![]() On the other hand, she does not go into too much detail on any one location, sticking mostly to preliminary impressions. I enjoyed her unplanned structure, as she drove from place to place just letting the journey develop by itself, seeing who she would meet and exploring the various natural landscapes, urban and wilderness, that can be found across the "fourth coast." She writes, for the most part, of the day to day activities of the three months she spent traveling and includes a lot of notes on the places she visited and reviews of various travel books. However, she limited herself to the American side which definitely leaves a lot of the culture of the lakes out. Lawrence Seaway to the Boundary Waters, stopping at a variety of interesting places along the way, including Niagara Falls, Mackinac Island, and Isle Royale and encountering a lot of local eccentrics. In a summer in the early '90s, Mary Blocksma took a solo camping road trip, hugging the coast from the St. ![]() I thought this book would be a fun accompaniment to a road trip I took recently in which I too visited all of the Great Lakes, save Lake Erie. ![]()
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