Good morning, my friends. It's our last morning in Kabetogama. We'll be moving on to Silver Bay, Minnesota today. It was a long and lovely day here yesterday. We took a boat tour around Voyageurs National Park, something we've done before. On our previous visit, we took off from the Rainy Lake Visitor Center. This trip, we took off from Kebetogama Visitor Cnter. The tour was just slightly different, but still incredibly beautiful. I'll tell you about it in just a minute. But first, I wanted to show you that I've taken the first stitches on the second Stitchin' Wisdom block. There's still a long way to go on this.
In this next image, we're seeing where the Ash River visitor center is located. One could drive to the visitor center and take a picture next to the sign with the lake in the background.
From here, I'm going to ask you to time travel back to our previous tour of the Kettle Falls Hotel back in 2014. Since I'd already taken pictures of anything of interest and written a whole post about it, it seemed a waste of time to reinvent the wheel. The next several pictures and paragraphs are an edited version of our first visit to the hotel....starting right here:
After 2-1/2 hours on the water, we arrived at Kettle Falls and the Kettle Falls Hotel. We had a short walk from the dock to the hotel.
And here's a satellite image of where the hotel is located. Much narrower waters in this area.
The plan was to spend two hours here, eat lunch, do a little exploring, and then head back the way we came.
The hotel was used mostly by mobsters and gangsters during the Great Depression, but it is still in use today and hosts around 40,000 visitors per year in its 16 rooms. And this brings me to another purpose for these waterways: rum running. We were told that during prohibition, this was an entry point for imported spirits. Apparently during Prohibition, it was legal to manufacture alcohol in Canada for exportation, even though it was illegal to consume it. And just where do you suppose those Canadian distributors exported their liquor to? The United States, of course. Much of it came right here to the Kettle Falls Hotel.
In the image below, you can see the hotel lobby. To the back is a door leading to the restrooms and to the bar/tavern/saloon. (A friend who hails from Wisconsin informed me that "bars" are called "taverns" locally, even if the name of the place includes the word "bar". We have heard them referred to as bars, taverns, and saloons, interchangeably.)
While we waited for our food to arrive, I made a little trip upstairs because I was told the unoccupied rooms were left open for exploration. Sure enough. Here's a room with twin beds, and there was another that had a full bed. The rooms were very small, and so I'm guessing a full bed would be as large as one could find here.
In the image below, you can see the little dresser to the right in the image above, along with the basin and pitcher. (I love those old basin and pitcher set-ups.) Bathrooms were across the hall and shared by all occupants of the hotel.
When we finished eating we visited the "tavern" at the far end of the hotel. The building was constructed without a foundation, and over the years, the settling ground and rocks beneath caused the hotel to become "twisted". There were some photographs on the tavern wall. It was built at the turn of the 20th Century. Here's how it looked in 1942. The pictures were behind glass, and I couldn't avoid some reflections. Still, I think you get the idea.
The hotel was renovated and brought up to code when it became a part of the national park in the 1980s, but the "bar" was left as is, complete with its interesting architectural problems. If you look closely in the image below, you'll see that the ceiling is level, but the bar has a distinct tilt to the right.
And check out the slant in the image below. There was a large rock under the floor in the middle of the room, and it felt as if you were walking up a slight incline, only to go steeply down hill as you walked toward the door.
These imperfections were felt to be historically significant, and so they were left as is during the renovations.
There was also a "player" jukebox--something I've never seen before. The bartender stuck a token in the slot and it played a song for us. It sounded a lot like a toy piano.
You've probably seen the rolls of paper that make old player pianos operate. This jukebox worked the same way.
Here's a photograph of how the hotel looked after renovations were completed in 1987.
And here's the picture I took back in 2014.
The hotel dining room was on the right of the building, the tavern to the left. The picture below shows the screened porch on the inside. Inviting, no?
After lunch, we took a walk over to see Kettle Falls Dam. The dam was built by a timber baron who used the ability to raise and lower the level of the water to sluice his timber from harvest on the Canadian side to his mill in International Falls. There was another dam on the other side of the hill from this one, and on a separate lake, and there was another dam in International Falls. This man had designs on creating an empire of hydroelectric power by damming up the rivers all around. Had he been able to do so, it would have completely changed the face of the area.
Okay...let's return to 2022 now. Since our last visit, a very nice overlook has been built beside the dam.
Looking out, the view was spectacular.
Okay, so we're in no hurry to take off this morning, and we'll have a slow morning. We have just about 150 miles to go to our next destination in Silver Bay, Minnesota. It was the closest campground I could find to Tettagouche State Park. We have two nights there to explore the park, and then we'll be on to Wisconsin. I believe I'll have internet at the next place, but it's always a good reminder. If we disappear for a couple of days, there's no need to send out the posse looking for us. If we're gone at all, we'll be back in a few.
5 comments:
There is an eagle in me that wants to soar, and there is a hippopotamus in me that wants to wallow in the mud. ~ Carl Sandburg
Looks like a fun tour. I think that little purple flower is a Smooth Fleabane. Not sure what that red berry cluster thing is.
Two hours sitting in bed, catching up with friends can't be bad.... It wasn't. It was just a lovely way to start the day. Your travels bring such joy to me now I can't get around quite so much.
The boat trip was great, loved the views.
So pleased Smitty is better, and I'm sure Sadie prefers to stay inside.
Love your interpretation for the stitching square, simplicity but beautiful.
Thanks again.
XX
The little white and purple daisy=like flowers look like asters to me. They bloom in the fall in many shades of purple and also white in northern climes. Ours are blooming here in VT now, too.
I can see why that boat trip would be worth repeating. The scenery is amazing.
I must admit I smiled when I saw the picture of the slanted floor and took note of the two men that were standing at the back....they both look as if they're on a tilt. Perhaps they had too much to drink?
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