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DSC_6620Custom home design using 12 inch logs.

Construction began in 2006 and was completed in 2008.

Contractor was Bobby Down, Five Mile Point Builders.

Custom interior and entry doors by Tim Flynn, The Modern Woodsmith. The front entry door is curly birch, the Master Bedroom door is bark pocket maple, and all other interior doors are hickory.

Custom chandelier in the Living Room is by Eric Hess, of Charlevoix.

MORE EXTRAS

Custom hickory cabinets in Kitchen and Master Bath are by Great Northern Cabinets.

The kitchen counter is granite with a higher serving counter of cherry.

Floors are bamboo on the main level, slate in the entryways and Sun Room, marble and walnut in Dining Room, with a custom compass insert in the floor of the Entryway. The upstairs floors are carpet and bamboo.

The ceiling in the Living Room and upstairs hallway is poplar, which never changes color. The other ceilings are pine.

Field stone wood burning fireplace in Living Room with insert and fan.

Brew Express Kitchen wall mounted coffee maker built in and plumbed in.

Built in wine refrigerator in Living Room.

Steam shower in Master Bath.

Seven ceiling fans.

Custom tile in Master Bath and shower with total glass enclosure.
Heated floors in the full bathrooms.

EQUIPMENT

Kitchen: Range/oven, dishwasher, refrigerator/freezer, disposal, and microwave.

14 KW whole house Generac backup generator with seamless switchover.

Bryant Evolution forced air propane furnace with steam humidifier, electric heat pump for air conditioning, and air exchanger.

WiFi Thermostat Control.

Tankless water heater for unlimited hot water.

Culligan water softener.

CONSTRUCTION DETAIL

Square footage:

2177 – 1st floor
1140 – 2nd floor
1035 Three plus car garage
420 Room over garage
1000 Deck

3,737 SF Total living space not including the garage and deck.

Central air conditioning.

Forced air heat with humidifier.

Lowen windows throughout, triple pane on lakeside, the balance double pane.

Spray foam insulation in ceiling and upstairs walls and floor, and around the bathrooms.

Electric baseboard heat in upstairs rooms.

Floor and ceiling trusses by Skandia Truss, overbuilt for snow load.

Insulated concrete forms with concrete floor, stairs and door for easy access to the crawl space.

Copper plumbing system.

UTILITIES

Underground electric power extends from home to M-28.

8 inch well 45 feet deep, fracked for abundant water, installed by Kleiman Well Drilling, water tested in 2008.

Septic system.

2015 approximate costs:

$2900 propane
$2050 electric
$4622 property taxes

LAND

#167 Laughing Whitefish Point has 258 feet of frontage on Lake Superior and 10.2 acres.

Paved driveway.

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Owner’s Reflections

DSCN1091We discovered Laughing Whitefish Point quite by accident. We had been searching for lakefront property on a Great Lake for several years, primarily focusing on Lake Michigan.

Our daughter was attending Northern Michigan University and during one of our visits while site seeing, we saw the signs along M-28 and drove the length of Shore Drive.

It was love at first site. It was spring and the forest was alive with spring beauties and peepers. Each sign along Shore Drive was surrounded by daffodils and the leaves on the trees were just beginning to pop out.

Originally we wanted a lot with direct access to the lake, but it was in a cedar swamp and had a tremendous amount of spring run-off. We settled on this lot because it was high and dry and the views are absolutely spectacular. In every season! It also has a flat driveway for easy year-round access.

We stayed until the sun went down that night and watched the first of the amazing sunsets that we have experienced, and enjoyed, for the last eight years. We have many sunset and sunrise pictures to remind us of the magnificence of Lake Superior.

We have also seen the lake during the furious gales of November which are just as spectacular to see. And when the power goes out we just settle in with a hot cup of tea as the generator kicks on to provide for our electrical needs. It was these winds that caused us to name this place “Whistling Winds.”

