Author: TN

  • Michigan: Escape the Ordinary, Explore the Coastal Wild

    Two Peninsulas, Four Great Lakes, and a Lifetime of Exploration Waiting to Be Discovered.

    There is a moment that happens to nearly every first-time visitor to Michigan that does not happen in many other places in America. You are standing at the edge of Lake Michigan, or Lake Superior, or Lake Huron, and you look out across the water and there is nothing there. No opposite shore. No distant landmass. Just open water stretching to the horizon in every direction, blue or gray or green depending on the weather and the season, waves rolling in like something oceanic. You are standing in the middle of the continent, hundreds of miles from any saltwater coast, and yet the experience is undeniably, powerfully that of standing at the edge of a sea.

    That moment, more than any other, captures what makes Michigan singular among American states. It is a place defined by water. Michigan has more freshwater coastline than any other state in the country, more than 3,000 miles of it, bordering four of the five Great Lakes. It has more than 11,000 inland lakes. It has rivers and streams and waterfalls and wetlands in abundance. The water shapes the landscape, the climate, the economy, the culture, and the psychology of the people who live here. It draws millions of visitors every year who come to sail it, swim it, fish it, paddle it, and simply look at it.

    But Michigan is far more than its water. It is a state of dense northern forests and dramatic sand dunes. It is the birthplace of the American automobile industry and the city that gave the world Motown music. It is the home of Mackinac Island, one of the most charming and idiosyncratic communities in the Midwest, where cars are banned and horse-drawn carriages clip-clop along streets lined with Victorian cottages. It is a place of copper mining history and Native American heritage, of world-class university towns and agricultural abundance, of cherry orchards and wine vineyards and pasties and craft beer. Michigan is a state that contains multitudes, and discovering those multitudes is one of the great pleasures of American travel.

    Understanding Michigan’s Geography
    Before diving into specific destinations and experiences, it is worth understanding the basic geography of Michigan, because the state’s shape is genuinely unusual and has a profound effect on how visitors experience it.
    Michigan is divided into two distinct land masses separated by the Straits of Mackinac, the narrow channel connecting Lake Huron to Lake Michigan. The Lower Peninsula, which resembles a mitten when viewed on a map, contains most of the state’s population, its major cities, and its primary agricultural regions. The Upper Peninsula, connected to the Lower Peninsula by the magnificent Mackinac Bridge, is a vast, sparsely populated wilderness of forests, waterfalls, and Great Lakes shoreline that feels in many respects like a different world. Residents of the Upper Peninsula, known affectionately as Yoopers, have a distinct regional identity and occasionally threaten, with varying degrees of seriousness, to secede and form their own state called Superior.

    The Lower Peninsula’s mitten shape is not just a geographical curiosity. It is also a practical navigation tool. Michiganders routinely use their right hand as a map, pointing to different parts of their palm to indicate locations within the Lower Peninsula. Hold up your right hand, palm facing you, and you are looking at a rough map of the Lower Peninsula, with Detroit at the thumb’s base on the southeast, the tip of the ring finger at the northern tip of the Lower Peninsula, and the heel of the hand representing the southwestern corner near the Indiana border.

    DETROIT AND SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN
    Detroit is one of the great American comeback stories of the 21st century, a city that has absorbed decades of economic hardship, population loss, and reputational damage and emerged with a creative energy and cultural vitality that surprises and delights visitors who arrive with outdated expectations.
    The story of Detroit is inseparable from the story of the American automobile industry. Henry Ford, who was born in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, did not invent the automobile, but he invented the moving assembly line that made automobiles affordable for ordinary Americans, and in doing so transformed American society. The Henry Ford, a sprawling museum complex in Dearborn that encompasses the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, Greenfield Village, the Ford Rouge Factory Tour, and several other attractions, is one of the finest history and technology museums in the world and could easily absorb two full days of exploration. The museum’s collection includes the Rosa Parks bus, the chair in which Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, the limousine in which John F. Kennedy was killed, early automobiles, industrial machinery, and artifacts of everyday American life spanning several centuries. Greenfield Village, an open-air living history museum on the same campus, contains more than 80 historic structures relocated from across the country, including the Wright Brothers’ bicycle shop and the laboratory in which Thomas Edison did much of his greatest work.

    The Motown Museum, housed in the original Hitsville U.S.A. recording studio on West Grand Boulevard, is a pilgrimage site for lovers of popular music. It was in Studio A of this modest house that Berry Gordy built a record label that would change the sound of American music, recording the Temptations, the Supremes, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, the Four Tops, and dozens of other artists who defined an era. The studio has been preserved largely as it was during its peak years, and the tours, led by knowledgeable and enthusiastic guides, convey the electricity and creativity of what happened in these rooms with genuine power.

    The Detroit Institute of Arts, one of the premier art museums in the United States, houses a collection of more than 65,000 works spanning five millennia of human creativity. The museum’s crown jewel is the Detroit Industry Murals, a cycle of 27 fresco panels painted by Diego Rivera in 1932 and 1933 depicting the workers of Detroit’s automobile industry with monumental force and political complexity. The murals are among the great works of public art in America and alone justify a visit to the museum.

    Detroit’s food and entertainment scene has been transformed over the past decade by a wave of entrepreneurial energy and creative investment. Eastern Market, one of the oldest and largest public markets in the United States, fills its historic sheds with produce vendors, specialty food purveyors, butchers, cheese mongers, and artisan makers on weekends, and has attracted a constellation of restaurants, bars, and food businesses to the surrounding neighborhood. The Corktown neighborhood, the city’s oldest surviving neighborhood, has become a hub of independent restaurants, cocktail bars, and creative businesses centered on Michigan Avenue. Greektown, though smaller than it once was, remains a lively entertainment district with excellent restaurants. The Detroit Riverfront, once an industrial wasteland, has been dramatically revitalized into a beautiful linear park with walking and cycling paths, public art installations, and stunning views of Windsor, Ontario directly across the river.

    Ann Arbor, home to the University of Michigan, is one of the finest college towns in America, with a downtown dense with excellent restaurants, independent bookshops, live music venues, and cultural institutions. The University of Michigan’s museums, including the Museum of Art, the Museum of Natural History, and the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, are all excellent and free to visit. The University’s football stadium, known as the Big House, is the largest stadium in the United States by seating capacity, holding more than 107,000 fans, and attending a Michigan Wolverines home game on a autumn Saturday is one of the great spectacle-sport experiences in American life.

    THE WEST MICHIGAN LAKESHORE
    The western shore of the Lower Peninsula, running along the eastern edge of Lake Michigan from the Indiana border north to the tip of the Leelanau Peninsula, is one of the most beautiful stretches of freshwater coastline in the world. The lake-effect climate along this shore, moderated by the enormous thermal mass of Lake Michigan, creates an unusually mild microclimate that supports fruit orchards, vineyards, and lush vegetation. The combination of sand dunes, clear blue water, charming lakeside towns, and excellent food and wine makes this one of Michigan’s most popular and rewarding tourism corridors.

    Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, located near the town of Glen Arbor in the northern part of the western shore, is frequently cited as one of the most beautiful places in America, and the description does not disappoint. The park protects a 35-mile stretch of Lake Michigan shoreline characterized by enormous sand dunes, crystal-clear glacially carved lakes, lush forests, and the undeveloped Manitou Islands. The Dune Climb, a short but steep climb up a massive sand dune overlooking the lake, rewards the effort with views that stretch across the blue water to the Manitou Islands in the distance. The Pierce Stocking Scenic Drive, a 7.4-mile loop through the park, passes a series of overlooks that rank among the most dramatic viewpoints in the Midwest. The Sleeping Bear Heritage Trail allows hikers and cyclists to explore the park’s interior landscapes. The Leelanau Peninsula, which forms the northern boundary of Sleeping Bear Dunes, is a wine-producing region of growing distinction, with dozens of wineries clustered along M-22, a scenic highway that hugs the shoreline through cherry orchards and small lake communities.

    Traverse City is the commercial and cultural hub of northwest Michigan and the self-proclaimed cherry capital of the world. The city sits at the southern end of Grand Traverse Bay, a deep, brilliantly blue arm of Lake Michigan, and its downtown has been transformed over the past two decades into a lively collection of excellent restaurants, breweries, wine bars, boutiques, and galleries. The National Cherry Festival, held every July in Traverse City, is one of the great regional food festivals in the Midwest, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors for a week of cherry-themed events, entertainment, and eating. The Traverse City Film Festival, founded by filmmaker Michael Moore, has grown into a significant cultural event that draws filmmakers and cinephiles every summer. Old Mission Peninsula, a narrow finger of land dividing Grand Traverse Bay into two arms, is dotted with wineries and orchards and bisected by M-37, a scenic road that passes old farmsteads, cherry orchards, and bay views.

    Holland, located on the southwestern coast near the Indiana border, was settled by Dutch immigrants in the mid-19th century and has maintained a strong Dutch cultural identity ever since. Tulip Time, a festival held every May when the city’s millions of tulips are in bloom, transforms Holland into a riot of color and draws visitors from across the Midwest. Windmill Island Gardens, a municipal park containing a 250-year-old authentic Dutch windmill imported from the Netherlands, is a delightful attraction. The city’s beaches, particularly the beach at Holland State Park with its iconic red lighthouse, are among the most photographed spots in Michigan.

    Saugatuck and Douglas, twin communities near the mouth of the Kalamazoo River south of Holland, have a long history as an arts colony and a welcoming community for LGBTQ travelers. The town of Saugatuck, with its galleries, boutiques, and excellent restaurants clustered on and around Butler Street, is one of the most charming small communities in the Midwest. Ox-Bow, an art school affiliated with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago that has operated near Saugatuck since 1910, has contributed to the town’s artistic identity over more than a century. Mount Baldhead, a large sand dune overlooking the town and lake, can be climbed via a wooden staircase and offers spectacular views. Chain Ferry, a hand-cranked cable ferry that crosses the Kalamazoo River between Saugatuck and Douglas, is one of those small, irreplaceable local experiences that visitors remember long after the trip is over.

    Grand Rapids, Michigan’s second-largest city, has undergone a remarkable transformation from a furniture manufacturing center to a culturally vibrant metropolitan area with a world-class art museum, a thriving craft beer industry, and a dynamic food scene. The Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park is one of the finest sculpture gardens in the United States, with an extraordinary collection of large-scale works by internationally renowned artists displayed in beautifully landscaped grounds. The Grand Rapids Art Museum houses a strong collection with particular depth in American and European art. ArtPrize, a juried art competition held in Grand Rapids every autumn, transforms the entire city into an outdoor gallery, with works displayed in public spaces, businesses, parks, and on building facades throughout downtown and beyond.

    MACKINAC ISLAND AND THE STRAITS OF MACKINAC
    At the northern tip of the Lower Peninsula, where Lakes Michigan and Huron meet in the Straits of Mackinac, lies one of the most singular travel destinations in the United States. Mackinac Island, a small, roughly 4-mile-long island accessible only by ferry or small plane, banned motorized vehicles in 1898 and has not looked back. Today, the island’s transportation is provided entirely by horses, bicycles, and human feet, giving it an atmosphere of Victorian-era tranquility that is utterly unlike anywhere else in America.
    The town of Mackinac Island, which clusters around the harbor on the island’s southern shore, is a collection of Victorian gingerbread cottages, grand hotels, fudge shops, and historic buildings that has changed remarkably little in outward appearance over the past century. The Grand Hotel, opened in 1887 and possessing the world’s longest porch at 660 feet, is one of the great historic resort hotels in America. Its white-columned facade, manicured grounds, and formal traditions, including a dress code for evening dining, evoke a world of leisured elegance that has largely vanished from American life. Guests and visitors come for the experience of sitting on that long porch, watching the horse-drawn carriages pass on the street below and the ferries crossing the blue straits beyond.

    Fort Mackinac, a British and later American military fort perched on the bluff above the town, is among the best-preserved historic forts in the Midwest. The fort played important roles in the War of 1812 and in the broader history of the Great Lakes region, and the living history demonstrations and costumed interpreters bring that history to life with skill and enthusiasm. The views from the fort’s walls, looking out over the town, the harbor, and the gleaming Mackinac Bridge in the distance, are spectacular.
    Beyond the town, the island’s interior is a state park of dense cedar and hardwood forest crisscrossed by hiking and riding trails. The most popular ride or bike route is the 8.2-mile road that circles the entire island, hugging the shoreline past dramatic limestone rock formations, quiet coves, and views across the straits. Arch Rock, a massive natural limestone arch rising above the eastern shore of the island, is among the most photographed geological features in Michigan.

    The Mackinac Bridge, which connects the Upper and Lower Peninsulas across the Straits of Mackinac, is itself a destination worth contemplating. Opened in 1957 after decades of political and engineering effort, the bridge spans 26,372 feet from anchorage to anchorage, making it one of the longest suspension bridges in the Western Hemisphere. Driving across it, particularly on a clear day with Lake Michigan shimmering on one side and Lake Huron on the other, is one of those genuinely memorable travel experiences.

    THE UPPER PENINSULA
    Cross the Mackinac Bridge and you enter a different Michigan entirely. The Upper Peninsula, known simply as the U.P. to Michiganders, is a vast, mostly undeveloped wilderness of approximately 16,000 square miles with a permanent population of only about 300,000 people. It is bordered by three Great Lakes: Michigan to the south, Huron to the east, and Superior to the north. It contains the western two-thirds of Lake Superior’s American coastline, some of the most rugged and beautiful lakefront in the world.
    Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, on the Lake Superior shore east of Munising, is the U.P.’s most visited attraction and one of the most spectacular natural landscapes in the Midwest. The park takes its name from the multicolored sandstone cliffs that rise directly from the lake along a 15-mile stretch of shoreline. Minerals leaching through the stone have stained the cliffs in swirling patterns of orange, red, brown, black, blue, and green, and the effect when viewed from the water, from a kayak or a tour boat, is breathtaking. The park also contains waterfalls, inland lakes, sand dunes, beaches, and miles of hiking trails. Miners Beach, within the park, offers some of the most beautiful and accessible Lake Superior swimming, and the water, though achingly cold even in midsummer, is so clear that you can see the sandy bottom in remarkable detail.

