We had Friday and Saturday nights booked at Lakehead Boat Basin, located near the aerial lift bridge and the Duluth harbor. This is a favorite spot for us when passing through Duluth. It is primarily a boat yard and marina, but they have RV sites in the area where they haul boats out and store them in the winter. There we have excellent views of the Duluth waterfront, the Duluth Harbor and the historic Aerial Lift Bridge.
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| What a sad sight! |
Our drive from Ely to Duluth was scenic and largely uneventful. Then calamity struck. While making a sharp right turn from the interstate ramp onto a local street about 6 blocks from our camp I struck the curb with my right rear tire. Ouch! The top edge of the curb was very sharp and I knew that could not be good for the sidewall of the tire. Sure enough about 2 blocks later our Tire Pressure Monitoring System (TPMS) sounded off, alerting us to a leak on the right rear outer tire. CRAP! The leak appeared to be slow, so we continued on to the marina about 4 blocks away. As soon as we got parked I inspected the tire and, sure enough, there was a huge gouge in the sidewall. Ironically, I could feel no leaking air from the gouge, and our TPMS indicated the tire pressure was stable. But we were over 1200 miles from home and it is unsafe to drive any significant distance with sidewall damage.
By this time it was close to 4:30 on a Friday afternoon. I located two truck tires dealers in town, but none had tires my size in stock. My 12R 22.5 tires are not common, in fact they are way bigger tires than are necessary for the size of my coach. One dealer said we could get a set of 6 Goodyear 661s here by Monday, and install them for a little over $4000. YIKES! I didn't know if those were the tires I really wanted, and I didn't know if I wanted to replace all 6. Our tires are about 7 years old, and many folks consider that to be close to the end of an RV tire's safe safe life, so replacing the whole set now was certainly a consideration. I told the guy I needed to do some research over the weekend. The guy said he would order the 6 Goodyears, but that I was not obligated to take them.
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A view from our camp at Lakehead Boat Basin
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So here we sit. We had planned to leave Duluth on Sunday, but we knew now that that wasn't gonna happen. Nothing to do but do some tire homework and enjoy the sites of Duluth. We could certainly be stuck in a worse place.
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| The Aerial Lift Bridge over the Duluth Ship Canal |
Following is an excerpt from our post on August 6, 2008 describing how the Duluth Ship Canal came to be:
"The "Twin Ports" serve Duluth, MN and Superior, WI. Actually, there is only one natural entrance to this harbor, the one between Minnesota Point and Wisconsin Point near Superior WI. In the 1870s the folks from Duluth determined that if their city was to prosper, they must establish an opening to the lake closer to their city. Consequently, they began digging the current canal which crosses the base of the peninsula of Minnesota Point. The folks from Superior objected to the the new opening and acquired a Federal injunction to stop the digging. The injunction was issued on a Friday, but could not be served until the following Monday. The folks from Duluth learned of the pending injunction, and had three days before the sheriff could arrive to serve the papers. In those three days the folks from Duluth rallied and completed the canal, making the injunction meaningless, and thereby assuring the prosperity of their city. Typical molasses government bureaucracy at work. Today the famous Aerial Lift Bridge spans the Duluth canal and the Duluth port is much more important than the Superior port."
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| A view of downtown Duluth across the harbor |
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| A 1000' iron ore freighter down bound through the canal to Lake Superior |
Has any one not seen the funny commercials on TV advertising products from Duluth Trading Company? We visited their flagship store on Superior Street to check it out.
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| Anybody need their plumber's butt fixed? |
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| I was tempted to try some, but I'm fairly happy with my Hanes. Besides I gotta keep Dorcas' Hanes retirement stock up anyway. |
We didn't buy anything; products here are not cheap, and we didn't really need anything anyway. They do offer mail order with free shipping, and there is no sales tax on clothing in Minnesota, even for items purchased in local stores. We made some notes and tried some things on. We may place an order in the future.
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| Another signature product |
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| Duluth has a number of beautiful brownstone buildings |
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| Another view from camp |
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| The Aerial Lift Bridge at night |
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| Our home in Duluth at Lakehead Boat Basin |
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| These bridge monuments appear throughout the city. This one was at our camp at Lakehead |
In addition to our sightseeing in Duluth, I made a serious beer run. There are several brews that I really like that are not available in NC, namely Moose Drool, brewed by Big Sky Brewing Company in Missoula MT and several Alaskan Brewing Company products brewed in Juneau AK. Between my beer run in Ely and the one in Duluth I stuffed about $125 worth of beer in the basement of the coach. Fortunately, that was all I had room for, or I might have really gone crazy.
Meanwhile, the tire saga continues. I corresponded with a number of members of 2 RV forums. Many offered good advice and most were incredulous that Country Coach put 12R tires on such a short and relatively light coach. Many suggested I take advantage of the FMCA Michelin Advantage program, which offers discounted Michelin and B.F. Goodrich tires (manufactured by Michelin) to FMCA members. Unfortunately there was no participating Michelin Advantage dealer in Duluth, although there was one in Winston Salem. We really didn't have time to stay very much longer in Duluth, because we were scheduled to attend an RV club rally near home in about a week. So ... it boiled down to three choices: 1) replace all 6 tires with the Goodyear 661s that would come in on Monday, 2) replace only the 2 steer (front) tires and move an older steer tire to replace the broken rear tire, or 3) see if we could find a used tire to put on the rear and limp home and then review our options after returning home. Option 3 was attractive but seemed like a long shot, partly due to its unusual size.
First thing Monday morning I called one of the 2 truck tire dealers, and he did have an old tire in our size. He claimed it had no usable tread, but figured it might get us home. Since this tire was an outer dual, if it began to fail we might be able to see it. Also, a failure on a dual was not as dramatic or dangerous as a failure on a steer tire. He said he could put it on this morning, and tire plus installation would be only $75. If it got us home, that would be a great bargain. We broke camp and rushed over to Jake's Quality tires, about 6 miles away, but generally on our way out of town.
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| Installing the used tire |
The tire did not look as bad as Jake had described it, but it was certainly well worn. They installed the tire and in an hour we were motoring southbound towards home, only one day behind schedule.
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| It seems that truck tires are always mounted manually |
We planned to spend 2 nights on the road, which would mean about 400 miles per day average. Not a terribly ambitious pace. We would stop frequently and monitor the appearance, pressure and temperature of our new old tire. And keep our fingers crossed.
Spoiler alert: The new old tire made it. YEAH!!!!





























