We have also enjoyed watching the many ships go by at all hours of the day and night. It usually takes well over 30 minutes for a ship to cross through our view. We have even found a webpage that identifies name of the ship, the owners, and the course it is following.

Just as eagerly we watch the birds, especially the eagles. The eagles seem to come by daily during the summer looking for their next meal. There are several avid bird watcher neighbors who are always willing to help us identify the unknown species.

Speaking of neighbors, Shore Drive has the best neighbors a person could ever want. The two-legged ones respect your privacy but are more than willing to help out when asked. The four-legged ones are always a treat to see, and appear regularly throughout the year.

“Just another day in paradise” has been our slogan since moving to Laughing Whitefish Point. We will miss our “Whistling Winds.”

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Hunter Lodge: In Depth

IMG_1736This is some of the finest waterfront land that I have seen.

Each element is wonderful but having them all creates a symphony of features that is unique on the south shore of Lake Superior. First feature among equals is this one: nearly a mile of Lake Superior shoreline, part fine sand beach, part granite coastline, including high Saux Head Point covered with pines, reaching far into Superior.

Views from that point are stunning. The long arc of a perfect sand beach sweeps miles to the northwest with nothing but pines along the shore and hardwoods behind. Turn eastward and there’s a totally different long view of rock bays, points, islands, and a mountainous shoreline reminiscent of California’s Big Sur, where fingers of granite reach into the lake to become small rock islands offshore. In the distance you’ll see Granot Loma on the point.

DSC_0028-(1)There’s much more. The property includes about 4,500 feet of frontage on Saux Head Lake, a large, scenic Huron Mountain lake, plus hardwood forest, garden plots and meadows, a small orchard, sand beaches, mountain trails and a river that flows right through the property. With wooded area so plentiful, selective cutting and clearing for additional farming activities can more fully tap the resources of this productive land. The Big Garlic River enters Saux Head Lake on the property at the south end and it flows to the north across the property into Lake Superior. You can kayak or canoe from lake to lake.

Monarch white pine and hemlock frame softwoods with brilliant colors in spring and fall. There are spruce and balsam stands, open fields and a small marsh. This diversity of highlands, lowlands, tree types and lake and river edges supports a wide variety of birds, animals and plants. Pop’s Mountain, the highest point on the property, has 360-degree views, but less apparent overlooks along the Lake Superior shore also surprise and are dramatic. Down off the mountain by Saux Head Lake there are five acres of fertile land containing an orchard and large vegetable garden fed from warm water drawn from the lake.

The southern shore of Lake Superior is America’s North Coast, its only coast unaffected by hurricanes and rising ocean levels. Superior holds an astonishing 10% of the world’s fresh water. This is a lake with the power and feel of an ocean. From a kayak the water is so clear you can see bottom 50 feet down as you float over massive boulders below.

DSC_0008Spring colors are a palate of pastels with the forest floor erupting in a blanket of trillium, arbutus, and other wildflowers. Summer is waterskiing, the beach, lots of sun and kayaks, canoes, sail and power boats. Fall colors here are second to none, and I’ve lived in New England. Winter is cross-country and snowshoes or snowmobiling in the high country of the Huron Mountains. So much of living at Saux Head is the regular changing beauty of the seasons and the changing experiences that each offers.

People find it difficult to choose between the serenity of an inland lake and the drama of Lake Superior. They frequently ask me which is best and it can be difficult to choose as both have appealing features. Here’s a better idea: don’t choose. With apologies to Nike, “Just get it”: an inland lake and river for warm water swimming, sailing, canoeing, kayaking, and fishing paired all with the stunning beauty and drama of Lake Superior. What a collection! This place is so dramatic.

Gulls bank and dive overhead, storm clouds and fog banks sweep across the lake, crashing waves wash the shore and ore boats pass in the night, bound for distant ports. This combination of a scenic mountain lake and Lake Superior, with high, beautifully timbered land between and a river on the property, is rare. “Unique” is much overused to describe property but look at any map. Convince yourself. There is nothing like this property that you can find, on or off the market. Period.

