During a stormy night in 1878, a ship known as the James R. Bentley sank to the bottom of Lake Huron just north of Rogers ...
After spending nearly a century and a half at the bottom of Lake Huron, a recently recovered historic variety of rye seeds could make a comeback.
The Bentley rye seeds, recovered from a shipwreck 145 years later, are set to be revived and turned into whiskey.
Divers have recovered seeds of a long-lost rye variety from a 146-year-old shipwreck in Lake Huron. Scientists hope to bring ...
The 183-foot Portsmouth rests in crystal-clear water just off the shore of Middle Island in Lake Huron, according to the NOAA ...
The rye sunk in a shipwreck in Lake Huron doesn't exist anywhere else in the world, and now a Michigan distillery wants to ...
Fox 17 reported on Sunday that Chad Munger of Mammoth Distilling joined forces with historian and shipwreck hunter Ross ...
In an extraordinary feat, scientists have retrieved 145-year-old rye seeds from a Lake Huron shipwreck and plan to turn them into whiskey. This effort not only seeks to revive a lost crop but also ...
Mammoth Distilling in northern Michigan offers, among other spirits, a variety of whiskey products largely made from rye.
The hope is the Bentley rye can be combined with another variety known as Rosen rye to create a historic crop that can be ...
Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, designated in 2000, is a 4,300-square-mile underwater preserve that protects more than 100 historic shipwrecks in Lake Huron off the Michigan coast.