    Tahquamenon Falls State Park, near the town of Paradise in the eastern U.P., contains the Tahquamenon Falls, often called the root beer falls for the tannin-colored amber water that flows over them. The Upper Falls, with a drop of nearly 50 feet and a width of more than 200 feet, is one of the largest waterfalls east of the Mississippi River and among the most beautiful. The Lower Falls, a series of smaller cascades around a small island that can be explored by rowboat rented at the site, are equally charming in a more intimate way. The falls are lovely in all seasons, but they are perhaps most dramatic in spring when the river runs high with snowmelt, or in autumn when the surrounding maples and birches turn brilliant orange and red.
    Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park, in the western U.P. near the Wisconsin border, is one of the largest state parks in the eastern United States and contains the largest tract of old-growth northern hardwood forest remaining in the Midwest. The park’s highlight is the Lake of the Clouds, a long, narrow wilderness lake cupped in a forested valley that can be viewed from overlooks perched on the escarpment above. The view, particularly in October when the hardwoods are at peak color, is one of the most beautiful things in Michigan. The park has more than 90 miles of hiking trails, a network of rustic cabins available for rent, and in winter a small downhill ski area and extensive cross-country skiing opportunities.

    Copper Country, the western tip of the U.P., was one of the most important mining regions in 19th-century America. For decades, the Keweenaw Peninsula was the primary source of copper for the industrializing nation, and the communities that grew up around the mines, particularly the town of Calumet, were prosperous and cosmopolitan far beyond what their remote location might suggest. Keweenaw National Historical Park preserves the legacy of this copper mining era with museums, historic buildings, and ranger-led programs. The Quincy Mine, just north of Hancock, offers tours that take visitors deep underground into the actual mine workings, a dramatic and memorable experience.

    Isle Royale National Park, accessible only by ferry or seaplane from ports in Michigan and Minnesota, is the most remote and least visited national park in the lower 48 states, and that is precisely its appeal. The island, 45 miles long and 9 miles wide, sits in the northwestern corner of Lake Superior and contains a remarkable ecosystem dominated by moose and wolves, whose predator-prey relationship has been the subject of one of the longest continuous ecological studies in scientific history. There are no roads on the island. Visitors either backpack on its network of trails or paddle its coastal waters by canoe or kayak. The effort required to get there and move through the park filters out all but the most dedicated visitors, and the wilderness experience that results is genuinely profound.

    THE NORTHERN LOWER PENINSULA
    The northern half of the Lower Peninsula, above a rough line drawn between Muskegon on the west and Bay City on the east, is a landscape of pine forests, blue inland lakes, trout streams, and small resort communities that swells with visitors in summer and skiers in winter. This is Michigan’s primary resort region, a vast outdoor playground that has been drawing vacationers from the cities of the Midwest since the railroad arrived in the 19th century.
    Petoskey, on Little Traverse Bay in the northwestern Lower Peninsula, is a gracious Victorian resort town with a charming downtown known as Gaslight District. The town is famous for Petoskey stones, the fossilized coral stones that wash up on Lake Michigan beaches and are unique to the region. The Stafford’s Perry Hotel, a historic inn overlooking the bay, is one of the most beloved historic lodging properties in northern Michigan. Ernest Hemingway spent his boyhood summers at his family’s cottage on nearby Walloon Lake, and the landscape of northern Michigan appears throughout his early fiction.

    Charlevoix, another Lake Michigan resort town south of Petoskey, has a beautiful harbor at the point where Lake Charlevoix connects to Lake Michigan and a charming downtown with good shops and restaurants. The town is also famous for its Mushroom Houses, a collection of whimsical homes with curved, organic rooflines built by local contractor Earl Young in the mid-20th century. The Beaver Island Ferry, departing from Charlevoix Harbor, provides access to Beaver Island, the largest island in Lake Michigan and another of those quiet, car-accessible-but-still-isolated communities that give northern Michigan some of its most interesting character.
    Gaylord, in the center of the northern Lower Peninsula, is the hub of one of the Midwest’s finest golf regions. The area around Gaylord contains more than 30 championship golf courses within a short drive, and the combination of rolling terrain, pine forests, and well-designed courses has given the region the nickname “Golf Mecca of the Midwest.” Treetops Resort and Garland Lodge and Resort are among the premier facilities in the area.
    The Traverse City area, already mentioned in the West Michigan lakeshore section, extends its influence throughout the northwest Lower Peninsula. The Leelanau Peninsula wine trail, the cherry orchards of the Old Mission Peninsula, and the beaches and dunes of Sleeping Bear National Lakeshore make this consistently one of the top-ranked travel destinations in the Midwest.

    Michigan’s Food and Drink
    Michigan’s culinary identity is shaped by its agricultural abundance, its Great Lakes fishing heritage, its immigrant communities, and a craft beverage industry that has grown to become one of the finest in the country.
    The pasty, a meat-filled pastry turnover of Cornish origin, arrived in the Upper Peninsula with the copper and iron miners who came from Cornwall, England in the 19th century. The U.P. pasty, pronounced PASS-tee by locals, typically contains beef, potato, onion, and rutabaga encased in a thick, sturdy crust meant to be eaten by hand. Pasty shops are found throughout the Upper Peninsula and the tradition is taken seriously, with heated debates about the proper ingredients, the appropriate crimping style, and whether ketchup is an acceptable condiment. Trying a pasty in the U.P. is a non-negotiable cultural experience.

    Michigan’s Great Lakes and inland waters support a rich fishing heritage, and freshwater fish appear prominently on menus throughout the state. Lake whitefish, a mild, delicate fish abundant in the Great Lakes, is a particular delight when smoked, and smoked whitefish from small operations in towns like Glen Arbor, Leland, and Charlevoix is one of the great regional food pleasures of the Midwest. Leland’s Fishtown, a collection of historic fishing shacks and smokehouses on the Leland River, is a working fishing community and cultural landmark where you can buy smoked and fresh fish directly from the source.

    The Great Lakes region’s cherry production is dominated by Michigan, which grows roughly 70 percent of all tart cherries produced in the United States. The cherry harvest of the Traverse City and Leelanau areas in late July produces an abundance that finds its way into pies, jams, juices, dried fruit, chocolate-covered confections, and numerous other products. Cherry pie from a northern Michigan bakery during harvest season is one of those simple, perfect pleasures.
    Michigan’s craft beer industry is one of the most developed in the country. The state regularly ranks among the top five in the nation by number of craft breweries, and the concentration of quality is high. Bell’s Brewery in Kalamazoo, founded in 1985, is one of the pioneering craft breweries in America and is widely credited with helping ignite the national craft beer revolution. Founders Brewing Company in Grand Rapids produces beers, including its cult-status KBS (Kentucky Breakfast Stout), that attract serious beer enthusiasts from around the country. Short’s Brewing Company in Bellaire and Brewery Vivant in Grand Rapids are among dozens of other standout producers scattered throughout the state.
    The wine industry of the Lake Michigan Shore and Leelanau Peninsula AVAs has matured significantly in recent decades. The lake-moderating climate, which delays both spring budbreak and autumn frost, allows varieties like Riesling, Pinot Gris, and Pinot Noir to ripen properly in a region that would otherwise be too cold for quality viticulture. Black Star Farms, Chateau Grand Traverse, and Shady Lane Cellars are among the most respected producers.

    Cider, made from the abundant apple production of the state’s fruit belt along the Lake Michigan shore, has become an increasingly serious and sophisticated craft product in Michigan. Virtue Cider in Fennville and Tandem Ciders in Suttons Bay are among the producers making exceptional ciders using traditional methods.