DSC_0021Superior is mostly well behaved and a calm lake is best for most activities, but I love the storms! When the wind is up the big lake comes alive. Thunderous waves crash against granite at the river mouth exploding spray 30′ into the air. It’s awesome, mesmerizing, and incredibly scenic. On those kinds of days at Marquette you’ll even see surfboarders out there in wetsuits riding those bucking, breaking waves.

The whole east side and south end of Saux Head Lake form the western and southern border of the property. Saux Head is a 137-acre Huron Mountain lake with 18-foot depths, sand beach, rock points, white pines, excellent fishing and the river that connects to the Great Lake. In season large northern pike, steelhead and salmon run that river from Lake Superior.

This country has long been a place of big land and big dreams. Fortunes were made here at the turn of the century. It still has the feel of a frontier with American eagles, wildlife in abundance, and a dramatic landscape that supports that impression. The rugged Huron Mountains protect a wilderness that extends 50 miles to the west and 30 miles deep. It’s the wildest land in Michigan and many call it the most beautiful. I feel that way. My camp is there. The Huron Mountains are cherished and defended by those of us who love big, beautiful, wild land.

DSC_0007Several structures and lots of history come with the property. This land was originally part of Louis Kaufman’s Granot Loma, a property from the early 1900’s that is often referred to as “Michigan’s Biltmore Estate” or “Michigan’s Hearst Castle.” Granot Loma land still adjoins the entire southeastern border of the property.

S.R. Kaufman built the original lodge here in 1917. Sam was the brother of L.G. Kaufman who built Granot Loma 5 years later. Robert & Mary Hunter renovated the Lodge in 1959 and 49 years later 2009 his four sons have brought it up to date with an extensive renovation. The Lodge has new Birdseye maple floors to complement the ancient pine beams that span the big Great Room. Wide, durable decks under roof wrap around the building. The Lodge contains about 4,700 square feet of space on two floors with a new kitchen/bar (Lodge appliance list – MS Word), four bedrooms upstairs, 3 1/2 baths and a full basement. The owners took special pains to integrate art pieces throughout the remodeled lodge. A dramatic monoprint by Mary Lee Rybar graces the entry hall. Local artist Stella Larkin from RustiCo Furniture in Marquette made the driftwood mirror in the first floor bathroom; Robert LaLonde a coppersmith and professor at Northern Michigan University handcrafted the outdoor chandeliers and Tom Wolfe of Wolfe Designs in Marquette designed and built the kitchen bar stools from native materials.

DSC_0020-(1)The living room has great light at any time of the day, be it storms or full on sunshine, and you can watch it all from any number of perches in that great room. A wonderful time of each day is the gathering of all in attendance in the living room around the low-slung table in front of the fireplace. It is here that the adventures of the day are retold.

You can use it “as is” with artistic and family changes you’ll have to make it your own. Four double bedrooms in the Lodge, completely refurbished and renewed this year, and two double bedrooms in Overlook House easily sleep 12. But beneath it all is the land, 170.9 acres of it. This awesome compound offers so many wonderful possibilities. Its future is as large as your imagination.

Properties like this seldom trade. L.G. Kaufman took title to the property in 1927. When L.G. and his wife, Marie, passed on it was deeded to their daughter, Marie Joan, who sold it to Robert Hunter in 1960. The Hunter family has owned it ever since. Overlook House was built across the river, on the hill, for Robert & Mary Hunter`s retirement in 1993 and was upgraded again in 2008. Overlook is about 1,600 square feet in size with two bedrooms, two baths, cedar siding and spectacular views of river where the Big Garlic meets Lake Superior. It has an attached garage and nearby in the woods, a tennis court.

The four Hunter brothers own the property now. Scot writes, “For me, Saux Head long ago became a state of mind — a place that I can go at will. It is the peaceful place on the large secluded beach next to that freshwater ocean, Lake Superior.” You can click right here to read more of their memories and observations.

