Part of my absence was due to a quick trip to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and a day long train ride from Sault Ste Marie, Ontario to Agawa Canyon, a remote wilderness accessible only by a single train line. It is a little over four hours each way passing through some beautiful country, endless miles of forests, rivers and lakes with very few people.
The canyon is home to a couple of waterfalls, Bridal Veil Falls and Black Bear Falls, not high volume but still pretty striking.
There is only one track in and out so while the passengers are exploring the engine shunts over to a side track and then reconnects on what was the back of the train for the ride back. Please excuse the fat lesbian couple walking along the side of the track.
It is rough terrain, one ten mile section of track took 2000 men working an entire summer to clear. This brief trip didn’t take me very far into the Ontario wilderness, the arrow is where we started…
Look at how much of Ontario is left after a four hour train ride. I spend a fair amount of time in southeastern Ontario but the province is huge with a land area of 344,562 square miles. By way on contrast, Texas is “only” 261,232 square miles. On the other hand, over 30 million people live in Texas and around half of that number live in Ontario, most of those living near Toronto. The northern part of the province is pretty desolate which is awful appealing at times but I bet it gets a little bit of snow in the winter.
The train ride was Saturday, on Sunday we went to Whitefish Point in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum…..
…and then to Tahquamenon Falls, the nearly 200 feet wide and 50 feet high Upper Falls are some of the highest east of the Mississippi River.
A quick dip in Lake Michigan (not me, my passengers) and then scampered on home. A fun trip got to see some cool sights and all. No internet or cell coverage on the train meant that for around 10 hours Saturday I was completely disconnected and that was pretty nice as well.
Beautiful scenery. A pity that Canada has becoming so arrogant to control its people to do its bidding. You are lucky to visit such a place, even for a short time.
Train track backcountry can be a wonderful experience. Years ago, took the Durango-Silverton narrow gauge train ride in southwest Colorado. Gorgeous country, the Sangre de Cristo – San Juans have some great peaks. I now wish we should have taken the earliest train ride to ride back on the last train back. Silverton Colorado has some beautiful sights too.
Thanks for sharing your pictures with us Mr. Sido.
I would like to do take a train trip out west with the wife one of these days
I did Via rail from Edmonton to Vancouver back in the 90’s. The staff on the train were not pleasant to deal with, windows on the train were filthy making it hard to enjoy the scenery. Would not do it again.
Took the Durango -Silverton trip a couple of times. Once back in the 1980’s, got dropped off halfwsy to climb four peaks in the San Juans. Second time in the early 2000’s with wife and son. Full ride that time. Marvelous scenery.
Went through that area accidentally in early July. Holy cow, what a place!
Thanks so much for sharing.
Was camping this weekend and disconnected from everything except nature and my animal companions and daughter. Replenishes the soul.
Enjoy your time while ‘normalcy’ is here, even if it’s a facade.
The problem is when we come back the madness never goes away
And a glorious lack of diversity, no? Appreciating the wonders of Nature is so, so…WHITE.
There were a weird number of Muslim types probably from Toronto on the train.
Enjoy what you can while you can.
Sporky fall is almost certain.
These things happen with quisling traitors at the helm of a sinking ship.
Haven’t been to the glorious peoples (property is theft) of MI since 2020 and $2 gas.
Enjoy what you can while you can.
Sporky fall is almost certain.
These things happen with quisling traitors at the helm of a sinking ship.
Haven’t been to the glorious peoples (property is theft) republic of MI since 2020 and $2 gas.
Peaceful religion scopers scouting on das train?
Thanks for the pictures. I’m a Michigan resident and have wondered about that train trip. There are some beautiful spots to visit in the UP.
There are beautiful spots all over the U.P.
There are also very few jobs, a bunch of niggers that got shipped up because housing is cheap, and meth if you’re white and not Apostolic Lutheran, the Stepford Wives version of Amish.
Every place has highlights and problems.
It may interest you to know that, should you live north of Toronto and wish to visit Manitoba, the drive will take you two days just to get to the Ontario-Manitoba border. Of course, this timeframe presupposes you don’t drive like an asshole; the highway (Hwy 17, the Ontario portion of the Trans-Canada Highway) has many twists and turns to it, especially the stretch around Lake Superior. It can be very dangerous, especially during moose season…
Anyway, you are very fortunate to have had this experience, before there is too much diversity fucking it up.
Thanks for sharing that. I am an absolute train buff and would love to take that Ontario ride. The Alaska train is on the bucket list too.
A few awesome experiences are the Durango-Silverton mentioned above and going from Beaumont, TX to Phoenix. Beautiful mountain and desert scenery.
We’ve gone from Beaumont to Nig Orleans a few times, too. Fun with a group, but the landscape is dirty bayous, salvage yards and trailer parks.
Glad you enjoyed yourself up here, Arthur. It is beautiful, but we are cursed with the gynocracy in Lansing.
Very cool!
Always nice to get away for a bit.
White Pill anecdote:
So every year there is a Spirit of Boise Balloon Classic where they launch 30- 45ish hot-air balloons in the morning just after sunrise during Labor Day Weekend. This year I went to Ann Morrison Park to watch them launch. I had always wandered how they started the process of launching a balloon because the gas blowers blow a lot of flame. Turns out they use a big electric fan to blow them up initially until they get to the point of using the gas blowers.
I paid extra attention to the demographics and it made this old grump happy. Why? Lots of white people. Lots of white people with children. I did samples whereby I would count to 10 making a mental note how many of the 10 were white. 10,10, 10 , 9, 7,10, 6, 10. I know it wasn’t scientific but I would estimate the crown 85% to 95% white. I didn’t see a single nigger. Not one. Maybe a mulato. But the other ethics were mostly mestizos, a few Asians, a couple of Pacific Islanders. There were even a lot of skinny, attractive young ladies. The only bad thing to report was the ubiquitous use of the word “like.”
The native Idahoan kids stood out because, though it was a crisp morning, they were in T-shirts and shorts. The faggots from southern California and elsewhere were bundled up like they were in Nome, Alaska. Wimpy faggots.
The announcer said that one thing that was uncommon about the Boise Classic was that you could walk amongst the balloons as they were setting them up and launching them. I almost backed into one balloon trying to get a shot of one the was getting ready to launch. So to do that, you have to have a ruly crowd that respects the rules of staying out of the way of the ground crews. And I am proud that my fellow whites very respectful.
I always thought we should have taken Canada also. Enslaved the French, killed the indians and raped it of resources for the next 400 years, while giving every american a minimum 100 acres. Damn it, bear would still be on the menu, and fuck the passport to travel there now.
There’s still time, brother….and it gets easier every day, thanks to Justin.
Excellent pictures. Good times!