    History and Culture
    Michigan’s history begins long before European contact, with the territories of the Anishinaabe peoples, including the Ojibwe (Chippewa), Ottawa (Odawa), and Potawatomi nations, whose relationship with this land stretches back thousands of years. Several federally recognized tribes continue to maintain sovereign nations within Michigan’s borders today, and their cultural presence, from the powwows and museums to the casinos and tribal environmental stewardship programs, is a living and significant part of the state’s identity.
    French explorers, missionaries, and fur traders arrived in the Great Lakes region in the 17th century, and Michigan’s place names retain the deep imprint of that French colonial presence. Sault Sainte Marie, the oldest European settlement in Michigan, was established by the Jesuit missionary Jacques Marquette in 1668 and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. Fort Michilimackinac, a reconstructed French and British colonial fort at the tip of the Lower Peninsula in Mackinaw City, offers living history demonstrations and archaeological exploration that illuminate this early colonial period.

    The War of 1812 played out significantly on Michigan’s waters and soil. The Battle of Lake Erie, fought just west of the Ohio coast but with profound implications for Michigan, resulted in an American naval victory that helped secure control of the Great Lakes. Fort Mackinac on Mackinac Island changed hands between American and British forces during the war.
    The copper and iron mining booms of the 19th century, centered in the Upper Peninsula, were among the most significant industrial episodes in American history. At its peak, Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula was producing more than 75 percent of the nation’s copper supply, and the wealth generated by that production funded grand civic buildings, opera houses, and public institutions that still stand in communities like Calumet, Hancock, and Houghton.

    The automobile industry transformed not just Detroit but the entire industrial Midwest and, through the ripple effects of mass motorization, American society itself. Michigan’s automobile heritage is preserved and celebrated at the Henry Ford museum complex in Dearborn, the Automotive Hall of Fame in Dearborn, the Gilmore Car Museum near Kalamazoo, and dozens of smaller collections throughout the state. The annual Woodward Dream Cruise, held every August along Woodward Avenue in the Detroit suburbs, draws hundreds of thousands of classic car enthusiasts and is the largest single-day automotive event in the world.

    The Motown sound, developed in Detroit’s recording studios in the early 1960s, was among the most influential movements in the history of popular music, and its legacy echoes in virtually every genre of commercial music made since. Detroit’s subsequent contributions to music include the MC5 and the proto-punk movement of the late 1960s, the hard rock of Bob Seger and later Kid Rock, the electronic music of Derrick May and Juan Atkins who pioneered techno in the 1980s, and the hip-hop legacy of Eminem and Big Sean in more recent decades.

    Outdoor Recreation
    Michigan’s outdoor recreation opportunities are so extensive that they can barely be summarized in a section of any reasonable length. The state has 103 state parks, four national forests, two national lakeshores, and one national park, along with thousands of miles of trails, rivers, and shoreline in various stages of protection and accessibility.
    Winter sports are a major draw, particularly in the Upper Peninsula and the northern Lower Peninsula. Marquette Mountain, Blackjack, Indianhead, Brule Mountain, and the Porcupine Mountains ski area in the U.P., along with Crystal Mountain and Shanty Creek in the Lower Peninsula, offer downhill skiing in a snowfall-rich environment. Cross-country skiing and snowshoeing opportunities throughout the state’s forests are exceptional, and snowmobiling on the U.P.’s vast network of groomed trails is a serious regional recreation culture.
    Mountain biking has found outstanding terrain in Michigan, particularly on the trails around Marquette in the U.P., the Glacial Hills trail system near Rochester, and the North Country Trail and Ore-to-Shore route in various parts of the state.

    Fishing, as mentioned earlier, is a pursuit of near-religious seriousness for many Michiganders. The state’s inland trout streams, particularly the Au Sable and Manistee rivers in the northern Lower Peninsula, are legendary among fly fishers. The Au Sable, often compared to the finest trout rivers in the world, is the venue for the Au Sable River Canoe Marathon, a grueling overnight race from Grayling to Oscoda that is one of the most demanding paddle races in North America.
    Birding is increasingly recognized as a major draw for outdoor visitors to Michigan. The state’s position along major migratory flyways, combined with the diversity of its habitats, makes it one of the best birding states in the eastern United States. Whitefish Point in the Upper Peninsula, jutting into Lake Superior near Paradise, is a world-renowned raptor migration site where hawks, owls, and eagles funnel past in enormous numbers during spring migration.

    Practical Travel Information
    Michigan’s climate is continental, shaped by the moderating influence of the Great Lakes, which prevent temperature extremes near the shorelines but contribute to heavy lake-effect snowfall in winter. The Upper Peninsula receives among the highest snowfall totals anywhere in the eastern United States, with some communities recording well over 200 inches of snow in a typical winter.
    Summer, from late June through August, is the peak tourism season throughout the state, when the weather is warm, the water is swimmable, and the full range of outdoor activities is available. Fall, particularly September and October, is arguably the most beautiful season in Michigan, when the hardwood forests of both peninsulas transform into spectacular displays of red, orange, and yellow that draw leaf-peepers from across the Midwest. Spring is changeable and often muddy in the north, but the cherry blossom season along the Lake Michigan shore in May is beautiful.

    Detroit Metropolitan Airport is the state’s primary air gateway and a major hub for Delta Air Lines, with extensive domestic and international connections. Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids and Cherry Capital Airport in Traverse City serve the western and northern parts of the state respectively.
    Driving is essential for exploring Michigan beyond the Detroit metropolitan area. The state’s highway network is extensive, and the scenic routes, including US-2 along the Lake Michigan shore of the Upper Peninsula, M-22 through the Leelanau and sleeping Bear Dunes area, and M-28 across the center of the Upper Peninsula, are among the finest driving roads in the Midwest.
    Accommodation ranges from major urban hotels in Detroit, Grand Rapids, and other cities to historic resort hotels on Mackinac Island and the northern shores, to thousands of cottages, vacation rental homes, and campgrounds throughout the state’s resort regions. Renting a cottage on one of northern Michigan’s inland lakes for a week is the quintessential Michigan vacation for much of the Midwest, and the tradition goes back more than a century.

    Conclusion
    Michigan is a state that rewards patience and curiosity in equal measure. It does not announce itself loudly. Its greatest pleasures reveal themselves gradually, through the experience of standing at the edge of Lake Superior and feeling the immensity of that cold blue water, of watching the sun set over the sand dunes at Sleeping Bear, of eating smoked whitefish on the dock in Leland and feeling that you have found something that could not exist anywhere else.
    It is a state shaped by water and industry, by hard winters and glorious summers, by the people who came to mine its copper and build its cars and catch its fish, and by the people who have always been here, whose relationship with this land runs deeper than any European arrival can measure. It is Detroit’s gritty, brilliant creative reinvention and Mackinac Island’s time-stopped Victorian serenity. It is the silence of the Isle Royale backcountry and the roar of 107,000 fans in the Big House. It contains more than most people expect, and less of the ordinary than almost anywhere.

    Come to Michigan with time to spare and an open mind, and the state will give you more than you came looking for. That is the nature of this place, and it is why those who know it best return to its shores, again and again, for the whole of their lives.

    Michigan — Great Lakes. Great Times. And a greatness that takes a lifetime to fully discover.

