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8 Great Great Lakes Parks To Take Your
Dog
Your dog might not agree they are "great
lakes" when she discovers that dogs are not allowed on Michigan
state beaches and most county and town beaches. In-season, the
metropolises of Indiana, Illinois , Ohio and Wisconsin are even
more restrictive. But all is not lost for the outdoor canine
adventurer when visiting the Great Lakes. Here are the 8 best
places to take your dog here:
1. Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore
Lake Superior, Michigan
Possessing the largest surface area of any freshwater lake in
the world, there is enough water in Lake Superior to easily fill
the other four Great Lakes to overflowing. Lake Superior is known
for its cold water and rugged shoreline but there are some sandy
beaches scattered across its 300 or so miles of southern shores.
Other beaches are more of the cobble variety. Most of the shoreline
is sparsely populated which bodes well for finding a dog-friendly
beach.
The "pictured rocks" on the south shore of Lake
Superior were painted by mineral stains on exposed cliffs scoured
by glaciers. The colorful streaks on the cliffs - as high as
200 feet above the water - result from groundwater that seeps
out of cracks in the rock. The oozing water contains iron, limonite,
copper, and other minerals that brush the cliff face with colors
as they trickle down. In 1966, the Pictured Rocks were preserved
as America's first national lakeshore. The park stretches along
Lake Superior, the world's largest freshwater lake, for 40 miles.
Dogs are not allowed to trot everywhere in Pictured Rocks National
Lakeshore's 72,000 acres (a detailed pet area map is available)
but there is plenty of superb canine hiking on tap here. Day
hikes lead to clifftops and cobble beaches through hardwood forests
and windswept dunes. The best beach for dogs is at the western
end of the park where dogs are allowed on Sand Point until the
trail begins to climb the cliffs.
2. Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore
Lake Michigan, Michigan
Long ago, according to Ojibway Indian legend, a forest fire
ravaged the Wisconsin shoreline driving a mother bear and her
two cubs into the waters of Lake Michigan. The three bears swam
for safety across the entire lake but the two cubs tired in the
crossing. The mother bear continued to the shore and climbed
a high bluff to wait for her cubs who couldn't make it and drowned
within sight of shore. The Great Spirit Manitou created two islands
to mark the spot where the cubs disappeared and then created
a solitary dune to represent the faithful mother bear. The national
lakeshore, established in 1970, protects 35 miles of dunes -
the highest 480 feet above the lake - that are the product of
several glacial advances and retreats that ended 11,000 years
ago.
Your dog isn't allowed to make the Dune Climb up a mountain
of sand but she may thank you for that. Otherwise dogs are welcome
on Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore trails. The best canine
hike is the Cottonwood Trail off the popular Pierce Stocking
Scenic Drive. The loop leads out into dunes speckled with the
bleached remains of overwhelmed trees and the hardy survivors
adapting to their sandy world. The rollicking trail, open May
to October, is completely on thick sand that, while soft to the
paw, can tire an unfit dog.
In the north section of the park the Good Harbor Bay Trail
is a flat, wooded walk. Most of the starch has been taken out
of the Lake Michigan waves here for gentle canine swimming. More
adventurous dog paddlers will want to test the frisky waves in
the southernmost Platte Plains section. You have your choice
of trails here to choose how much you want to hike before reaching
the surf. The 13 mid-length trails throughout the park are all
hiker-only. Dogs are not allowed on North or South Manitou Island,
both floating just offshore.
3. Lake Michigan Sand Dunes Lake
Michigan, Michigan
The year 2007 marked the 50th anniversary of the opening of
the Mackinac Bridge that connects the lightly populated Upper
Peninsula of Michigan to lower Michigan. Traditionally the bridge
has attracted hunters and other woods-loving types but that list
should also include beach-loving dog owners.
Just across the bridge on the Upper Peninsula head west on Route
2 out of St. Ignace and eight miles past the town of Brevort
you will come to an unnamed, unsigned stretch of dune-backed,
sandy white beach. Pull off the water-side of the road and park
your car. There are miles of beach and not much traffic so there
will be plenty of room for your dog to romp in the Lake Michigan
waves. If you need facilites, travel a bit further west to the
Lake Michigan Picnic Area.
4. Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore
Lake Michigan, Indiana
The Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore is a park of striking contrasts.
More than 1,400 plant species have been identified within park
boundaries, ranking it 7th among national parks in native plant
diversity. Growing zones clash here at the southern base of Lake
Michigan so southern dogwood mixes with arctic bearberrry and
northern conifer forests thrive alongside cacti. The park itself
stands in stark relief from the industrial surroundings of Gary,
Indiana and Chicago. The national lakeshore was designated in
1966 and preserves 25 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline.
Canine hikers will also find the dog-friendly trails, with dips
and climbs, to be of a different style than the generally flat
northern Indiana area. The high point on the dunes is 123-foot
Mt. Baldy at the extreme eastern point of the park - you can
make this short, sandy climb your first or last stop. If you
take your time, even older dogs can make it to the top or you
can hike a trail around Mt. Baldy directly to the beach.
