{"id":9770,"date":"2023-09-07T18:38:00","date_gmt":"2023-09-07T23:38:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/northernsentry.com\/?p=9770"},"modified":"2023-09-06T22:09:30","modified_gmt":"2023-09-07T03:09:30","slug":"one-big-lake-sakakawea-offers-it-all","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/northernsentry.com\/2023\/09\/07\/one-big-lake-sakakawea-offers-it-all\/","title":{"rendered":"One Big Lake! Sakakawea Offers It All"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

\u201cHey what did you do this weekend?\u201d it\u2019s a common question, and even though you expect a return answer, let\u2019s face it, you may not be paying attention to what is said.<\/p>\n\n\n\n


Never do you expect a comeback that describes a weekend where you loaded up a 27 foot sailboat with enough provisions for three days, check the weather, and decide your camping destination based on the wind forecast for the next 48 hours. However, on most weekends that would be my answer.<\/p>\n\n\n\n


\u201cMy wife and I jumped aboard our sailboat, Celebration, and headed west to Berthold Bay (which if you really want to confuse the issue, you explain it is the bay just south of White Earth) on Saturday night and returned to Sharktooth Bay on Sunday night and sailed to the new marina at Ft. Stevenson on Monday morning.\u201d I won\u2019t explain how it is that I learned to sail in the first place. That story is for another day. Let\u2019s just say that we have owned Celebration since 2010 and have had many weekend sailing adventures on beautiful Lake Sakakawea.<\/p>\n\n\n\n


For those of you who may have just arrived in our fair city, if you travelled in from the south on Highway 83, you crossed the embankment, a dividing point between Lake Sakakawea and Lake Audubon. For geographic purposes, Lake Audubon is on the east, and Lake Sakakawea is on the west. From the embankment, Lake Sakakawea, named after the Native American mother who was a guide for Lewis and Clark, stretches another 125 plus miles west to Williston, North Dakota. I once heard there was over a thousand miles of shoreline on Lake Sakakawea. It really could be when you consider the hundreds of bays that stretch back off of the main lake. All I know is that we have explored a small percentage of the many bays and camped overnight in many of them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n