Standing
on Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula, I looked northward
over Lake Superior toward the town of Terrace Bay,
my destination, one hundred miles away. Five years
earlier, I had been hit by a car while bicycling.
That ended my touring days and lead to my involvement
in sea kayaking. Other kayakers told me of the epic
ocean crossings undertaken by Ed Gillett and Hannes
Lindemann. I was immediately intrigued with what
it must have been like to see nothing on the horizon
surrounding them except the razor-thin division between
air and water. In the years that followed, I sought
out long-distance solo crossings, rough-weather paddling
and rolling. Then, early in 1995, I decided to test
my limits by crossing each of the five Great Lakes
near their geographical centers. Finding this spot
would be possible with the use of a Global Positioning
System (GPS), a hand-held electronic device that
receives signals from orbiting satellites and gives
its position in latitude and longitude. The location
of each lake's geographical center was calculated
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
office in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
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