  • Seattle, Washington: Where the City Meets the Sound

    Seattle stands at the edge of the American continent like a city that chose its location with theatrical intent. Draped across a narrow isthmus between Puget Sound to the west and Lake Washington to the east, ringed by the snow-capped volcanic peaks of the Cascade and Olympic mountain ranges, and wrapped for much of the year in a soft, pewter-gray mist that softens every edge and deepens every green, Seattle is one of the most physically spectacular cities in the United States. It is also one of the most intellectually alive, culturally adventurous, economically dynamic, and quietly self-assured.

    This is the city that gave the world Starbucks and grunge music, Boeing and Amazon, Microsoft and Nirvana, the Pike Place Market and the Space Needle. It is a city of software engineers and salmon fishermen, of ferry commuters reading novels in the rain, of coffee shops where serious conversations about serious things happen over serious cups of coffee, of breweries and bookstores and food halls and hiking trails that begin within the city limits and end in genuine wilderness. It is a city that has changed faster than almost any other in America over the past three decades – transformed by the tech boom from a mid-sized port city with a strong blue-collar identity into one of the wealthiest and most educated metropolitan areas in the world — and that is still, in the way of all cities undergoing profound change, trying to understand what it is becoming without losing what it has always been.

    Seattle sits in the Pacific Northwest -that vast, green, rain-soaked, mountain-shadowed corner of the continent that occupies its own imaginative space in the American geography, distinct from the California coast to its south, the Canadian wilderness to its north, the high desert to its east. The Pacific Northwest has a personality as distinctive as its landscape: independent, environmentally conscious, technologically sophisticated, culturally eclectic, and deeply, almost religiously devoted to the outdoors. Seattle is the urban expression of all of these qualities, concentrated into a city of hills and water and evergreen trees where the mountains are never far from view and the ocean is always in the air.

    Come to Seattle prepared for rain – not the dramatic, thunderous rain of the Gulf Coast or the violent downpours of the Midwest, but a persistent, gentle, atmosphere-defining drizzle that the locals have long since made their peace with and that gives the city its particular quality of introspective, cozy intimacy. Come prepared to eat and drink extraordinarily well. Come prepared to walk hills that will test your legs and reward your eyes. And come prepared to be surprised by a city that is considerably more complex, more beautiful, and more interesting than its popular image – flannel shirts, coffee cups, and tech campuses – might suggest.

    Getting There
    Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA), universally known as Sea-Tac, is located about 14 miles south of downtown Seattle in the city of SeaTac. It is one of the busiest airports in the United States and serves as a major gateway to the Pacific Rim, with extensive direct service to Asian destinations including Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Taipei, as well as comprehensive domestic coverage and European connections. Alaska Airlines, which was founded in Seattle and maintains its largest hub here, operates the most flights, followed by Delta, Southwest, United, and American.

    The Link Light Rail system connects Sea-Tac directly to downtown Seattle and beyond in approximately 40 minutes – one of the most convenient airport-to-city rail connections in the United States. Trains run frequently from early morning until well past midnight, and the fare is modest. Taxis and ride-sharing services are available at the airport. Several express bus routes also connect to downtown. For visitors renting a car, the rental car center is connected to the terminal by a shuttle.

    Amtrak serves Seattle’s King Street Station – a beautiful 1906 Beaux-Arts building that has been handsomely restored – with three routes. The Coast Starlight runs the length of the Pacific Coast between Seattle and Los Angeles, passing through Portland, the Sacramento Valley, and the Bay Area in one of the most scenically spectacular long-distance rail journeys in North America. The Empire Builder crosses the northern tier of the country to Chicago via Spokane, Glacier National Park, and the upper Midwest. The Amtrak Cascades connects Seattle to Portland, Eugene, and Vancouver, British Columbia, in comfortable, scenic comfort along the Puget Sound shoreline.

    Greyhound and Flixbus connect Seattle to regional destinations. Washington State Ferries, the largest ferry system in the United States, connects Seattle to Bainbridge Island, Bremerton, Vashon Island, and other Puget Sound communities from the downtown Coleman Dock terminal — one of the most beautiful and practical commuter ferry systems in the world.
    For those driving, Interstate 5 is the primary north-south artery connecting Seattle to Tacoma and Olympia to the south and to Everett, Bellingham, and the Canadian border to the north. Interstate 90 runs east over the Cascades through Snoqualmie Pass toward Spokane and the Idaho border. Highway 2 offers a more scenic mountain crossing via Stevens Pass.

    Getting Around
    Seattle is a city of hills — the original seven hills rival San Francisco’s for steepness, and the topography makes walking between neighborhoods an athletic proposition. That said, individual neighborhoods are very walkable within themselves, and the transit system has expanded considerably in recent years.
    The Link Light Rail is the backbone of the transit system, running from Everett in the north through downtown, Sea-Tac airport, and Tacoma in the south, with branches to Bellevue and Redmond on the Eastside. The downtown tunnel stations connect the light rail to several bus routes. Sound Transit continues to expand the light rail network, and it has become increasingly practical for navigating the central city and inner neighborhoods without a car.

    The Seattle Monorail, built for the 1962 World’s Fair, still operates its original 1.3-mile route between the Seattle Center (home of the Space Needle) and the Westlake Center shopping mall in downtown — a brief but atmospheric ride on a genuine piece of mid-century optimism.

    The King County Metro bus system provides comprehensive coverage throughout the city and inner suburbs. The South Lake Union Streetcar and First Hill Streetcar connect several central neighborhoods to downtown. The Water Taxi connects downtown to West Seattle across Elliott Bay. Washington State Ferries provide both practical transportation and one of the finest scenic experiences in the region.

    Cycling in Seattle has become considerably more practical with the expansion of protected bike lanes and the availability of Lime and other bikeshare systems, though the hills remain a genuine challenge for casual riders. Electric bikes and scooters are widely available.
    Driving in Seattle requires patience. Traffic congestion is severe — consistently ranked among the worst in the nation — and parking downtown is expensive and scarce. Most visitors staying downtown find that they can manage the central neighborhoods without a car and rent one only for day trips.

    Neighborhoods to Know
    Seattle’s neighborhoods are dramatically diverse in character, topography, and atmosphere, and each rewards exploration on its own terms.
    Downtown and the Central Business District is the commercial core of the city, anchored by the Pike Place Market at its northern waterfront end and Benaroya Hall to the south. The downtown core has undergone significant stress in recent years — a challenge shared by many American downtowns in the post-pandemic period — but remains home to important cultural institutions, excellent restaurants, major hotels, and the Pike Place Market, which functions as a city unto itself.

    Pike Place Market deserves its own paragraph because it is not merely a tourist attraction but the living heart of Seattle’s public life and one of the great urban markets in the world. Established in 1907 as a farmers market connecting agricultural producers directly to urban consumers, it has grown into a nine-acre labyrinth of covered arcades, open-air stalls, small shops, restaurants, and craftspeople spread across multiple levels descending toward the waterfront. The fish market at Pike Place Fish Company — where fishmongers throw whole salmon through the air with theatrical precision — is justly famous, but the market’s real treasures are the small farmers selling seasonal produce, the flower vendors whose stalls overflow with dahlias and sunflowers and tulips, the bakeries and cheese shops and spice merchants, and the dozens of tiny specialty food shops that have occupied their stalls for decades. The original Starbucks, opened at 1912 Pike Place in 1971, is here as well, perpetually surrounded by a line of tourists that stretches around the corner.

