This is
the third and will be the last installment of my 2012 vacation chronicles. (What is that sound? A collective sigh of relief?) Do
you remember the definition of a geometrical point? It has location but does
not take up space, as I recall. Some very small towns on two-lane highways feel
almost like points rather than places, as if you could be at a named point without being in an actual place, because the town itself seems
to take up no space. Obviously, that’s an exaggeration, since the smallest
country store or post office or gas station covers a certain amount of surface
area, but you know what I mean, right?
And yet
the geographical town I’m calling a point has, in addition to surface area on
the earth, a historical past, as is evident to anyone with eyes open. This old
former school building did not pop up overnight. Besides, any town on the old
railroad, lying not far south of the forested Lake Superior shore, would have
been a lively place a hundred years ago.
Even
these days, Shingleton, Michigan, is lively in its own small way. There are
families at work in their gardens, young people on bicycles, and chickens in
backyards. The automotive repair shop (which we came to know well this year)
does an extremely good business (and good work, too).
There’s a restaurant where
you can relax with a hot pasty or a full dinner while your vehicle is being
worked on. An
interesting Up North feature of the restaurant is what I learned years ago to
call a “Russian” heating system: wood is burned a furnace some distance from
building and ducted in underground. To my mind, this is a very attractive
method of heating with wood, as the danger of fire and the smoke smell are
pretty much eliminated from the building you want to heat. In this case, it was
also pointed out to me that since the wood furnace also heats all the
restaurant’s water, not having the heating system in the restaurant means not
adding unnecessary heat—restaurant kitchens get hot enough--to the building in
summer.
Marquette,
home of Northern Michigan University, is a town in another league altogether.
It is the Ann Arbor of the Upper Peninsula, the amenities of sophisticated
urban life housed in old historic buildings. For me, no trip to Marquette would
be complete without a visit to Snowbound Books. Coming back to our designated
rendez-vous spot, I shot a few architecture photographs, never guessing that
David was watching me from a bay window above the old movie theatre. Wonder
what the future of that theatre building will be.
One
year we made our return trip from vacation on a Sunday and happened on the last
of the big semi-trailer trucks on display along the main street of St. Ignace.
We were too early to see most of the big trucks this year, but when we detoured
into the downtown for lunch at Bentley’s Cafe we were surprised—and I was
delighted beyond measure—to happen on a long, long parade of “antique” farm
tractors.
I used scare quotes above because only a small percentage of the
tractors appeared “antique” to my eyes—something to do with my age? Still, all
major American makes were represented, and the parade (which, oddly, was taking
place in a distracting manner alongside normal road traffic) went on and on and
on. After escaping traffic and parking the truck, we scored the window table at
Bentley’s and had a ringside seat for the rest of the long parade.
What
more could a returning pair of vacationers ask? Memorably delicious sandwiches
(I highly recommend the B-n-N whitefish) with hot, crispy potato
chips thinner than any I’ve ever had before in my life, and, under a sunny,
blue sky over the Straits of Mackinac, a parade of tractors! The scene could
only have been improved if (1) there had been only tractors and no cars going
by; and (2) if there had been a few horses in the parade. But those are only
observations, not complaints.
Maybe "near-perfect" makes for the best souvenirs,
life presenting itself directly rather than being represented in ideal (and therefore
unrealistic) form. A tractor parade was certainly a welcome change from personal automotive crisis.
And now it's back to the books!
5 comments:
Awww this was nice. Photos and the words...took me back to a simpler time in my life. Even before living up north when I would visit my mother's farm. Love the tractors...:)
Is dyslexia contagious? I came back to respond to Dawn's comment and saw that I'd typed "town itself seems to take up on space" rather than (as I meant) "no space."
Dawn, I love the tractors, too.
Well I read it as no...so there you go! :)
I've really enjoyed your UP vacation posts. Thanks so much too for the calendar plug. I appreciate that! Karen
Good morning, Karen. I meant to send you a link so you'd see the calendar note, but you found it on your own. Good! The rest of you, stop in and see what Karen has prepared to accompany us through the next calendar year. It's gorgeous!
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