I was stationed at KI Sawyer years ago, got to know the UP very well. Wisconsin got robbed! lol The government gave Michigan the UP over a strip of farmland dispute with Ohio.
The land of the UP was part of the what was called the Northwest Territory at the time. It was never a part of the state of Wisconsin, and it wasn’t wanted by them as it was largely considered to be “worthless land”. Until it wasn’t after copper and iron ore were discovered there. I spent several years as a civilian contractor at KI as well. Good times, bad weather. But not bad enough to chase me out of the UP. Been here since ‘90 and have no plans to leave.
I went to the Wallace zoo back when I could afford car insurance. Big fun. I live in Gladstone. Used to hitchhike from Munising (where I lived) to Chassel (where the highway to Toivola connected.) back and forth in my late teens. 41 was desolate between Negaunee to L'anse. All trees. Beautiful.
@@briantickler1637 When I was 14 (55 years ago), Houghton got 609 inches of snow. I lived at my grandmother's house (My grandfather built it for her.) on Misery Bay. Grandpa Pete, grandma Lempi. Lempi means "loving." She was and I still grieve for her.
Grew up along the $Soo Line RR tracks in the UP.. That old Line played a big part in UP history with many memorie for many people. Those engines look marvelous. Boy, I can hear that whistle now!!]
Once again thanks for the journey back into the backroads from long ago. The Sunday drive on a Tuesday afternoon is a brilliant poetic masterpiece of tranquility!
This is one of the best travel videos I have seen. Very well done with some historical info. I can't believe Marty did not buy you an ice cream. So sad.
The buildings where lumber was stored in Wallace used to be the Wallace building supply, which was owned and ran by relation of mine(my Grandpa Philipps' nephews and their kids. They also used to build homes and such. Where you saw the snake in the pop machine was outside the 'Wallace Mall', sort of a liquidators type place. I believe it's only open on weekends. In Ingalls, the river you saw going under the bridge was the Little Cedar River. The Little Kelley Creek runs into that and together the enter the Menominee River. The little brick building in Stephenson was actually a small service station.
T😢his looks like all of the entire midwest I grew up in during the 60’s and 70’s. This is why my wife and I moved to Hawaii in 1990 and didn’t move back to the midwest until 2018 when we retired and decided to spend half the year traveling around the world.
Another outstanding video Sally and Marty. Definitely that was a snake!! Don't know what type. I love those sleepy towns. Thank you for sharing look forward to the next video. Be careful on your travels. Thank you.
I’m from the lower peninsula and I feel like I rarely ever hear the term “Upper Michigan”, but man, it’s much more pleasing to the ear over “the U P” 👍🏽
That was a foxsnake . They are fairly common in parts of the UP. Some folks call them a pinesnake. They are very beneficial because they eat rodents . Harmless but they may bite if you try to pick them up
You came to the Snakes land of Oz and he was sticking out his head to tell you that "Orders are nobody can see the Great Oz! Not nobody, not nohow!" And slunk back into his kingdom of old shiny cans.
Pastys are great, In Madison Wisconsin just off the Capitol square by the Historical Museum and State Street there is a place called Teddy Wedgers. The original owner passed away a while ago but they still had great Pastys there the last time we stopped in, been about 10 years though. Every thing has changed and many food places went out of business from the plague. I hope it is still running his crew had kept it going for a while and they were nice people. Escanaba has some great Pasts also. Nice drive hope you guys stay safe and healthy.
I saw the light in mid 80s and in 90s everytime I went I saw the white one and twice I saw the red one it came within 10 feet and I couldn't figure it out at all cool times
When I saw that, I immediately knew it was a coal chute. The first two houses I lived in with my family had coal chutes. Both houses had been converted to oil, so they were not used. One of those houses had a cistern as well. That house was a Montgomery Wards house that was built in the 20s.
Overall the winters are not rough with the LENGTH may be the worst...anywhere from 6-9 months. Snow can remain in the woods or in piles as late as July. Winter severity varies whether you live on the Lake Michigan side or Lake Superior side. The Superior side can be very hazardous while the Michigan side is known as the Banana pBelt!! lol.
