But you can see the actual river from a bit deeper into the campground.
The piece of NCT I hiked is mostly along the bank on the south side of the river. Today, these tall pines looked nice in the late afternoon light.
This blue-stemmed goldenrod, Solidago caesia, grows along the trail. Most of the time, the stems are darker purpleish, thus the name. Gray goldenrod also has flowers along the stem like this, but the leaves are different.
This is fun. It's the fruit of a mapleleaf viburnum, Viburnum acerifolium. Supposedly you can eat these, but they are better (like many fall berries) after the first frost. I guess I need to find some then and try them. But since they are popular with wildlife, I may have a hard time finding any!
Here's another nice picture of the Manistee River. You can tell that fall is on the way.
The reason I was up that way was to meet with a fellow Michigan Outdoor Writer Association member, Dave Foley and his wife Cyndy. He's doing a feature on me for the Cadillac paper before I speak at the Cadillac Area Land Conservancy in October.
In other news: I managed a little editing in the morning before leaving for this adventure.
Miles hiked in 2024: 436.5. NCT miles in 2024: 130.8
North Country Trail, Manistee Co, MI, from Highbridge to Chicago Rd and back with a side trip to Blacksmith Bayou. 3.6 miles NCT, + 1.2 side trip miles
See Old Trail Section, New Season |
2 comments:
Java Bean: "Ayyy, you have the most interesting places to go sniff there!"
Bean- I really do! And they will all smell different from you southwesty ones
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