PORT WING, WIS. - It starts with a crack in the lawn.
When Mike Briggs mows his front yard overlooking Lake Superior, he searches for signs of earth weakening below his feet.
Over the past four years, Briggs has watched cracks turn into mudslides as heavy rains, sustained high lake levels and battering storms gobbled up an estimated 75 feet of shoreline from the dream property that he and his wife Kathy bought more than two decades ago. The once sprawling lawn in front of their little log cabin is now just three swaths of a lawn mower deep. Instead of remodeling the memory-filled vacation home, as they had planned, the Cannon Falls, Minn., couple made the gut-wrenching decision two years ago to give up and start over, building a new structure farther off the shoreline.
Pouring money into the old home just wasn't worth the risk.
"We never thought that within our lifetime, we'd have to worry about it," said Mike Briggs, 69, as he shook his head in dismay. "Wet clay is just like Jell-O."
After several years of high water on the Great Lakes, residents and governments along the shores are scrambling to figure out what to do to combat Mother Nature's wrath. As the water keeps rising, many are fortifying shorelines with giant boulders and concrete walls, rebuilding infrastructure and, in some cases, considering selling properties while they're still habitable.
"The entire system is waterlogged," said Keith Kompoltowicz, chief of watershed hydrology for the Detroit district of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. "There's just a tremendous amount of water flowing into the lakes at the moment."
All of the Great Lakes are on track to set or tie record-high monthly mean levels for June. Lake Superior hit a new such high for May, while Lake Erie set a record for the highest monthly mean water level of all time in a century of record-keeping.