I think the "Gingerbread House" was a restaurant with the old pepsi sign hanging on the post back in late 1990 or early 2000. If I am right the road allowed you to park right up to the building and I stopped there with the crew I worked with back then. But there could be a building similar in another small town and I am wrong. Maybe someone that lived there will know.
I have been thinking of moving back to my native state of Michigan. Thank God I watched this episode of yours to remind me of why I got the heck out of there in the first place! THANK YOU!
Aha! So I learned a little tidbit about Marty's past: buying the projectors from the Tivoli. Was Marty a theatre projectionist or tech? Or was he referring to concession equipment? If only he woulda splurged for ice cream at the "Palace," we could seen inside how they'd fit the parlour inside the old theatre!😅 I've never seen pasties beyond the entertainment variety!😂
In 1979 I worked all over the upper peninsula changing mechanical computers in gas pumps when gas went higher than 99 cents a gallon. I seen a abandoned town with closed gas station, tennis court and hotel I can remember where remember where it was I've looked all over for it recently i can't find it
all that snow melted quick, and it was rainy, so guess what? mosquito breeding grounds! they are terrible right now UP here. Trying to get yardwork done this week and between them and the 90 degree weather 🤨🦟🦟🌞🌞
Where's your sense of adventure, you should'a tried to get a pop. Technically they are milk cans not jugs and they are pronounced Pasties (pa as in grandpa,- sties). Most likely the old building by the tracks was the old train station. The railroad bridge is a type call an overhead iron/steel truss bridge. The overhead structure supports the tracks below. Mind you not being critical , just enlightening. Thanks for the video please enjoy you trip and hope to see more.
i wonder how many forest fires were started by steam trains hauling lumber. nice drive into peaceful towns. gads it's up there, a good place to read long novels.
Forgotten town? They're not forgotten by the people who live there. You want a forgotten town, go find where the town of Northland was...not the bar that sits on the side of the highway but the old logging town and rail spur.
Sorry, Sally Marty made me drive all the way up to Wallace and put that snake in that machine for you. LOL Sorry. 😅😅😅 p.s. I’m pretty sure it’s a pine snake harmless
Gary Peretto started those two food stores in Wallace and Stephenson. Now two of his kids own the two stores.
Thank you! I knew one of you would know this.
US Hwy 41 runs from Copper Harbor, Michigan all the way to Miami, Florida
Stephenson is a great town. Lived and worked there in the 90's . Great trucking and farming community then.❤
Thanks for visiting my home state Michigan!!
You’re welcome JR! Hope to come back and do more exploring here real soon.
You have a Pasty shop on 36th and burleigh and it's been there since the 1960's
I was stationed at KI Sawyer years ago, got to know the UP very well. Wisconsin got robbed! lol The government gave Michigan the UP over a strip of farmland dispute with Ohio.
It was over Toledo, Ohio.
The land of the UP was part of the what was called the Northwest Territory at the time. It was never a part of the state of Wisconsin, and it wasn’t wanted by them as it was largely considered to be “worthless land”. Until it wasn’t after copper and iron ore were discovered there.
I spent several years as a civilian contractor at KI as well. Good times, bad weather. But not bad enough to chase me out of the UP. Been here since ‘90 and have no plans to leave.
I can truthfully say that my life would not be the same without the tours provided by you and Marty.....FACT.... good tours....yup
Yup
Thank you Jay 😊 that’s the best kind of compliment 🥰
I was born and raised in Wallace. My sister and brother-in-law own the Gary’s store there. I currently live east of Stephenson.
Herman a small town up north had 300+ inches of snow this winter..
I went to the Wallace zoo back when I could afford car insurance. Big fun. I live in Gladstone. Used to hitchhike from Munising (where I lived) to Chassel (where the highway to Toivola connected.) back and forth in my late teens. 41 was desolate between Negaunee to L'anse. All trees. Beautiful.
@@briantickler1637 When I was 14 (55 years ago), Houghton got 609 inches of snow. I lived at my grandmother's house (My grandfather built it for her.) on Misery Bay. Grandpa Pete, grandma Lempi. Lempi means "loving." She was and I still grieve for her.
Grew up along the $Soo Line RR tracks in the UP.. That old Line played a big part in UP history with many memorie for many people. Those engines look marvelous. Boy, I can hear that whistle now!!]