    Belltown sits just north of downtown and has evolved from a neighborhood of warehouses and artists’ studios into a dense residential and entertainment district with some of the city’s best restaurants, cocktail bars, and the celebrated Belltown neighborhood of the pre-tech boom Seattle that nurtured grunge music in the early 1990s.

    South Lake Union was, within living memory, a neighborhood of light industrial buildings and marine supply shops around the southern end of Lake Union. Amazon’s decision to locate its world headquarters here in the 2010s transformed it into one of the most dramatic examples of urban redevelopment in American history — a gleaming campus of glass towers, including the extraordinary Spheres (three interconnected glass domes housing a rainforest botanical garden open to the public), surrounded by restaurants, coffee shops, and residential towers that house tens of thousands of Amazon employees. The Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI) sits on the lake shore in the former Naval Armory building and is one of the finest urban history museums in the country.

    Capitol Hill is Seattle’s most vibrant and eclectic neighborhood — the center of the city’s LGBTQ+ community, its alternative music and arts scene, its independent restaurant culture, and its progressive political identity. Broadway is the neighborhood’s main commercial artery, lined with coffee shops, restaurants, bars, vintage clothing stores, and the occasional dance studio. Pike and Pine Streets form the heart of the bar and nightlife district. The neighborhood contains a remarkable density of excellent restaurants, from Ethiopian spots on Pike Street to ramen shops on Broadway to some of the city’s most ambitious fine dining establishments. Cal Anderson Park is the neighborhood’s outdoor living room — a park of green lawns, a reflecting pool, and a reservoir that serves as a gathering place for the community in all weathers.

    First Hill sits adjacent to Capitol Hill and is home to several of Seattle’s major hospitals and medical institutions, giving it a more utilitarian character, but it also contains the Frye Art Museum — a small, free museum with a permanent collection of nineteenth-century European and American painting and excellent temporary exhibitions — and the Sorrento Hotel, one of Seattle’s oldest and most atmospheric lodging options.

    The Central District is the historic heart of Seattle’s African American community — a neighborhood that has been shaped by decades of discriminatory housing policies, cultural creativity, and more recently by significant gentrification pressures. It is the birthplace of Jimi Hendrix, and its historically Black churches, community institutions, and cultural organizations tell a story of a community’s resilience and creativity that is central to understanding Seattle’s full identity.
    Madrona, Leschi, and the Madison Valley are quiet, residential neighborhoods on the western shore of Lake Washington with lovely parks, excellent neighborhood restaurants, and beach access to the lake.

    The International District — encompassing Chinatown, Japantown, and Little Saigon — sits just south of downtown and contains the most geographically concentrated diversity of Asian American communities and food cultures in the city. The Uwajimaya supermarket is a magnificent Asian grocery emporium; the Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience is one of the finest community-based museums in the country, operated in genuine partnership with the communities it represents.

    Pioneer Square is Seattle’s oldest neighborhood — the district built on the filled tideflats after the Great Seattle Fire of 1889 destroyed the original wooden city. Its red-brick Richardsonian Romanesque architecture, largely intact and carefully preserved, gives it a character unlike any other Seattle neighborhood. It is home to art galleries, the underground tour of the city’s buried Victorian-era streets, sports stadiums, and a nightlife scene that has waxed and waned over the decades.

    Fremont calls itself the Center of the Universe — tongue in cheek but with genuine conviction — and has the personality to back up the claim. This quirky, creative neighborhood north of Lake Union is home to an enormous concrete troll crouching under the Aurora Bridge, a statue of Lenin rescued from the former Soviet bloc, a Cold War-era rocket ship attached to a storefront, and a community of artists, technologists, brewers, and individualists who take considerable pleasure in Fremont’s reputation for benign eccentricity. The Sunday Fremont Market and the Solstice Parade (featuring the nude cyclist contingent that has scandalized and delighted Seattleites for decades) are neighborhood highlights.

    Wallingford sits next to Fremont and offers a quieter, more residential but equally characterful version of North Seattle life, with excellent neighborhood restaurants, the magnificent Gas Works Park on Lake Union, and a strong community identity.
    Green Lake centers on a natural lake in North Seattle ringed by a 2.8-mile paved path that serves as the city’s most popular recreational circuit. The surrounding neighborhood is family-friendly, walkable, and possessed of excellent coffee shops and restaurants.

    Ballard was a Scandinavian fishing community incorporated into Seattle in 1907 and still retains traces of that heritage in its culture and architecture, even as it has evolved into one of the most popular and restaurant-rich neighborhoods in the city. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks — the engineering works that control the water level difference between Puget Sound and the Lake Washington Ship Canal — are a remarkable public attraction where visitors can watch boats of all sizes pass between salt and fresh water and observe salmon climbing the fish ladder during the late summer and fall migration. The Ballard Farmers Market on Sundays is one of the finest in the city.

    West Seattle sits across Elliott Bay from downtown and is connected by bridge and water taxi. Its Alki Beach is the longest stretch of urban beach in Seattle, with a bicycle path, beach volleyball courts, and a view of the downtown skyline across the water that is one of the most beautiful urban vistas in the Pacific Northwest. The Junction neighborhood is a lively commercial district with excellent restaurants and shops.

    History & Culture
    Seattle’s history is relatively young by the standards of older American cities, but it is dense with incident and shaped by forces — the Klondike Gold Rush, the timber and fishing industries, the labor movement, the Japanese American incarceration of World War II, the Boeing boom and bust cycles, the rise of grunge, and the tech revolution — that give it a narrative arc of considerable drama.

    The Duwamish people, closely related to other Coast Salish communities of the Pacific Northwest, inhabited the shores of Elliott Bay and the rivers flowing into it for thousands of years before European contact. The city takes its name from Chief Seattle — Si’ahl in the Lushootseed language — the leader of the Duwamish and Suquamish peoples who forged a pragmatic accommodation with the first American settlers. His famous speech on the relationship between the living and the dead, between people and the land, is one of the most debated documents in Pacific Northwest history; its authentic text has been disputed and embellished, but its spirit has become a touchstone of the region’s environmental consciousness.

    American settlement began in earnest in 1851 when the Denny Party landed at Alki Point in present-day West Seattle. The settlement moved to the more protected shores of Elliott Bay and grew through the timber trade, eventually becoming a major port city. The Great Seattle Fire of 1889 destroyed the entire downtown in a single afternoon and gave the city the opportunity to rebuild on a grander scale — raising the street level by two stories through hydraulic regrading and constructing the red-brick commercial district that survives in Pioneer Square today.

    The Klondike Gold Rush of 1897 transformed Seattle overnight. When the steamship Portland arrived at the Coleman Dock with two tons of Klondike gold, Seattle positioned itself as the primary outfitting and departure point for prospectors heading to the Yukon. The city’s population doubled in a year, and the commercial infrastructure built during the Gold Rush established Seattle as the commercial gateway to Alaska — a relationship that persists to this day. The Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park in Pioneer Square tells this story with outstanding exhibits.