Dogs are not allowed on the Ly-Co-Ki-We Trail but can
spend the night in the Dunewood Campground. More superb canine
hiking can be found in Indiana Dunes State Park, entombed by
the national lakeshore. There are many numbered trails - some
quite challenging - that ascend high vista points such as Mt.
Tom. The best trails on the lake's edge can be found in the state
park.
5. Presque Isle State Park Lake Erie, Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania's most popular state park is believed to have formed
11,000 years ago from the deposits of sand carried by wind and
water across Lake Erie. This "flying spit" of sand
is the largest in the Great Lakes region and the only one in
Pennsylvania. Presque Isle State Park is estimated to be moving
eastward at the rate of one-half mile per century. Although Presque
Isle is French for "almost an island," the area has
often been completely surrounded by water. One such breech in
the sand peninsula, designated a National Natural Landmark, lasted
32 years.
During the War of 1812 Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry used a
harbor on the east side of Presque Isle as a base of operations
for the critical Battle of Lake Erie on September 10, 1813. After
the clash with the British fleet, Perry returned to Presque Isle
for the winter, using a shallow pond to bury American dead. The
harbor was named Misery Bay in light of the hardships suffered
that winter. Today the Perry monument on Crystal Point remembers
the American exploits here.
Presque Isle is unique in that plant succession from sandy shoreline
to climax forest can be seen in less than one mile. This transformation
can be viewed from the 5.8-mile Multi-Purpose Trail, a
National Recreation Trail. The path begins at the park entrance
and shadows the Presque Isle Bay shoreline until it ends at the
Perry Monument. As this main pathway is popular with cyclists,
skaters and joggers, dogwalkers may want to migrate to one of
the park's many other trails. Dogs are welcome on all trails
but ticks are heavy so avoid the trail fringes. Dogs are not
allowed on the swimming beaches but you can hike a little ways
up the peninsula past the supervised beaches where dogs can enjoy
the frisky waves of Lake Erie.
There are more than a dozen short trails radiating across the
peninsula that offer a pleasing variety of easy hiking. The Sidewalk
Trail was constructed of wooden boards by a lighthouse keeper
to reach the Presque Isle Lighthouse from his boat over a mile
away in Misery Bay; it is now a concrete strip down the center
of the trail that was resurfaced in 1925. The North Pier Trail
traces the shoreline along a sand ridge and the Long Pond
Trail hugs the shoreline of one of the park's several lagoons.
Longer trails such as the Fox Trail (2.25 miles) and the
Dead Pond Trail (2 miles) traverse distinct ecological
zones as they move from sandplains to oak-maple forests.
6. Old Mission Peninsula Lake
Michigan, Michigan
Old Mission Peninsula is an 18-mile appendage that splits Lake
Michigan's Traverse Bay neatly in half. Presbyterian Minister
Peter Dougherty arrived in 1838 to establish the missionary for
which the peninsula would be named. As settlers arrived they
discovered ideal growing conditions on the narrow land moderated
by the surrounding waters of Lake Michigan. Getting the crops
to market was not so easy as growing them, however, thanks to
a series of rocky shoals around the tip of the peninsula. Today
Old Mission is still renowned for its cherry harvest.
Congress authorized funds for the building of a lighthouse here
in 1859 but the Civil War prevented construction until 1870.
A keeper was stationed here until the 1930s when a navigational
marker was built on the shoals in the lake. The Mission Point
Light remains the focal point of the park that was created by
the state of Michigan after World War II. The lighthouse sits
directly on the 45th parallel - halfway between the equator and
the North Pole.
The trail system stitches several paths into a loop of a couple
miles around the tip of the peninsula that works through woodlands
and along the shore of Lake Michigan. This is easy hiking for
your dog on mostly level terrain with plenty of opportunity for
your dog to visit the waters of the lake.
7. Point Gratiot Lake Erie, New
York
Although its shores are the most densely populated of any of
the Great Lakes, there is plenty of opportunity for a dog to
explore Lake Erie. The smallest of the five lakes, Lake Erie
waters average only about 62 feet in depth and warm rapidly in
the summer for happy dog paddling.
The headlands here contain Dunkirk Beach, a U.S. Coast guard
Naval Reserve Station and an historic lighthouse. Around the
west side of the headlands are low bluffs fronted by a wide,
sandy beach. Dogs are welcome, there is plenty of easy parking
- and it's free.
8. Whitefish Dunes State Park Lake
Michigan, Wisconsin
Door County is a magnet for Lake Michigan recreation. For dog
owners it is hit and miss among the parks and forests but one
place your dog can enjoy the sandy lake beaches is Whitefish
Dunes State Park. Long considered the best sand dunes on the
western shore of Lake Michigan, this wilderness was the target
of conservationist before World War II. Finally in 1967 the state
park was established. Parts of the beach are open for your dog
to swim in Lake Michigan.
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