Once again thanks for the journey back into the backroads from long ago. The Sunday drive on a Tuesday afternoon is a brilliant poetic masterpiece of tranquility!
It's funny how Uppers tell you "Yield" at railroad crossing while Trolls just tell you to "Stop".
More trains, more people down below!!
Yoopers not uppers haha. Common mistake.
This is one of the best travel videos I have seen. Very well done with some historical info. I can't believe Marty did not buy you an ice cream. So sad.
I haven't finished the video yet, but if you went to Wallace and didn't stop at the DeYoung Zoo, turn around right now and get back there!!!
I have yet to make it to the DeYoung Zoo. One of these days I’m going there!
@@SightseeingSally A place you must visit!
Thanks for the tour Sally and Marty!
Stayin tuned!
🤠👍
Gary's in Stephenson closed last fall.
The buildings where lumber was stored in Wallace used to be the Wallace building supply, which was owned and ran by relation of mine(my Grandpa Philipps' nephews and their kids. They also used to build homes and such. Where you saw the snake in the pop machine was outside the 'Wallace Mall', sort of a liquidators type place. I believe it's only open on weekends. In Ingalls, the river you saw going under the bridge was the Little Cedar River. The Little Kelley Creek runs into that and together the enter the Menominee River.
The little brick building in Stephenson was actually a small service station.
T😢his looks like all of the entire midwest I grew up in during the 60’s and 70’s. This is why my wife and I moved to Hawaii in 1990 and didn’t move back to the midwest until 2018 when we retired and decided to spend half the year traveling around the world.
I had many meals at the Stepenson Family Restaurant always good food
What a riot - a garden snake living in a soda machine!!! Never would have dreamed of seeing that. Thanks!
Another outstanding video Sally and Marty. Definitely that was a snake!! Don't know what type. I love those sleepy towns. Thank you for sharing look forward to the next video. Be careful on your travels. Thank you.
Thanks! I was told it was a pop snake? Hahaha j/k don’t know what kind either
I enjoyed this video. Wonderful scenery. Thank you!
You’re welcome Joan 😊
I really enjoy videos like this.
My family came here in 1890 from Finland 🇫🇮 eh! 😎
I’m from the lower peninsula and I feel like I rarely ever hear the term “Upper Michigan”, but man, it’s much more pleasing to the ear over “the U P” 👍🏽
Might want to find a book called "Michigan Ghost Towns Of The Upper Peninsula"
On July 6, 2023, WDIO tv showed a pile of dirty snow still at the Duluth airport.
Enjoyed your video😊 Would love to see Battle Creek Michigan
That was a foxsnake . They are fairly common in parts of the UP. Some folks call them a pinesnake. They are very beneficial because they eat rodents . Harmless but they may bite if you try to pick them up
Thanks! I definitely won’t be picking one up 😂
7:35
Love Marty's laugh!!!!
He really got a kick out of the snake story
You came to the Snakes land of Oz and he was sticking out his head to tell you that "Orders are nobody can see the Great Oz! Not nobody, not nohow!" And slunk back into his kingdom of old shiny cans.
Hahaha that’s a good one Jen!
you guys missed the Wallace zoo. or maybe you mentioned it and i missed it. Its a rustic, natural type zoo, we usually hit it up once a year.
Pastys are great, In Madison Wisconsin just off the Capitol square by the Historical Museum and State Street there is a place called Teddy Wedgers. The original owner passed away a while ago but they still had great Pastys there the last time we stopped in, been about 10 years though. Every thing has changed and many food places went out of business from the plague. I hope it is still running his crew had kept it going for a while and they were nice people. Escanaba has some great Pasts also. Nice drive hope you guys stay safe and healthy.
The Paulding Light would be up your alley, for eagle eye Marty too.
I saw the light in mid 80s and in 90s everytime I went I saw the white one and twice I saw the red one it came within 10 feet and I couldn't figure it out at all cool times
Actually if you head down around Mineral Point, Wisconsin, you'll find a lot of pasties in the restaurants.
Good ones in Calumet and long ago Lake Linden. I haven't been in Lake Linden in a long time.
When I saw that, I immediately knew it was a coal chute. The first two houses I lived in with my family had coal chutes. Both houses had been converted to oil, so they were not used. One of those houses had a cistern as well. That house was a Montgomery Wards house that was built in the 20s.
