This column is a 20th Anniversary encore from the September/October
1988 issue of Lake Superior Magazine.
Isle Royale Rainy Afternoon
HIKING ISLE ROYALE IS A WHOLE LOT MORE
UP AND DOWN THAN HORIZONTAL TRAVEL
He was a little fellow - cold, wet and extremely tired.
His somewhat bedraggled scout kerchief had obviously seen duty wiping sweat
and probably an errant nose. His slumping shoulders gamely bore the dripping
frame and pack; the bedroll lashed atop the pack reached above his head.
He collapsed on the dock in sort of a spiral fashion, emerging from this
odd performance with a bounce - sans pack frame.
The rest of his troop stood part way up the hill at Isle Royale’s McCargoe
Cove campsite, silently watching his diplomatic effort at establishing
contact with the boat lying alongside the dock.
The cold rain continued to fall, dripping off his hat unnoticed. With a
trace of a smile he mustered up his courage, looking me squarely in the
eye.
“Nice boat, mister,” he observed. “Is it dry in there?”
I assured him that all boats leak, but we did have a few rainfree areas.
“Why not come aboard and look it over,” I suggested, stepping back quickly
as he leaped into the cabin.
His tiredness evaporated. He was torn between greeting us and making sure
the gang on the hill fully realized his accomplishment.
“I’m Billy, “ he announced, “and I’m from Fort Wayne, Indiana, and I’m
hiking Isle Royale with my scout troop, and we’re wet and cold and tired,
but we’re DOING IT!” His eyes grew even bigger when I handed him a plate
of cookies, which began disappearing like ice cubes on a summer sidewalk.
“Better
go get your friends,” I advised him, “or your life won’t be worth a plugged
nickel when they find out what you’ve been doing to those cookies.” He
nodded, leaped back on the dock and ran up the hill.
I dug out our big kettle, filled it and began heating some water. A gift
from Bob Lang, one of our regular boating companions, we carry it on Skipper
Sam II for two reasons: boiling spaghetti for seemingly starved Canadians
encountered on the Ontario north shore or for heating gallons of bouillon
soup for Michigan’s Isle Royale hikers. It’s done plenty of both.
In no time the whole group was aboard, greetings being exchanged between
the consumption of packages of cookies. Scoutmaster Jack turned out to
be an automotive service manager in real life. In no way, he admitted,
did his work prepare him for the rigors of hiking Isle Royale. The whole
idea of the adventure had been born in the winter comfort of a troop meeting,
and the reality of the undertaking had now firmly set in.
As steaming cups of hot soup were passed around, I asked Jack about the
decision to hike the island. “We got this map,” he said, burrowing in his
pocket. “It shows the trails, the campsites, everything.…”
With a chuckle, one of the older scouts spoke up: “Except the ravines.”
The whole group assented with weary laughs. “Except the ravines,” they
chorused.

I dug out another large chart (on a boat, a map is a chart) and spread
it out. The gold, green and brown hues of the geologic relief map of the
island brought gasps of amazement. This obviously was new information to
the group, and several kneeled down to study the details so clearly displayed.
“Here is the swamp-before-last,” one said. “Here is Do-or-Die Hill,” said
another. Yet another hit the nail on the head.
“Hiking Isle Royale,” he observed, “is a whole lot more up and down than
horizontal travel!”
Scoutmaster Jack pursed his lips and glanced around at the serious faces
regarding the map. “What in the world did Mother Nature have in mind,”
he wondered aloud, “when she made this obstacle course?”
“Jack,” I said, “you can take your choice. The Indians and the geologists
both have an explanation. The book, Geology of Isle Royale, blames it all
on the glaciers, the last of which left here about 10,000 years ago. It
was just as tough for some folks who preceded you - by about 9,000 years.
Their ghosts are still here, guarding their ancient mines, all around us.”
The old formula still works, I thought. Mix scouts and ghosts, and you
suddenly have an attentive audience!
“We really don’t know who they were,” I continued, “but the late Dr. Roy
Drier of Michigan Technological University spent a lifetime trying to solve
the mystery.”
It is estimated the work is that of 10,000 men for a thousand years, according
to Drier. Thousands of shallow pits or horizontal adits, following elusive
veins or masses of copper, dot the island.
Several of these pits have been excavated over the years. In one, a mass
of copper weighing several tons was found. It had been freed from the native
rock and raised on log cribbing. Another yielded the skeleton of a prehistoric
“giant” beaver.
Host rock was cracked and chipped away with egg-shaped boulders, called
hammerstones. An additional mystery surrounds these mining tools. Thousands
of them were found on the Keweenaw Peninsula of Upper Michigan, almost
all having a groove around them, probably to aid in affixing a handle of
some form. The hammerstones of Isle Royale, though used for the same purpose,
lack the grooves.
“Ghosts or no ghosts:” said little Billy, “I’ll hike, but mining copper
with a stone - no thanks.”
“The Indians have a much more interesting tale,” I said.
Jack Strickland, an old prospector who lived on the Canadian north shore
of Lake Superior, passed the story on years ago. It seems that Thunder
Cape, whose high cliffs and rocky shores form the east side of Thunder
Bay, was once home to a giant eagle. Early men came to the cape and the
islands nearby to steal gold, silver and copper. This infuriated the eagle,
since it felt these treasures belonged to the Ojibway Indians who lived
in the area.
While flying high above Isle Royale one day, the eagle saw many men laboring
on the island, tearing bits of copper from the rocky hills. Swooping down,
it raked the island with its giant talons, seeking to destroy this force
of men who would defile the eagle’s territory. They fled in terror, leaving
only the pits and broken rock to mark their efforts. The eagle scratched
the hills and cliffs until it was sure not a single person remained on
the island.
Manitou, the great Indian god, was pleased. When the eagle finally died,
Manitou reformed Thunder Cape into the shape of an eagle’s head as an eternal
memorial. It remains so today.
The scouts quickly agreed that the Indian tale made far more sense. We
discussed the nearby Minong Copper Mine they would have the chance to explore
the next day. Scoutmaster Jack noted some of the prehistoric mining areas
would also be visible during their ascent to the Minong Ridge trail.
“Okay boys,” he said. “Let’s get set up in the shelters.” We parted, new
friends with a strong bond between us: Isle Royale.
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