DSC_0015There’s also an original boathouse on the river used as storage for canoes, kayaks, and equipment and awaiting further renovation, and an old dam that once controlled the level of Saux Head Lake. There is also a pump house on the point, and a small bunk house that has not been used in recent years. When you stand on the deck of the pump house, framed by granite walls that plunge into the lake, and look west up that long arc of the beach you’ll understand. It will likely be renovated, changed or removed. Also, there is a relatively new, working sauna next to the pump house.

We will post additional detail here soon on the land, buildings and equipment.

To the northwest and southwest the Saux Head Point Association lands forms the other boundary. The Association includes seventeen large waterfront parcels, one of which is included in this holding. Each Association member, which includes the owner of this property, has an equal undivided interest in an additional square mile of forest with a common access site on Saux Head Lake and a mile of vacant Lake Superior shoreline to the north. How do you put a value on all this land and lakeshore held in common? How can you value the uncommon privacy afforded by large, closely held private parcels surrounding on all sides?

Click here to download a PDF containing maps of the Hunter land and lakefront with property lines, the topography, and views of the land and lakes from every angle.

Mount-Marquette-VistaAnd here’s the kicker: This property is close to Marquette, the largest city in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Marquette has great restaurants and shopping, an excellent regional hospital, regional jet airport with a 12,366′ (2.32 miles) runway that once launched B-52’s, and the regional seaport with two good harbors for your boats, a base for your big-water boating on Superior. You can watch Division I sports (hockey) at Northern Michigan University, or hit the slopes on skis or snowboards at Marquette Mountain, one of the state’s top downhill ski facilities.

The Marquette area has received national publicity as one of the nation’s “Most Livable Communities” and as one of the top small arts communities in the nation. Bike Magazine called Marquette one of “The 5 Best Places to Live & Ride.” Outdoor Life Magazine picked the city #7 of the “200 Best Places to Live,” and Sherman’s Travel named Michigan’s Upper Peninsula one of the Top Ten Global Summer Vacation Destinations in 2006.

A Noquemanon 12k trail system that runs along and above the north shore of Saux Head Lake is one of the best in the area and you can cross-country ski there in the winter or jog there or along the lake on miles of white sand beach in the summer. The restless will find endless adventure mountain biking, snowmobiling, cross county skiing, fishing, hunting, exploring and just plain wandering with friends or, if you choose, very much all by yourself.

DSC_0138The 30-mile shoreline between Marquette and Big Bay appears lightly developed from Hwy. 550, but that is an illusion. Plenty of wild shoreline remains but this lakeshore is home to the largest collection of high-end homes on the Lake Superior shore. Driving north from Marquette, invisible from the road, you will find them at Middle Bay, Middle Island Point, Partridge Bay, Granot Loma, Saux Head, Lake Independence, Squaw Beach, and just north of Big Bay, at the Huron Mt. Club.

Usually Superior is calm but there’s a wind today and I can hear the lake. It’s a sound like no other and I’ve never lived far from it. This is a place with beauty, power, and magic. Come spend a day and see for yourself. Take a deep breath. Mother Nature conditions the air, and it smells of pine.

Read the story of Hunter Lodge.

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Saux Head Memories by the Hunter Brothers

David Hunter

When Mom and Dad first bought the place I remember driving into it and seeing Lake Superior – WOW – I was blown away. Then I saw the big house and again said – WOW – this is one big house with an incredible view!!

Among the many changes to the big house were the removal of the second story and the lowering of the roof to make it a 2-story facility. Dad figured it could be done, even had cardboard models of what it would look like. He talked with several engineers who all told him it couldn’t be done. Never one to take no for an answer, he persevered, hired Ben Scott and his dad and got the job done. I was there the day the roof was lowered – will never forget the crane lowering it into place; as I recall, it had to be done in sections, but it got done! Great celebration that night!

