a pasty shop with an iron skillet in her hand. 😂

  • @treasuretom13
    @treasuretom13 10 місяців тому +6

    I just came back from our gorgeous Upper Peninsula this time a nice trip to Sault Ste. Marie! The scenery, roads and old buildings were awesome as were the folk! I think the preferred spelling is 'Yoopers', nice informative vid! ⛵

  • @marcusaurelius544
    @marcusaurelius544 10 місяців тому +2

    Some of the locations you are visiting are amazing, would love to visit so many of them, keep them coming guys 👍

  • @allenkunes1671
    @allenkunes1671 8 місяців тому +2

    Very lovely and peaceful. A great place to relax and find perfect solitude!❤

  • @InvisibleCitizen
    @InvisibleCitizen 8 місяців тому +3

    My maternal grandpas lived in the UP in a old log cabin with zero utilities. It was hand built in the 1800’s!

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 11 місяців тому +6

    Eating a Pasty without Ketchup on the Upper Peninsula is a major SIN! I can't believe they did not advise you! My grandfather was born in Chassel, not far from Houghton and Hancock, my great-grandfather is buried there, and many family members have lived and died there. It was largely settled by French speakers from Quebec in the 19th century, followed by Scandinavians. My favorite senior cousin was the daughter of a French/Finnish marriage. She is now buried there, too. She once told me that only Canadians put butter and salt and pepper on Pasties, and they are all wrong!

    • @homesteadprowlers8388
      @homesteadprowlers8388 10 місяців тому

      LOL! I had no idea we were suppose to put ketchup on it! The little Pasty place in Iron Mountain did not advise this! For Shame!

    • @aililunta581
      @aililunta581 10 місяців тому +2

      gravy when fresh, ketchup when leftover

    • @lauravictorious4670
      @lauravictorious4670 10 місяців тому +1

      Yes, I wondered why he didn't have ketchup packets. I wondered what kind of place wouldn't have offered that?

  • @primad8781
    @primad8781 4 місяці тому +1

    My mom was from Escanaba (my grandma lived by the papermill) and my brother still lives near there. I live in Canada now but I lived for a few years on the Stonington Peninsula on the Big Bay de Noc side when I was growing up. I haven't been back in years so thanks for sharing your trip!

  • @kathleens.laroche754
    @kathleens.laroche754 11 місяців тому +2

    Faves: the "Just Ask" sign - Marquette County Courthouse -
    the stunning variety of Marquette homes - Old City Hall - the bridge connecting Upper and Lower Michigan (easy for me to say because I don't have to drive over it 😮).
    I really appreciate hearing how people make their money in various places, such as the logging and tourism in this case. Would love that to be a regular feature because sometimes I've wondered. Looking forward to seeing Lower Michigan with you! Safe travels.

  • @peterparr3079
    @peterparr3079 11 місяців тому +3

    Great video Joe, looks a nice area to visit.

  • @Jjchg
    @Jjchg 11 місяців тому +3

    This water tank is gorgeous. I’ve never seen one that nice!❤ 15:54

  • @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner1955
    @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner1955 10 місяців тому +2

    In 79 I worked for Chicago Bridge and Iron. We were doing some maintenance painting at an Iron ore mine in palmer Michigan
    The country side in up state is absolutely beautiful, but what impressed me most was the people. Up state Michigan has the greatest people I've been around. If not for the winters, I would have never left.
    Great place, wonderful people.

  • @liliann8346
    @liliann8346 10 місяців тому +2

    LOOOOOOVE the U.P. Went on childhood trips to my uncle's cottage on Lake Gogebic. Later, my Mum n Da lived in Ironwood. Beautiful, uncrowded, clean, accepting, patriotic. The air is so clean, I'd challenge any visitor to stay awake past 8pm--I couldn't, and really didn't mind. The downfalls? Bitey bugs--mosquitos, of course. No-see-ums. Deer flies--we'd hold out breath underwater, hoping they'd move along. If you're restless or looking for big-time entertainment, it may not be exactly for you. But--affordable, safe, clean, kind. LOVE the U.P.

    • @michelerosevear7466
      @michelerosevear7466 8 місяців тому

      Deer flies are bad; to me, horse flies are worse and "no-see-ums"... are horrible. I remember having bites all over the back of my neck (long hair) when I was younger! Love the U.P. always...will never leave again.

  • @dianneweaver4809
    @dianneweaver4809 10 місяців тому +3

    I'm fortunate enough to live in Manistique (year round). Thank you for your realistic description of our beautiful area.

  • @jeffneptune2922
    @jeffneptune2922 10 місяців тому +4

    Thanks for the great scenic journey through the UP of Michigan. That Manistique beach⛱ was knockout gorgeous! A lot of people are surprised when they discover all the photographic beaches and lighthouses that line the Great Lakes in both America and Canada. Not really a tough choice for me, I would take the four seasons in the Northeast or Great Lake region over scorching or steam heat for months at a time. I think Phoenix has been 110 degrees for 26 days and counting.😳

  • @Madskillsuniversity
    @Madskillsuniversity 10 місяців тому +2

    Very calming, peaceful, relaxing and educational trip. Loved it!!! Thank you.

  • @olinwright7628
    @olinwright7628 10 місяців тому +1

    This is honestly the first footage im ever seeing of the UP. Thanks!

  • @stephenanderson3056
    @stephenanderson3056 10 місяців тому +4

    You should mention the 200 plus waterfalls in northwestern Upper Michigan. My wife and I try to see as many as we can when we go there in the summer. They are beautiful!

  • @tyrus0872
    @tyrus0872 11 місяців тому +6

    That might be referred to as a widows peak. Here in the Northeast along the shore line the houses similar to those might have been owned by a Captain of a whaling ship. His ship having sailed away for a few years provided a top lookout for the wife in anticipation to see the harbor and the possibility of his ship returning. At times ships never returned, hence the term widows peak.

  • @johnhinant970
    @johnhinant970 10 місяців тому

    Thanks for taking us along on your travels!

  • @garyneilson3075
    @garyneilson3075 3 місяці тому

    Enjoyed the video. On both sides my grandparents lived in Michigan and we always went to visit them. Such memorable visits and family gatherings on the beaches. I loved the trip down memory lane. Thank you...