U.P. Forest Trail
| Nearest City: | ??? |
|---|---|
| County: | ??? |
| Planted By: | SpringChick |
| Date Planted: | October 2007 |
| Terrain: | Moderate |
| Time/Distance: | Allow a few hours |
| Status: | Active (verified 05/2010) |
Five friends (Jaime, Becka, Craig, Amber and Bryce) took a camping trip to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Each person selected a hike/trail for the group, the name of which referenced their favorite kind of tree (pine, maple, hemlock, cedar and white birch). Each hike was in a different county (Alger, Chippewa, Mackinac, Luce and Menominee), of a different distance (2, 4, 5, 7 and 10 miles) and had a different trailhead location (Salt Point Road, Twelve Mile Beach, Forest Road 3114, Stables Picnic Area and a Campground). From the information provided, determine each person’s favorite type of tree, the county their hike was in, the trailhead location and the hike distance.
Once you have solved the puzzle, only one set of details accurately corresponds to an actual hike/trail in the U.P. The correct set of details will be your key to the letterbox location, and the name of the person who chose this hike will be your key to the clue.
Puzzles Clues…
- The person whose favorite tree is a pine (who isn’t Craig) chose a 4-mile hike. Craig’s chosen hike does not begin at Forest Road 3114. The person whose hike begins at the campground is not the friend who favors maple trees.
- The hike that begins at the campground is the next shorter in distance than the hike chosen by the friend who favors Hemlock trees, which is shorter than the Luce County hike.
- The Mackinac County hike (which was chosen by Amber) is longer than the hike beginning at the Stables Picnic Area (which was the hike chosen by Bryce), which is longer than 2 miles.
- The hike located in Chippewa County is the next shorter in distance than the hike chosen by the friend who favors maple trees (who isn’t Amber), which is shorter than the hike that begins at Salt Point Road (which was not on the white birch trail).
- The hike that begins at Forest Road 3114 (which is not 5 miles long) is neither the hike in Alger County (which was not the hike chosen by the friend who favors cedar trees) nor the hike chosen by Becka (which was not in Alger County either).
Letterbox Clues…
NMG EUM IQG ITE FQT YIG DQG GSB QNL ONS TSG VGM
Tagged: Active, Clues, Codes & Ciphers, Logic Puzzles, MI-Mystery, Michigan-UP, Mystery Box
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Old Shoe’s Brews #2
| Nearest City: | ??? |
|---|---|
| County: | ??? |
| Planted By: | SpringChick |
| Date Planted: | October 2007 |
| Terrain: | Moderate |
| Time/Distance: | About 4 miles end to end |
| Status: | Active (verified 8/2008) |
This box is part of an ongoing series of letterboxes representing some of OldShoe’s favorite microbreweries.
Letterboxes in this Series…
Clues…
Complete the Sudoku Puzzle and use the results to decipher the clues below.

| Click here to download the puzzle grid in Adobe .PDF format |
- {E1*D5*F6} {F9-A4} {A6+G7+H4} {G5+I2} {A2*I4} {C1+C4-C2} {B4*G2+D1} {A3+I4} {F9*H1} {H2*B1} {A4+G5} {B6-H9} {H6+D5+G9} {C2+I7} {G1*H3+B2} {D3-F7} {G7*B8} {A3*F8-A4} {C4*A3*I8} {D5*G2-I9} {D3*F8-A6*D8} {B1*G7} {E8*E2}
- [D1*I7] mile(s) from {A1-E8} {E4*I8} {H1*F7} / {C4*F7+I2} {C6*I4-I7} {D1*H4} {G8*H1} {F3*B1-B9}
- [A2*G9+B1] steps toward {A2*F8} {B9*I3} {F3*H1} {B6-H3} {A1*G6} {B8-E5*H3} {A7+H4} {A1/G8} {A2+G9} {F3+D5} {B8*C5+D1} to {C1/B4} {E1*E2} {F4/H6} {D7*G7} {H1+E5} {G5*I4-B2} {H4*A5} {F8*B9} {C2+I4}
- [B7*F7] steps from {C1*F5+H3} {A7*I7} {F4*I8+H4} {A7*E5*G6} end to {E8*D5} {F4/B2} {C6*A3} {F7+C5} on {D7*E5} {H1*B1-H4} {A4*I7} {A7*G4}
- [F4*B8*G9-A7] degrees; {C5*H3} {E4*H1} {C3*B1+B2} {A1/H4} {B6/F7} {D8*I7} {B9*H1-H9} {C5+G7} {A2/E4} {F8*G4} {F4+G7} {F7+A7} {G1*B4} {A3-H4-I7} {D8*D5} {H6*F7} {B7*H3} {E1+I2} {D8+B8}
Tagged: Active, Clues, MI-Mystery, Michigan-UP, Mystery Box, Number Puzzles, Old Shoe's Brews
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Giant Pine at Tahquamenon
| Nearest City: | Newberry, MI |
|---|---|
| County: | Luce |
| Planted By: | SpringChick |
| Date Planted: | September 30, 2007 |
| Terrain: | Easy; fairly flat wide, wooded path |
| Time/Distance: | About 3.5 mile loop |
| Status: | Active (verified 9/2009) |
Clues…
UOEN RUUG JTHU PTRR NLUU NSGQ LUQM ILRY QUEL UUPM LIFR NUAU UHNR NTRP RTGQ PQOL UHRD YAUN OGQR NUEO TGRJ OGUM OGQR NUDU RRUL AIXO GTNI DDIW DIE.
