Death on Lake Michigan’s Left Coast
A Wisconsin state park is popular for its forested camping spots, for its fish-stocked quarry, and mostly for its sandy Lake Michigan shoreline. Milwaukee is a half-hour drive from the park—Chicago, 2 hours. In summer, vacationers here enjoy the beach, the hiking trails, the nights around campfires.
On a Friday in mid–August, five Chicagoans headed to the park for a three-day weekend. All in their early thirties, they sought escape from the pressures of careers and endless dating. On Memorial Day, two of the five had announced their intent to marry. Everyone looked forward to a celebration.
“First stop Mars Cheese Castle!” announced the designated driver as he pulled off I-43. They had all vacationed in Wisconsin before; they loaded up requisite Spotted Cow, cheese curds, and fudge. Back on the northbound expressway, they at last encountered well-tended farms along Lake Michigan. “It’s just remarkably beautiful here,” mumbled Steven, the future groom. His gaze had wandered to Lake Michigan, a band of royal blue beyond sturdy cornrows of green and gold.
“Dude, I think we’re in a dead zone…” said Surya—the future bride—as she watched her calls drop. “At least my boss won’t be able to get a hold of me,” she said, dully. They all pulled out their phones and tapped desperately as their calls disappeared. They fell silent. The world population is connected via mobile phones. Without them, each camper realized the group’s profound isolation.
At their campsite the five Chicagoans set up new tents, blew up new air mattresses, and unrolled new sleeping bags. They found supplies for their breakfast of eggs, sausages, and coffee to be cooked on an open fire. Then they looked at one another, wondering what to do next.
“To the beach!” came the rallying cry. In Chicago, the five frequented the splendid city beaches situated safely inside harbors and breakwaters. On summer nights, Zamboni-like machines rumbled back and forth to rid the imported sand of debris. As the campers ducked into tents to don bathing suits and mosquito repellent, they anticipated an utterly familiar Lake Michigan. As Lake Michigan’s Left Coast slipped into twilight, they drank, dined, and dug toes into the bliss of sun-warmed sand.
Saturday and Sunday were the most glorious days of summer. Under cloudless skies, Lake Michigan appeared to the campers as rippled glass. Strong swimmers all, they raced one another in the cool, fresh water. They lounged in beach chairs, rubbed on SPFs, and felt just fine in the blazing August sun. On Saturday night, they passed around a bottle of Kentucky’s finest and, beside smoldering logs, toasted the soon-to-be bride and groom.
On Sunday night, they lingered as Lake Michigan lapped gently at their ankles. They had fallen under the spell of the summer-warm water and believed the Lake to be tame, even welcoming. The decision to postpone their departure until Monday afternoon was unanimous. They tumbled into tents to dream of another day of heaven at a Great Lake beach.
Anyone familiar with the Great Lakes climate knows the weather can change quickly and dramatically. Monday morning arrived with stiff northeast winds off the Lake. The campers’ plan was to pack up, hop in the car in beach clothes, and arrive in Chicago around sunset. As they loaded the trunk, the five noticed enormous white cumulus clouds low in the sky, shuffling rapidly to the southwest.
At the beach, the cool lake breeze was welcome against the weekend’s sunburns. The campers downed the last Spotted Cows and splashed at the shoreline. When the northeast wind built velocity, they donned hoodies and huddled on damp beach towels.
As the waves kicked up, one of the five noticed a spot where the water was oddly flat. It was eddying, sand appearing intermittently. “A sandbar! Let’s go out there!” shouted the camper over the wind and ever-louder waves. The other four peered from under their hoods, and they too spotted a sandbar not far from shore.
The group shed their hoodies and dashed into Lake Michigan. Fifteen feet from the beach, the sandy bottom disappeared, and under their feet the water was cold, oh so cold. Defiantly they swam through the oncoming waves until their feet hit gravelly sand. They clambered up the sandbar and stood out of breath and shivering at its highest point.
Above their heads the increasing clouds were low and partly gray, but in between, the mid-August sun still warmed them. They fell silent as they looked out at Lake Michigan—its shades of azure and sapphire now broken by shreds of whitecaps. There was nothing between them and the endless midnight deep. They faced the wild surf of the inland sea.
Steven turned around and gasped. The others turned and saw they were farther from the beach than they thought. Massive waves rolled toward shore, crashing onto the beach where they left their hoodies. “Like an ocean,” Surya uttered, her words lost in the din of wind and waves. They looked at one another, a little intimidated. Rested but cold, they waded off the sandbar for the 20-yard swim to shore.
Sometimes the most momentous consequences result from the most trivial decisions. Like swimming to a sandbar in Lake Michigan to prolong a long summer weekend. The campers had heard of the Lake’s stealthy currents, but they had reached the sandbar OK. They had heard of rip tides but did not know the overpowering currents frequently occur around sandbars. They started to swim back to the shoreline. Between the sandbar and the beach, the campers became separated. Individually they learned that Lake Michigan is unforgiving. It gives only one chance.
Within moments of one another, three campers dragged themselves onto the beach. Wide-eyed with fear from battling a rip tide, they scanned the surf for their two companions. They yelled above the roaring waves and peered into rolling white caps. There was no sign of either one. They dashed to yank phones from their gear. Their frantic calls to 911 dropped; they remembered they were in a cellular dead zone.
Shortly, at the south end of the park, a man walking his dog spotted a limp woman in shallow water and pulled Surya to shore. His calls to 911 dropped. He witnessed Surya’s last breath right there on the beach. Two weeks later, Steven’s floating corpse was spotted off Door County, some 120 miles to the north.

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