Marty-isms, gotta love ‘em!
Yep! There should be a book on Marty-isms.
Stephenson, what a pretty little town , Thanks for giving us a tour. Was Marty setting you up with a rubber snake? Thanks you, Lynn & Steve
No it was definitely a real snake 🐍
Have a great weekend you two😎@@SightseeingSally
Nobody calls Michigan's U.P, "The Yoop"! lol
I live in the yoop and everybody calls in the yoop
@@dudeindawoods914
Family been here since 1890 and never heard anyone call it the yoop.
More like DA’ U.P. Not yoop 🤦🏼♂️
Da Yoop!
Residents are called Yoopers.
We totally do!
A lovely and interesting video. All your videos are good in my opinion.
Awww 🥰 thank you
I just got back from the yoop the other day after visiting my family. I was born and raised in Keweenaw county, a weird but beautiful place.
This looks nice now but what is it like in the dead of winter? I hear the Michigan winters can get pretty severe.
Yep
Overall the winters are not rough with the LENGTH may be the worst...anywhere from 6-9 months. Snow can remain in the woods or in piles as late as July. Winter severity varies whether you live on the Lake Michigan side or Lake Superior side. The Superior side can be very hazardous while the Michigan side is known as the Banana pBelt!! lol.
Always puts a smile on my face when I see you guys pop up. Although Marty's a little to energetic and stingy with the ice cream..lol
Thanks Michael! That’s what I’m saying, more ice cream lol
I think the "Gingerbread House" was a restaurant with the old pepsi sign hanging on the post back in late 1990 or early 2000. If I am right the road allowed you to park right up to the building and I stopped there with the crew I worked with back then. But there could be a building similar in another small town and I am wrong. Maybe someone that lived there will know.
Thanks for another cool video!
It's a sneaky snake 🐍 Yes, a sneaky snake!😁
A sneaky snake 🐍 that lives in a Seven Up machine hahaha
But the pop machine didn't have any Root beer.
@@garybryant6148 Don't you mean Sasparilla lol?
You guys rock!
Welcome back Marty.....great video Sally
Thanks Julio, Marty says hi 👋🏻
Head up to Bessemer, my home town.
Love the video. 10:20 Bob's Custom Creations.
Pretty country, Thx for the tour.
Upper Michigan is actually in the “middle” of the state or the upper half of “the mitten”. The UP is the UP. The thumb is the thumb.
UP = Upper Peninsula
Looks like a nice place to settle down. You look absolutely gorgeous, Sally! ❤
Sally! Tell me. Does Marty know just how lucky he is just to sit beside you! ??.😊
Common here to enjoy a Pasty w/ ketchup.
Gravy!!
I enjoyed this thank you
Glad you enjoyed it John!
Years ago I had a good friend in Carney.
I believe the brick building in Wallace is the warehouse for Wallace building supply.
Awesome video!
🙂👍❤️❤️
Thanks beautiful Bonnie ❤️
@@SightseeingSally
You're welcome, Gorgeous Sally!
You are truly loved! ❤️
pasty shop in milwaukee wi 3600 w burleigh st since the 60's
6:48, that's a Fox snake, I believe....
We don't really have any dangerous snakes or spiders in Michigan.
I have been thinking of moving back to my native state of Michigan. Thank God I watched this episode of yours to remind me of why I got the heck out of there in the first place! THANK YOU!
I enjoyed the tour of the Boeing 747 manufacturing plant
.....enjoyable.
US 41 goes all the way to Copper Harbor, MI. or Miami, Fl. Your choice.
If you get a pasty, get it with gravy
Slap you
Plead the fifth Marty.....or better yet drink the fifth
With a bit of seven up that fifth will go down nicely 🥃😉
@@SightseeingSally but don't be getting your 7Up out of that old soda machine 😂
@@charausten5242 LOL
U. S 41 ends at Copper Harbor.
Aha! So I learned a little tidbit about Marty's past: buying the projectors from the Tivoli. Was Marty a theatre projectionist or tech? Or was he referring to concession equipment? If only he woulda splurged for ice cream at the "Palace," we could seen inside how they'd fit the parlour inside the old theatre!😅 I've never seen pasties beyond the entertainment variety!😂
More like Marty has a fascination for mechanical items and is a collector with eclectic interests 🤷🏼♀️😂
In 1979 I worked all over the upper peninsula changing mechanical computers in gas pumps when gas went higher than 99 cents a gallon. I seen a abandoned town with closed gas station, tennis court and hotel I can remember where remember where it was I've looked all over for it recently i can't find it
Wallace is like the town of Channing. A sign was put up for a railroader by the name of Channing so he knew where to get off the train.
