We welcome
your comments
experiences &
corrections.
---
E-mail us
The online version of the popular regional travel book
---
Hunts' Guide to Michigan's UPPER PENINSULA
---
A candid guide to enjoying and understanding the U.P.
| UP Travel Map ad

Click for Eagle River, Michigan Forecast
---

---
Home

Search

U.P. Maps

Regions

Towns

Restaurants

Lodgings

Campgrounds

Points of Interest

Fun for kids

Waterfalls

Wayne Premo's Waterfalls

Beaches

Canoeing & Kayaking

Hikes

Lighthouses

Walks

Mountain Biking

Notable U.P. Shops

Specialty foods

Maritime

U.P. History

Useful Information

Links

About us

UP Travel Map

-
EAGLE RIVER
POINTS
OF INTEREST

M-26 from Eagle River to Eagle Harbor. Follow one of the most idyllic highway landscapes along the Lake Superior shoreline with deep blue water, crescent bays, beach after beach ... more

The Jampot. Near Jacob's Falls, a small group of monks make delicioiusly rich muffins, brownies, rum cakes, as well as jams. Their elaborate, onion-domed Orthodox church is down the road. ... more

 

 
|
EAGLE RIVER
-

M-26 from Eagle River to Eagle Harbor

-
M-26
Don Hunt
Hugging Superior's sinuous, sandy & rocky shoreline, M-26 provides an uncommonly pleasant drive.

At Phoenix, M-26 turns west for about two miles, following the Eagle River to the village of the same name. Then it goes east along the Lake Superior shore to Copper Harbor. Beginning at Eagle River M-26 is one of the most idyllic highway landscapes in the United States. From here to Copper Harbor, the Lake Superior shoreline looks a lot like Maine - only without the summer crowds. The narrow, twisting highway does have summer traffic, however, especially in the afternoon.

On the Way to Eagle Harbor
Beaches and Lake Superior shoreline vistas abound on the highway between Eagle River and Eagle Harbor.

Rocky shores and islets are interrupted by occasional crescent bays and beaches - some sandy, some rocky. Roadside parks have benches, picnic tables, and occasional gazebos. The Keweenaw Road Commission's tidy rustic signs hanging from brown cedar posts point out historic and scenic highlights. On the opposite, uphill side of the road, trails climb into ferny-floored forests of pine, balsam, and hardwoods.

Jacobs Falls
Jacobs Falls, next to the Jam Pot, flows right next M-26. Weirdly, a motel once straddled Jacobs Creek on the other side of the highway. But in the 1950s, a beaver dam far to the east near the creek's source at Meadow Lake burst. The resulting tidal wave of water destroyed the motel.
Here, and at many sunny areas of birch and aspen in the Keweenaw, the landscape looks amazingly like Scandinavia. Thimbleberry bushes, with their velvety, maple-like leaves and bright red summer berries, border many roads and cover open woods. One house advertises "Thimbleberry Jam for Sale." The intensely flavored spread is locally prized. The Jam Lady here is now a man, who has taken over his late wife's business. In a blind taste test at an Upper Peninsula Tourism & Recreation conference, his jams were judged best.

Signs sometimes point out the paths to waterfalls, formed as short creeks and rivers come cascading down to Lake Superior from the peninsula's high spine.

Sand Dunes Drive is the name of the lovely eight-mile stretch of M-26 between Eagle River and Eagle Harbor. It parallels the sandy beach of the Great Sand Bay. Frequent pullovers encourage motorists to get out and take a swim or walk down the beach. The tilted shelf of volcanic crust drops off so rapidly under water that the bay is 1,300 feet deep. On the opposite side of the road is the steep, dark, rocky forest, carpeted in pine needles.

Delightful Jacob's Falls cascades right near the road, 2 1/2 miles east of Eagle River. Next to the scenic pullout, tucked away in the piney hillside, is The Jampot).



Return to Eagle River


Copyright © 1997-2007 Midwestern Guides