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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Aug 24-27, Milwaukee, WI

Today we moved 25 miles from Port Washington, Wisconsin, to Milwaukee, the largest city in Wisconsin. Lake Michigan was flat calm and we had a delightful cruise with lots of sunshine. The water temperature was 51 degrees and the air temperature was mid 60’s. Cool cruising on the water. This is nice weather but not summertime weather.

Ran the generator today while underway and it ran well for an hour and quit. Same problem as before. Bummer. Fuel solenoid may have been bad but was not the whole problem. Called the local Onan/Cummings service dealer in Milwaukee from the boat before we docked to send someone out from their shop tomorrow.

Approaching Milwaukee.


Milwaukee Art Museum from the water. 'Wings' are closed.
'Click' on any picture to enlarge.


McKinley Marina.


We are at the McKinley Marina which is adjacent to the large Veteran’s Park and about a mile from downtown. The marina is a large one with 685 slips and all the facilities. We have a good view of the Milwaukee skyline. The marina Internet is not free and even so is not working. Bummer.

Brady Street


We walk into town using the pedestrian overpass (over Lincoln Memorial Drive) and visit the historic Brady Street neighborhood. Some shops and several good restaurants and famous bars. Seems like a college neighborhood.

We found the Milwaukee Yacht Club for dinner tonight as it is in the same area as our marina. This is the first time we have used our club reciprocal privileges and find it a very pleasant experience. We may do this sort of thing more often. We talked to a couple at the club who made us feel at home. He told us that ‘Wisconsin’ was really an Indian name that meant ‘the place with the really bad weather’. True or not, it rings true as the weather is quite cool and windy in late August.

The technician from N-Power, the local Cummings dealer, came to the boat early and diagnosed our generator problem as probably (90%?) being the voltage regulator board. They do not have the part locally and so we order it form the factory and hope it will arrive tomorrow.

So we set out to see Milwaukee. First we head to the ‘Historic Third Ward’ which is a theater, arts and decorating neighborhood. One of the highlights for us was the ‘Milwaukee Public Market’, a collection of food vendors. About the best of it’s kind we have seen anywhere. Like Carmine’s on PGA in West Palm Beach but larger and with independent vendors. Also enjoyed ‘Artasia’ a gallery specializing in art, carvings and bronzes from China, Tibet, Nepal and Mongolia. Over 1000 Buddhas plus masks, statues, temple carvings and alters. Very unusual!

Milwaukee Public Market


Inside the market


Historic Third Ward


Owen with a large wood carving


Visited the Pfister Hotel downtown and walked across the Milwaukee river to the ’Shops of Grand Avenue’, a downtown mall which is about 30% vacant.

Milwaukee River downtown


Then walked ’Old World Third Street’ an area of restaurants and bars and some shops, one specializing in German/Polish sausages and one in Wisconsin Cheese.

Old World Third Street


Linda with a 'cheese hat'


There are some really big older buildings in Milwaukee. Must have been built in very prosperous times.

County Courthouse is a beautiful stone building from the 1800's.


City Hall is a well designed brick building.


Rain overnight all night last night and cooler this morning. After two nights at McKinley Marina we moved a mile south in the harbor to the Lakeshore State Park Marina which is near the spectacular Calatrava wing of the Milwaukee Art Museum and next to the Discovery Center.

We move past the Milwaukee Art museum
which has it's 'wings' extended


Discovery Center
with the DENIS SULLIVAN


Skylne view from the Lakeshore State Park Marina


DENIS SULLIVAN underway


We are much closer to the downtown and restaurants. Services here include 50 amp but no water or other facilities. Internet is within range from the Discovery Center. We are the only boat in this small marina tonight. We are pretty self sufficient.

Nick, the technician from N-Power, the Onan/Cummings dealer in Milwaukee, came to the boat today with the new part, the Automatic Voltage Regulator board and installed it for us. The generator is running fine and we are again hopeful. We will run the generator for several hours on our way to Racine and that should tell us if this repair has fixed our problem.

Milwaukee Art Museum


Milwaukee Art Museum inside


Twenty foot glass sculpture from Seattle


We tour two of Milwaukee's museums this afternoon. The first is the Milwaukee Art Museum, with the spectacular 'burke brise soleil' "wings" which open every morning at 10 am, close and open at noon and close again at 5 pm every day. The building and 'wings' were designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. This part of the museum opened in 2001. Museum is good inside and from an architectural point of view this new wing of the museum is great inside and out. We see the wings in the open position.

Linda with a real 'mummy' at the Milwaukee Public Museum


Next we visit the Milwaukee Public Museum, which is a natural history museum with large specimens and skeletons of current and extinct animals (even a real mummy) and has many large displays and dioramas depicting scenes from prehistoric peoples to modern cultures from all over the world. We think this is one of Americas great museums.

Students from Marquette University practice in the Milwaukee River


From the museum, we walked across the Milwaukee River and went to 'International Exports' a James Bond 'safe house' that is a famous restaurant in Milwaukee. We found the 'International Exports' off the alley across from the Pabst Theater and entered the small lobby. Upon entering we found there were two doors both of which were locked. We could not find a way into the restaurant. We spent a few minutes (two or three minutes) knocking on the locked doors and looking around for a way into the restaurant. Finally read a small sign on the wall that invited us to press a lever and as we did a bookcase wall opened up. This led to a hallway with double doors at the end which opened into the restaurant. Turns out the whole process of confusion and discovery is shown to the restaurant patrons on closed circuit TV for their amusement and entertainment (doesn't take much to entertain bar patrons). Some folks even get a round of applause as they finally make it through those doors and into the dining room. Fun evening and certainly unique.

Another night of drizzling rain and cool temperatures. We move the boat over to the wall at the Discovery Center. No power here for us (only single 30 amp) but it is closer to everything and has wifi Internet which we can tap into. Then we head off the the Harley Davidson Museum (Harley/Davidson is headquartered in Milwaukee). Featured are motorcycles from as early as 1907 and exhibits that include a good sampling of the motorcycles built over the years. There are movie clips, war time displays, police displays and displays featuring local motorcycle clubs and their patches and activities. We see customized bikes with everything from additional chrome to more elaborate ways of making a bike unique.

Harley Davidson Museum


Owen with early 1907 motorcycle


Biker costumes


1939 motorcycles


All decked out with chrome


With Jewels


Then back to the Milwaukee Art Museum for the noon closing and reopening of the 'wings'.

Open


Closing


Closing more


Almost closed


They have a wingspan comparable to a Boeing 747-400 aircraft. Santiago Calatrava is famous for his design of buildings that move. We are told that in one of his buildings in Dubai, parts of the towers rotate at different speeds so the building changes shape. This is his first design completed in the USA (2001). The wings slowly close and reopen for us at noon. Remarkable.

As we are docked at the Discovery Center and there is no 50 amp power available here, we have run our generator from 1 pm to 6 pm, and again from 8 pm to 10 pm to generate power for our boat. It worked as it should. I think our last repair has solved the problem. Thanks Nick and N-Power of Milwaukee.

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