    The 1962 World’s Fair — Century 21 Exposition — was Seattle’s great civic coming-out party, leaving behind the Seattle Center campus, the Space Needle, the Monorail, and the Pacific Science Center as permanent legacies. The fair attracted nearly ten million visitors and announced Seattle to the world as a modern, forward-looking city.
    The grunge era of the late 1980s and early 1990s gave Seattle its most unexpected cultural contribution to the world. Bands including Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, and Mudhoney emerged from the Seattle club scene — incubated at venues like the Central Saloon in Pioneer Square, the Vogue, and the Moore Theatre — to transform global popular music. Kurt Cobain’s childhood home in Aberdeen, 90 miles to the southwest, and the Seattle clubs where these bands developed their sound are objects of genuine pilgrimage for music devotees worldwide.
    The Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP) at the Seattle Center, designed by Frank Gehry in a swirling, metallic building that looks like a smashed guitar, is the most important institution for understanding Seattle’s musical legacy. Its permanent collections on the history of rock and roll, on science fiction literature and film, and on the specific Seattle music scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s are outstanding. The Nirvana exhibition — including instruments, handwritten lyrics, stage costumes, and extensive documentary material — is among the finest exhibitions devoted to a single band’s work anywhere in the world.

    The Seattle Art Museum (SAM) downtown holds an excellent collection of art spanning ancient to contemporary, with particular strength in Native American art of the Pacific Northwest Coast — one of the great artistic traditions of the indigenous Americas, expressed in the monumental carved cedar of totem poles and house posts, in masks and ceremonial regalia of extraordinary visual power, and in the formline design tradition that transforms animals and ancestral beings into interlocking abstract forms of remarkable sophistication. The Olympic Sculpture Park on the waterfront north of Pike Place Market is a free outdoor annex of the museum with large-scale sculptures set against views of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains.
    The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture on the University of Washington campus is Washington State’s oldest public museum and holds one of the finest collections of Pacific Northwest indigenous materials in the country, alongside excellent natural history collections.

    The Wing Luke Museum in the International District is the finest museum in the country devoted to Asian Pacific American history and culture. Operating as a community-based institution in genuine partnership with the communities it represents — Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Vietnamese, Korean, South Asian, and others — it tells the stories of immigration, discrimination, cultural persistence, and community building with unusual depth, honesty, and human warmth.

    The Space Needle & Seattle Center
    The Space Needle is Seattle’s most universally recognized symbol — a 605-foot observation tower built for the 1962 World’s Fair that manages to be simultaneously a piece of optimistic mid-century futurism and a genuinely beautiful work of architecture. The rotating restaurant at the top, now rechristened the Loupe Lounge after a comprehensive renovation completed in 2018, offers 360-degree views of the city, Puget Sound, and the surrounding mountains through a glass floor that extends outward from the observation deck for the nervous delight of visitors with acrophobia. The views on a clear day — which does happen, genuinely, and with some frequency, particularly between June and September — are breathtaking: the downtown skyline dropping to the blue water of Elliott Bay, the white cone of Mount Rainier floating above the Cascade Range to the southeast, the jagged Olympics across the Sound to the west.

    The Seattle Center campus surrounding the Space Needle is a 74-acre public park and cultural campus that contains, in addition to the Needle and MoPOP, the Pacific Science Center (with its distinctive arched concrete colonnades designed by Minoru Yamasaki, the architect who later designed the World Trade Center), the Chihuly Garden and Glass museum, Climate Pledge Arena (home of the NHL’s Seattle Kraken and the WNBA’s Seattle Storm), the Seattle Children’s Theatre, and the McCaw Hall opera house. The campus hosts multiple festivals throughout the year, including Bumbershoot (Seattle’s major music and arts festival on Labor Day weekend) and Folklife (the Memorial Day weekend celebration of folk and traditional music).

    Chihuly Garden and Glass is a museum devoted to the extraordinary glass art of Dale Chihuly — a Pacific Northwest native and one of the most celebrated glass artists in the world. The interior galleries display massive, exuberantly colorful glass installations of otherworldly beauty, and the outdoor garden presents sculptures in dialogue with the Seattle Center landscape and the Space Needle looming above. It is a genuinely transporting experience, particularly in the evening when the illuminated glass glows against the night sky.

    Food & Drink
    Seattle’s food culture is one of the finest in the American West, rooted in the extraordinary agricultural and marine bounty of the Pacific Northwest and shaped by the culinary traditions of its diverse population — Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, Filipino, Ethiopian, Mexican, Scandinavian, and more.
    Salmon is the foundational ingredient of Pacific Northwest cuisine, and eating it in Seattle — wild-caught Chinook, sockeye, coho, or pink salmon, depending on the season — is a fundamentally different experience from eating farmed Atlantic salmon anywhere else. The best salmon here is oceanic, mineral, rich with natural fat, and requires almost nothing in preparation beyond careful cooking. Pike Place Market is the place to buy it fresh; a dozen excellent restaurants from Pike Place Fish Bar to Canlis to Walrus and the Carpenter prepare it with skill and reverence.

    Dungeness crab, the sweet, delicate Pacific crab that is the glory of the West Coast seafood world, is another essential. A whole Dungeness crab, freshly cooked and served with drawn butter and a glass of Washington Chardonnay, is one of the great simple pleasures of eating in Seattle.

    Pacific oysters from the cold, clean waters of Puget Sound, Hood Canal, and the Washington coast are extraordinary. Oyster bars throughout the city — the Walrus and the Carpenter in Ballard, Taylor Shellfish Farms’ multiple locations, Elliott’s Oyster House on the waterfront — serve them on the half shell with a range of accompaniments. The Shigoku, Kumamoto, and Olympia (the tiny native Pacific oyster, nearly harvested to extinction and now being carefully revived) varieties are particularly fine.

    Coffee culture in Seattle is both genuinely important and somewhat mythologized. Starbucks was born here, but the city’s coffee culture long predates and extends far beyond the global chain. A constellation of independent roasters and cafes — Victrola, Stumptown (technically Portland-born but deeply Seattle-adopted), Slate, Lighthouse, Milstead, Caffé Vita, and many others — maintain a standard of craft coffee preparation, sourcing, and roasting that ranks among the finest in the world. Seattle’s relationship with coffee is not merely about caffeine; it is about a particular quality of rainy-day indoor life, of neighborhoods defined by their cafes, of the coffee shop as the primary social institution of a mildly introverted, intellectually active urban population.

    The craft beer scene has flourished in Seattle and throughout the Pacific Northwest, where the local abundance of Cascade hops — grown in the Yakima Valley of eastern Washington — and the brewing culture that developed alongside the tech and outdoor recreation boom have produced an extraordinary variety of excellent beer. Fremont Brewing in Fremont (their Urban Wheat and lager are particularly beloved), Cloudburst in Belltown, Georgetown Brewing (the largest craft brewery in Washington State), Holy Mountain Brewing in Interbay, and dozens of others maintain a standard of brewing that regularly attracts national and international attention.

    The wine culture of Seattle benefits enormously from proximity to Washington State’s wine country — the Columbia Valley, Walla Walla, Red Mountain, and Yakima Valley appellations east of the Cascades produce world-class Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, and Riesling under conditions of high altitude, extreme diurnal temperature variation, and volcanic soil that give Washington wines a distinctive character of bright fruit, firm structure, and crystalline clarity. Wine bars and bottle shops throughout Seattle — Bottlehouse in Madrona, Bar Melusine in Capitol Hill, the Ruins in Belltown — maintain exceptional Washington State wine lists alongside thoughtful global selections.

