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Lake Erie's secret: Pelee Island

The southernmost inhabited bit of Canada is Pelee Island, a 36-square mile island in Lake Erie just 90 minutes from Sandusky, Ohio by ferry. To its south is an even more southerly uninhabited Canadian island, Middle Island, which was a safe haven for rumrunners during Prohibition, but Pelee is Canada's southernmost community.
Pelee is very quiet and (how shall I put this?) truly out of sync with the urgencies of contemporary life. For the first two days of my stay on Pelee I tried to find a pocket of wireless Internet access. I was unsuccessful. "We're working on it," said a clerk at the police station. "You can use my computer," the owner of Connerlee Bakery offered. "Nowhere on the island," said the guy at the register at Pelee Island Winery. "This is your vacation! Relax! You're as bad as my husband," said the proprietor of Comfortech Bike Rentals. Her husband, it turned out, is Pelee's mayor.
We were on Pelee to celebrate a belated birthday and to chill out. Both goals were accomplished. We rented two adjoining houses at the north end of the island and spent our time biking, swimming, and eating. We had all our meals at home save a few bakery runs and our final night's dinner, which saw us sampling Anchor & Wheel Inn's C$16.95 all-you-can-eat fish fry.
On balance, Pelee is a very affordable place to vacation. Our house rental ran about C$160 per person for the week. Beyond housing, bike rentals (C$20 per day), and the final night's dinner (about C$20 per person) there were no costs beyond market and bakery runs.
Actually, that's not quite true. There is a fabulous Heritage Centre on the island, and we spent a few dollars (adult admission C$3) to check it out. Opened in 1988 by founder Ron Tiessen, it contains well-curated exhibits on various aspects of Pelee's cultural and physical history. The Heritage Centre has helped pioneer organic farming on the island and also operates an annual event in early May called Springsong, which celebrates birds and birding and typically features a banquet with Margaret Atwood, a long-term part-time resident of the island. Ron is a Pelee expert, and talkative to boot, and the Heritage Centre functions as a tourist information center as well as a museum.
There is some great local produce to sample as well. Plenty of local producers sell the fruits of their labors at little roadside stands, and there is also a Saturday farmer's market. Pelee feels on the ground and looks from the air like a set of farms plopped down into Lake Erie.

Pelee is charming, of course, but what sets it apart from dozens of other North American islands full of rental cottages is its sense of being apart from the rest of the world, its lack of resorts, and the fact that it has so few traditional tourist amusements. It feels like a little secret, tucked away for residents and the few people who make the trek. That it barely markets itself surely has something to do with the impressions it sustains.
There's a giddiness in extreme communities, places on the edge of nations or continents, and Pelee is no exception. Visitors hike stealthily through Fish Point Nature Reserve to walk to the very tip of Canada's southernmost inhabited island. A secret of sorts, Pelee shows no sign of morphing into something unrecognizable or overdeveloped anytime soon.
Pelee Island ferry information can be found here.
Filed under: North America, Canada












Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Hellen Sep 10th 2010 10:01AM
Pelee Island is no big secret as birds watchers by the hundreds flock there in the spring and fall for bird watching. They have been doing this for years.
The big secret is Sarnia Ontario some times have more different birds during the migration then Pelee.
Ed Kohne Sep 25th 2010 9:53PM
Now you've told everybody, the carpetbaggers, crack addicts, gamblers,
smokers and prostitutes will ruin the place by the end of this
weekend.
I see that Schwansini's is putting up a burger kiosk at the southernmost
tip of the island which will open next Saturday with free kayak
rentals, candy, and firearms for kids under 14. Plus, because of your
article, there are now ELEVEN casinos scheduled to break ground on the
island on the first week of October 2010.
Just because of your post, lines are forming right now in Cleveland,
Leamington, Detroit, and even Gary, Indiana with 10's of thousands of
people all wanting to go to Pelee Island and ruin the secrecy for all
of us.
Nice job, Alex.
P.S. I wish my blog got this kind of absurdity and comments. :-]