One of the pieces of old furniture that was kept was a huge round table, which we reduced in height and placed in front of the fireplace in the living room. It has served as the gathering spot for family and friends for all these 50 years. The stories that have been told, the tears that have been shed, the meals that have been consumed were numerous and provide many memorable moments. The kids would sit around and listen to the stories – many of which were about their parents and previously untold – and remind us later of what they now knew about us. They didn’t miss a word.

Saux Head has been the glue that has held our family together – we’re all over the U.S. now, but we have gathered there as single-family units or collectively for 50 years. Without it, it’s possible that we would have drifted apart as in the case in many other large families.

Harley Hunter

Our introduction to the UP was when Dad was with the Electromotive Division of General Motors in LaGrange, Ill. I think I was 5 years old when Mom & Dad packed us into the car and we drove to Ives Lake

DSC_0018It wasn’t too long before Dad would be gone all day. Unbeknownst to us, he was either picking up a boat in Marquette and going half way up the big lake and back again looking at property or he was going from Big Bay down the coast half way towards Marquette and back again. He was trying to find the most unique spot between Big Bay and Marquette. Once he laid his eyes on Saux Head he researched who the owner was.

On hot humid days it was great to just jump in the big lake and start swimming around the point to the big black granite islands offshore from Bruce’s Cove, lie down on them and it was like a sauna on one side. Once we were warm we dove back in the lack and swam back home again. To this very day, the tradition continues.

We would spend the entire month of August at Saux Head, we had many friends that came for visits and the reaction was always the same “WOW”, “no place like it in the entire world”. We had developed many friends in Marquette that we did fun things with and still do – such as playing golf. It is a great place and will always hold fond memories for us. It was where our kids grew up loving the outdoors, the big lake and it is a phenomenal part of our family’s history and we thank Mom & Dad for making it possible.

During one summer night, with Saux Head on the most westerly part of the Eastern Time Zone (never understood that), the sun wouldn’t go down until sometimes 10pm at night and we noticed over the green boathouse point and Granite Point an amazing red sky that looked as though sparks were flying into the sky. We looked and looked and finally said we’ve got to call the Forest Service because we were sure it was a fire. We called but they had had many other reports of the same thing and said it was just the sun setting – truly amazing.

The whole family was always doing odd jobs around camp and down on the beach, cutting trails, and hiking. It was where our kids grew up loving the outdoors, the big lake and it is a phenomenal part of our family’s history and we thank Mom & Dad for making it possible. A great place to unwind and know the closeness of God & His peace.

Scot Hunter

The living room has great light at any time of the day – be it storms or full on sunshine, you can watch it all from any number of perches in that great room. A wonderful time of each day is the gathering of all in attendance in the living room around the low-slung table in front of the fireplace. It is here that the adventures of the day are retold.

DSC_0015-(1)The 1957 Jeep figures in each of the brother’s driving stories and in those of our kids as well. It sits in the boathouse, temporarily disabled, ready for a tune-up and another generation of new drivers. We’ve had offers for it but, my sense is it belongs right where it is!

Although our name is Hunter and we’ve been the proud occupants of this wonderful place for the better part of our lives, we’ve never hunted or fished to any degree but I do remember, when the smelt were running, standing in the river on the Superior side of the dam with a bucket and hauling out hundreds of smelt which we cleaned and fried up with eggs in the morning. Many of our kids caught their first fish at Saux Head (usually a sunfish or pike). There are many of our guests over the years who were fish inclined and have pulled many trout, salmon and whitefish out of the big lake, river and Saux Head lake. Our family activities usually involve hiking, biking and running the trails and lots of swimming and kayaking (and waterskiing in the early years) in the big lake and Saux Head.

In more recent years, Saux Head has not been used as much as it should have been by our families – with homes all over the country and growing families, none of the brothers have spent extended amounts of time in residence. For me, Saux Head long ago became a state of mind – a place that I can go at will. It is the peaceful place on the large secluded beach next to that freshwater ocean, Lake Superior.

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