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The online version of the popular regional travel book
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Hunts' Guide to Michigan's UPPER PENINSULA
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A candid guide to enjoying and understanding the U.P.
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IRON RIVER
POINTS
OF INTEREST

Iron County Museum. Multifaceted museum includes satisfying exhibits on the area's geology, musical and ethnic heritage, life in mines (great video), plus 24 outdoor buildings (10 old log barns, houses, outbuildings). Of special note: vast folk art logging camp, life in mines (great video), gallery of noted wildlife paintings, inventive décor in artist's home, intact Caspian Mine headframe (powerful!). ... more

Downtown Iron River. A trim, pleasant shopping district with an art supply/gift shop/book shop, a combination of shops in an big old department store, a mild-long trail along the Iron River ... more

Angeli's Central Market/Plaza Cinema. A terrific supermarket with quality, fresh produce, something hard to find in the U.P., as well as a good wine selection, meats, ethnic baked goods. ... more

Ski Brule winter and summer. In a scenic hilly setting is a resort with miles of cross-country skiing trails, two snowboard parks, Alpine skiing, and in summer mountain bike trails, horseback riding, canoeing and tubing ... more

Lake Ottawa Park/Ge Chi Ski Trail. This pleasant Ottawa National Forest park is on crystal-clear, 551-acre Lake Ottawa. It has hiking trails, a swimming beach, fishing pier, and a handsome CCC-era pavilion/bathhouse with fireplaces. ... more

Hiking path to "Treaty Tree" & Mile Post Zero. A short, secluded hike leads to the head of Brule River and the much-contested border between Michigan and Wisconsin ... more

George Young Recreational Complex. Open to the general public, this plush golf course and indoor swimming pool is sited on a 3,300-acre complex bordering 3 lakes. Foxes, deer, and eagles are not unusual sights for golfers here ... more

Wolf Track Nature Trail. A scenic 1.5-mile woodland nature trail with wonderful paintings and text to illuminate one's experience ... more

Pentoga Park. pened in 1922, this is one of Michigan's very first county parks, located at an Ojibwa burial ground. Take an old 3-mile Indian Lake to the Brule River, fish the deep, 1,100-acre Chicaugon Lake for walleye and muskie, or use the swimming beach and picnic area ... more

First Roadside Table. Michigan was a pioneer in providing pleasant rest stops for motorists, and this 1918 picnic spot may well be the very first ever ... more

 

 
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IRON RIVER
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Wolf Track Nature Trail

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What makes this easy, scenic 1 1/2-mile woodland nature trail loop so unusual are the wildlife paintings and calligraphy along the way by Marquette artist Carl Mayer and the simple, poetically written text by White Water Associates of Amasa. For example, the “Arctic Archive” display interprets a bog, where plants remaining from the area's post-glacial Arctic climate persist and slowly decay. “Perpetual cheer in black and white” is the chickadee, called “a tiny dynamo with a racing metabolism. . . perpetually searching for its fuel of caterpillars, insect eggs, seeds, and berries.” If you put seeds in your hand, a chickadee may feed from it! Spring ponds, wolves, and the effects of glaciers on the Upper Peninsula are among the other topics explored here.
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The short drive to the trail is on the south side of CR 424 a little west of the entrance drive to the Young Complex (above). Visitors are asked to register at the complex clubhouse before using the trail. No fee. Handicap accessible. Probably wheelchair-accessible, with a little help. One hill is near the loop's end


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