Trans Canada Highway - how plans really start
For the trip across Canada, I'm searching through recollections in recesses in my head, trying to figure out what goes into the "include this on the trip" pile. Here are a pair that are on the plan: the Mackinac Bridge and Lake Gitche Gumee.
The Mackinac (pronounced close to mac-in-awe) Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac that connects the non-contiguous Upper and Lower peninsulas of the U.S. state of Michigan. Although bridge happens to be really long, as in longer than the Golden Gate Bridge as measured between the anchorage points, the big deal is the wind. The engineering design of the bridge makes the road way stable in winds up to 150 miles hour (240 km/h). Learning from the failure of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge (Tacoma, WA) in 1940, the bridge designers gave the Mackinac two features to reduce its wind resistance, the stiffening truss is open to reduce wind resistance and the road deck is shaped as an airfoil to provide lift in a cross wind.The center two lanes are open metal grid (not tarmac) to allow vertical air flow which cancels the lift, making the roadway stable. "Stable" is the key word here, stability is all in the mind. I've watched Cirque du Soleil performs who thought they were stable walking across a high wire.
We'll take a southerly detour to Michigan as we cross into Ontario from the east as Peter is determined to ride across this bridge. The motorcycle blogosphere has several entries from riders who white-knuckled it across the bridge because of the windy conditions.I will decide whether I cross the bridge when we get to St. Ignace. Go ahead, call me a wimp. The fact that the Mackinac Bridge Authority has a Drivers Assistance Program for those who are concerned about driving over the bridge tells me just about everything I need to know.
As we head west from the Mackinac Bridge experience, if I'm understanding correctly, we'll be riding on the south edge of Lake Gitchie Gumee, which is also known as Lake Superior. In the Ojibwe language, the lake is called Gichigami, meaning "big water." Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote the name as "Gitche Gumee" in his epic poem, The Song of Hiawatha.What's confusing is there is actually a lake in Hanover, Michigan called Lake Gitchegumee, which is about 100 miles southwest of the northern end of the Mackinac Bridge. This would be an easy mistake, one that would be easy to admit and shrug off. I've seen blogs from brave men who admitted that they got confused in Alaska and rode from Fairbanks, AK to Circle, AK instead of riding to the arctic circle at Prudhoe Bay, AK via the Dalton Highway.
The "what could go wrong?" approach to getting to the arctic circle from Fairbanks (a dream still on my list) can cost about 300 miles and a day's delay. Stories about unplanned round trips feed the stubborn nature of spontaneity-challenged riders. Should I be thinking about getting Peter his own GPS?


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