“The shortcut” is the key.
Tagged: Active, Clues, Codes & Ciphers, MI-Luce, Michigan-UP
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Nahma, King of Fishes
(Hiawatha Series #4)
| Nearest City: | Bay Mills, MI |
|---|---|
| County: | Chippewa |
| Planted By: | SpringChick |
| Date Planted: | September 28, 2007 |
| Terrain: | Moderate/Difficult |
| Time/Distance: | About 7 miles round trip |
| Status: | Active (verified 8/2008) |
By the shores of Gitche Gumee,
By the shining Big-Sea-Water
Stood the wigwam of Nokomis,
Daughter of the Moon, Nokomis.
Dark behind it rose the forest,
Rose the black and gloomy pine-trees,
Rose the firs with cones upon them;
Bright before it beat the water.
Beat the clear and sunny water,
Beat the shining Big-Sea-Water.
There the wrinkled old Nokomis
Nursed the little Hiawatha.
– Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Song of Hiawatha, Hiawatha’s Childhood
This is an ongoing series of letterboxes themed around Longfellow’s poem, The Song of Hiawatha. The boxes will be placed at various locations in or near the Hiawatha National Forest in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
Named after Longfellow’s poem, The Song of Hiawatha, the Hiawatha National Forest is located in the central and eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The forest encompasses approximately 880,000 acres, and receives over 1.5 million recreational visits per year. The forest affords visitors access to white sand, scenic beaches and relatively undeveloped shorelines along three of America’s inland seas — Lakes Superior, Michigan, and Huron. From scenic and historic lighthouses to Great Lakes islands, from spectacular shorelines to the Midwest’s finest winter playland, the Hiawatha National Forest brings to life a myriad of fascinating and exciting natural, historical, and unique recreational opportunities.
Letterboxes in this Series…
Naomikong Point…
The rocky points and bays of the Lake Superior shoreline west of Point Iroquois provide ideal fishing spots for fishermen today as they have for centuries. If you follow Lakeshore Drive west from Bay Mills to M-123, you will catch glimpses of this secluded shore of Lake Superior, but the way to really explore it is to hike. Several hiking trails can be found in the area, but our favorite is by far the hike out to Naomikong Point.
Full of history, this beautiful area gets its name Naomikong from an Ojibwa Indian word meaning “where the breakers strike the shore.” It was an important fishing ground and location of a mission outpost during the 1800’s and, at one time, an Indian Village was located on the shore here.
Naomikong Point itself appears rather nondescript, just a point of rocky land that juts out into Lake Superior, backed by a line of trees. But sitting here on this tip of land, nearly surrounded by the lake, the wind whispering in the trees, waves playfully lapping at the rocky shoreline, puffy white clouds floating carelessly in a azure sky, it is not hard to feel the words of Longfellow’s poem, Song of Hiawatha. It is not hard to forget the bustle of the world around you and truly believe that time has stopped.
Getting There…
You will need to consult a trail guide for hiking directions to Naomikong Point.
Clues…
After a short jaunt through the woods from the parking lot, the trail opens up to Lake Superior at Naomikong Creek. The rest of the trek follows the shoreline around a couple of smaller points and bays. When we were there, we walked a sandbar that ran out in the lake across one bay and had to jump rocks across another. We also were treated to the sight of a Bald Eagle nesting in the tall trees on Menekaunee point.
At the tip of Naomikong Point, a small peninsula stretches to the NW. Just east of this narrow finger of land, several large boulders provide an ideal place to sit and enjoy this treasure of a location. Among the boulders, find the split black one and site 170 degrees to a large black rock, frosted in light green moss. From here, 110 degrees to a white birch that leans to the SW. At the base, find your treasure.
Tagged: Active, Clues, Hiawatha Series, MI-Chippewa, Michigan-UP, Traditional
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Sand Dune Sunsets
| Nearest City: | Mears, MI |
|---|---|
| County: | Oceana |
| Planted By: | SpringChick |
| Date Planted: | September 2, 2007 |
| Terrain: | Easy; wooded path with a few small inclines |
| Time/Distance: | About 1-1/2 miles round trip |
| Status: | Active (verified 8/2010) |
Getting There…
Go to the Ruckel’s Bridge day use area of Silver Lake State Park. There is a small amount of parking available here.
Clues…
From the picnic area, follow the northerly trail. This is a lovely hike that skirts the base of the sand dunes in several places. If you are feeling ambitious, take a detour to climb one of these hills for a fantastic view of the Silver Lake Sand Dunes and Lake Michigan. Back on the trail, cross over the way of the sunset tours, picking up your trail again on the other side. When the trail ahead of you lies at 55 degrees and a very large standing oak with many dying arms is on your right, make your way at 130 degrees for about 50 paces to the stump which hides the letterbox.
Tagged: Active, Clues, MI-Oceana, Michigan-LP, Silver Lake SP, Traditional
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