It was me. I was that guy.

JMacs

Observer
For a little while, Labor Day Sunday morning, I was further north than anybody else in the contiguous United States.

It all started around 30+ years ago. A friend and I were looking for road trip destinations. We decided to go as far north, east, south and west as you could go.

East wasn’t too bad. Maine in March (spring break) isn’t ideal camping / tourist season. But that’s ok. Didn’t let that stop us. On the plus side, we got to try out a luge on the Olympic track in Lake Placid.

West was easy. He was going to school in Tacoma. Quick summer visit. Camp weather was great. Getting the last campsite that night, #42, seemed like the Universe was smiling on us.

Then grown up life happened and getting the other 2 points seemed to take a back seat. Fast forward to this year. Moved my kid off to college. The wife wanted to spend some time with her friend in Colorado. Leaving me alone for the long, Labor Day weekend. Time to road trip north.

The northern most point is in that little blip of northern Minnesota. The village of Angle Inlet holds the title as the northern most town. Getting there isn’t that hard, but it’s not that easy either. It's a long way from anywhere and you have to drive through Canada to get there.

Friday afternoon after work, the plan was to drive up to Fargo, ND, use some Marriott points and finish the drive on Saturday. Leaving town, something felt a little off. Couldn’t place my finger on anything specific, so I kept going. About 30 minutes later, I realized I forgot the cash I had pulled out of the bank to pay the locals up there for the room. Too late, not worth turning around. Credit card will have to do. Five and a half hours later as I was pulling into Fargo, it hit me. I forgot my passport! After giving my steering wheel a thorough beating, shouting a few obscenities, I decided I have to go back and get the passport. Can't do the trip without it. Adding 820 miles to the trip didn't sound like a great idea. But I would have felt more foolish seeing people on Tuesday when they asked how my trip went and then telling them I didn't make it because I forgot my passport.

I might as well go ahead and check into the hotel. Maybe take a quick nap, then drive back and get it. Too late to cancel the room and get a refund for the room. Might as well get some use out of it. I don’t know if it was the anxiety of the situation, or the people next door talking loudly away, but I couldn’t fall asleep. Back in the truck and start heading 6 hours back home.

Made it back before dawn. Grabbed the cash and the passport. Thought a nap would be a good idea before I start heading north again. Neighbors were quiet. Anxiety was gone. Caffeine flowing through my system from the drive back was not gone. So, back in the truck again. Luckily, none of my neighbors are up at 5 in the morning. I didn’t have to explain my boneheaded move.

The drive up (again) was uneventful. There are some reaaaallllly straight roads in South and North Dakota. There were a couple of stretches where I turned the steering wheel more to change lanes than I did for the curve in the road. North Dakota is really flat too. And that is coming from a guy who has driven all over the States. (You guys on the east coast aren’t immune to knowing what flat areas are either. Don’t want to hear your Midwest comments.)

At one point, the Ukrainians decided this part of Canada was the place to be. They built a couple of very distinct and beautiful churches. Ukranian Orthodox Church of Canada. Here is one in Vita, Manitoba.
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JMacs

Observer
Directions from Omaha are pretty simple. Hop on interstate I-29 and head north for 8 hours. Cross into Canada, take the next right. Drive for 1.5 hours, cross back into the States. Turn left. 20 miles of gravel road and your there. Canadian customs was easy. Smile, answer a couple of simple questions to the boarder guards. Crossing back into the States is a little less formal, but no quicker. You enter your information into the US iPad at Jim’s Corner. Wait for the response, and away you go.

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I finally make it to Prothero's Post and check in with Kellie and Tony. They point me to my cabin, tell me where I can park. "Enjoy your stay." She didn't hand me a key. I smiled and didn't ask for one. I'm sure if I did, she would have given me a confused look wondering why I thought I would need one.

The cabin was great. Nice, 2 bedroom, living area, wood stove, shelf full of books, nicely stocked kitchen. Very clean. And a front porch with a couple of conformable chairs. What more do you need.

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Sunday morning, I have a little breakfast and wander back down to the lake to get a boat for the day. First thing I see in the water is a couple of otters playing around. It's going to be a good day.

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I meet up with Tony and he gets me set up with a boat and a map of the area. He tells me a couple of places to explore. And away I go.

Getting to that last little bit of land is harder than it looks. Most of the water in the inlet is only about 6' deep. And full of reeds. There's, kind of, a channel for a while. But it gets to a point where your average boat isn't going any further. (A swamp boat could do it, but it would just kill the piece and quiet.) Getting to the shore to hike the rest of the way ain't gonna happen either (see swamp boat comment). I'm saying I've made it. We'll call it a win.

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It was probably the quietest place I've ever been. No people. No other boats. Even the birds were quiet. The silence was only broken by me swatting the myriad of flies that kept biting my ankles. I now understand why all the locals are wearing pants in the middle of a summer day.

I spent the rest of the day cruising around the lake. Found Fort St. Charles. Had my picture taken at the tourist version of the northern point. It’s not really the northern most point, but it is close enough for most. (I’ve now been further north!) Ended the day at Jerry's Restaurant. They were finishing up a walleye and musky fishing tournament. Jerry’s had recently worked a deal with a Minnesota distillery for a barrel select bourbon. Bought a bottle. Didn’t get dinner, unfortunately. The kitchen was right in the middle of cooking the banquet meal for the tournament (they were serving chicken ?? to everybody). That’s OK, I brought food along for dinner. All in all, a good day.

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Monday came around and it was time for the drive back. The last half of the drive up felt really flat. So, I decided on the way back to watch the elevation on the GPS to see how flat it really was. I started the day at 972' above sea level. Hovered around that for most of the next couple hours. Dropped below 960’ for about a quarter of a mile, dipping all the way down to 946' at Red Lake Falls when I crossed the river there. Then began a slow steady climb up to 1204' when I crossed the Laurentian Continental Divide, about where North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota meet. 260' of elevation change in 320 miles of driving.

Glad I was finally able to check that point off my list. Key West, your next!
 

grizzlypath

Active member
I once did the passport turnaround! I was in Anchorage, AK heading through Canada to Juneau, thankfully remembered my passport about 45 min from home, but the ramifications would have been a full day burned and the trip likely toast.
 

SimplyAnAdventure

Well-known member
Was there this past summer. Very cool spot. The drive through Canada had more bugs (dragonflies and horseflies) then I even thought possible. 10’s of millions of each would not be an exaggeration.
 

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codename607

Adventurer
Thanks for sharing! I'm adding this one to the list. I just did the Lake Superior Circle Tour and the Canadian side was simply amazing. Always looking for a good reason to get back into that area.
 

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