Marty: man of many words!😊
It’s how he rolls 😂
all that snow melted quick, and it was rainy, so guess what? mosquito breeding grounds! they are terrible right now UP here. Trying to get yardwork done this week and between them and the 90 degree weather 🤨🦟🦟🌞🌞
I feel for you Kevin!
Mosquitoes, the state bird of Minnesota, eh.
Now that was a, SSSSSeven-Up! SSSSo refreSSSSShing.
Hahaha that’s for sure 😂🐍
I am From Iron Mountain, - Yup Life in Da U.P --Eh
i have stopped at that same park in stephenson to use the bathroom.
Marty, but Triple S all the ice cream she wants. What’s wrong with ya!? 😅😅😅
Nice !
Thanks Glenn! Hope you’re seeing signs of summer by you.
@@SightseeingSally a little ! Still in the 40s at night ,!
@@SightseeingSally another nice town & yes , it does reminds me of Mayberry !
My wife is from England, and pasty is the pastry. We eat them all the time.
?
Yooper dee do to you and Marty too, Sally! 🤣😎
Lol 😂
My ex wife and I use to take those kind of impromptu trips almost every weekend. People and things change.
Looks like snakes are scared of you.😂
The Ingalls also lived in Michigan for a little bit.
Did they? I wonder if there’s any relation. I did a quick google search and came up with zilch but I didn’t really look that hard tho
@@SightseeingSally I was wrong, it was Minnesota. Walnut Grove. I always get those northern M states mixed up
@@justnerdystuff isn't that where Little House was set? In Walnut Grove? I had no idea there was a real Walnut Grove!
Yeah, so, I won't be forgetting about the snake in the pop machine anytime sssssoon!
Hahaha me either Lorie!
thanks for the map
Where's your sense of adventure, you should'a tried to get a pop. Technically they are milk cans not jugs and they are pronounced Pasties (pa as in grandpa,- sties). Most likely the old building by the tracks was the old train station. The railroad bridge is a type call an overhead iron/steel truss bridge. The overhead structure supports the tracks below. Mind you not being critical , just enlightening. Thanks for the video please enjoy you trip and hope to see more.
Stephenson, it's an old train station 😅
We have to know. What breed of snake likes a seven up once in while ❤I'm getting ready to go to Antigo Wisco have u guys been there yet
i wonder how many forest fires were started by steam trains hauling lumber. nice drive into peaceful towns. gads it's up there, a good place to read long novels.
In da Moonlight.
Forgotten town?
They're not forgotten by the people who live there.
You want a forgotten town, go find where the town of Northland was...not the bar that sits on the side of the highway but the old logging town and rail spur.
Like they say in the U.P. . We go town , hey ?
My neighbors, are from the up of Michigan. Army brats.there parents were. Anyway.
Born to Yoop.
Sorry, Sally Marty made me drive all the way up to Wallace and put that snake in that machine for you. LOL Sorry. 😅😅😅 p.s. I’m pretty sure it’s a pine snake harmless
I knew it was a set up hahaha 🤣
That's the favorite delicacy of the Inn's meat pies that Sweeney Todd so graciously furnished the fix'ens for. 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🙄
Now why do I suddenly feel like watching “The Office”??? Lol 😂
And you guys are in a classic Prius…
Go to R Place in Spalding for the Friday night fish fry.
it said hi! sally!
Big Trucks/Trucksters! We used to have Dinkies! Late 70's!
What’s a Dinkies?
@@SightseeingSally Dinky, small cars, Sally Matchbox, small cars that fit in your palm!
@@SightseeingSally Don't you remember?
@@ahmedhumayunrasheed2434 I do now. We just never called them dinkies
@@SightseeingSally Well what did you?
Pasties are also a cultural phenomena of Butte and Anaconda Montana.......mmmmmm gravy please