    The restaurant scene encompasses every point on the spectrum from extraordinary fine dining to inspired casual eating. Canlis, perched on a hillside above Lake Union in a mid-century modern building opened in 1950, is the most storied fine dining restaurant in Seattle and remains, under the fourth generation of the Canlis family, genuinely worthy of its reputation — the food, the service, the wine program, and the lakeside view at sunset compose an experience of exceptional refinement. Noodle Larder in Capitol Hill produces outstanding Southeast Asian-influenced cooking. Il Corvo in Pioneer Square serves handmade pasta of extraordinary quality in a lunch-only format that draws loyal queues. Brimmer and Heeltap in Ballard, Altura in Capitol Hill, and Communion in the Central District are among the many other restaurants that make Seattle’s dining landscape so rich.

    The international food scene reflects the city’s diverse population. Little Saigon in the International District contains some of the finest Vietnamese food on the West Coast — pho shops, banh mi bakeries, and bun bo hue specialists that draw customers from across the region. The Japanese American community has sustained a remarkable concentration of excellent Japanese restaurants, from sushi bars to izakayas to ramen shops. Ethiopian restaurants on Capitol Hill, Filipino bakeries in Beacon Hill, and Mexican taquerias throughout the city round out a culinary landscape of extraordinary breadth.

    Natural Attractions & Outdoor Activities
    Seattle’s greatest competitive advantage as a travel destination may be the sheer density and accessibility of its natural environment. Within two hours of downtown Seattle, visitors can hike through old-growth forest, ski on glaciated volcanic peaks, kayak in protected marine waters, whale-watch in the San Juan Islands, and explore a rainforest on the Olympic Peninsula.
    The Puget Sound is the defining natural feature of Seattle’s geography — a complex inland sea of channels, islands, peninsulas, and bays that extends north from Olympia to the Strait of Juan de Fuca and is connected to the Pacific Ocean through the Strait. Its cold, clear waters support extraordinary marine biodiversity: orca whales (both the resident Southern Resident community and the more numerous Bigg’s transient population), humpback whales, Minke whales, Dall’s porpoises, harbor porpoises, harbor seals, Steller sea lions, bald eagles, and the entire food web that supports them. Whale watching tours from Seattle depart from the waterfront and from Anacortes to the north, and summer sightings — particularly of the Bigg’s orcas that increasingly frequent the sound — are reliably spectacular.

    Mount Rainier National Park, about two hours southeast of Seattle, dominates the southeastern skyline on clear days with a presence so enormous and so unexpected that Seattleites never quite take it for granted. At 14,411 feet, Mount Rainier is the highest peak in the Cascade Range and one of the most heavily glaciated mountains in the contiguous United States. The national park surrounding it offers hiking of extraordinary variety — from easy wildflower meadow walks at Paradise and Sunrise to challenging summit approaches that require technical mountaineering skill. The Wonderland Trail circles the entire mountain in 93 miles. Wildflower season in August, when the subalpine meadows below the glaciers erupt in lupine, paintbrush, and avalanche lily, is one of the most spectacular natural displays in the American West.

    Olympic National Park, accessible from Seattle via the Bainbridge Island or Kingston ferries and then a drive across the Kitsap Peninsula to the Olympic Peninsula, protects one of the most diverse landscapes in the national park system — a temperate rainforest (the Hoh Rain Forest, receiving 12 to 14 feet of rainfall annually) of cathedral-like Sitka spruce and western red cedar draped in club moss, a rugged and largely undeveloped Pacific coastline with sea stacks and tide pools, and glaciated mountain peaks rising from the interior. The park is large enough and diverse enough to sustain multiple visits and rewards slow, exploratory travel.

    North Cascades National Park, about three hours northeast of Seattle via the North Cascades Highway (State Route 20), is the least visited but most dramatically alpine of Washington’s national parks — a landscape of jagged granite peaks, hanging glaciers, and turquoise glacial lakes that has been compared to the Swiss Alps. The drive along Route 20 through the park is one of the finest scenic drives in the American West, though the highway is closed by snow from approximately November through April.

    The San Juan Islands, accessible by Washington State Ferry from Anacortes (about 90 miles north of Seattle), are an archipelago of rocky, forested islands in the northern Puget Sound where the pace of life drops to something approaching geological time. San Juan Island, Orcas Island, and Lopez Island are the main ferry-served destinations. San Juan Island offers whale watching from Lime Kiln Point State Park (one of the best land-based whale watching spots in the world), excellent cycling, and the historic sites of the Pig War — the remarkable 1859 boundary dispute between the United States and Britain that was settled without a shot being fired. Orcas Island offers the most dramatic terrain — the summit of Mount Constitution, accessible by road or trail, provides a panoramic view of the entire archipelago and the surrounding mountains that is unforgettable.

    Snoqualmie Falls, about 30 miles east of downtown via Interstate 90, is a 268-foot waterfall on the Snoqualmie River — taller than Niagara — that plunges into a deep gorge in a display of considerable power and beauty. The surrounding area offers hiking, the Salish Lodge (a luxurious inn perched at the falls’ edge that served as the exterior of the Great Northern Hotel in David Lynch’s Twin Peaks), and the Snoqualmie Valley’s working farms and small towns.

    Sea kayaking in the waters around Seattle — in the ship canal, on Lake Union, in the Puget Sound, around Vashon and Bainbridge Islands — is one of the most rewarding ways to experience the city’s relationship with water. Multiple outfitters offer guided tours and rental equipment throughout the region.
    Skiing and snowboarding are accessible from Seattle at several resorts in the Cascade Mountains. Crystal Mountain, adjacent to Mount Rainier National Park about two hours southeast, is the largest and most acclaimed. Stevens Pass on Highway 2 and Snoqualmie Pass on Interstate 90 are closer and more accessible. The mountains receive enormous snowfall — measured in feet, not inches — and the season typically runs from November through April.

    Parks & Urban Green Spaces
    Seattle’s park system is exceptional — a reflection of a city culture that places profound value on access to nature within the urban fabric.
    Discovery Park occupies 534 acres of bluff, forest, and beach on the Magnolia neighborhood’s western edge — the site of the former Fort Lawton military installation, decommissioned and converted to parkland through a remarkable community campaign in the 1970s. Its network of trails winds through second-growth forest, across open meadows, and down to a beach on Puget Sound with views of the Olympic Mountains across the water. The West Point Lighthouse at the park’s tip is one of Seattle’s most photographed landmarks. Discovery Park is where Seattleites go when they need to remember why they live here.

    Gas Works Park on the northern shore of Lake Union occupies the site of a former coal gasification plant whose industrial ruins have been incorporated into a public park of unexpected beauty — rusting towers and tanks preserved as sculptural elements in a landscape of green lawn and wildflower meadow sloping down to the lake. The view from the hilltop picnic shelter across Lake Union to the downtown skyline is one of the finest urban panoramas in Seattle.

    Volunteer Park in Capitol Hill contains the Seattle Asian Art Museum, a Victorian conservatory filled with tropical plants and orchids, a water tower with a spiral staircase leading to a city view platform, and extensive lawns and gardens that serve as one of the neighborhood’s main social spaces.

    Seward Park on the Bailey Peninsula in southeast Seattle is a 300-acre park that extends into Lake Washington and contains one of the few remaining stands of old-growth forest within Seattle city limits — towering Douglas firs and western red cedars that escaped the nineteenth-century logging that stripped most of the region bare. A 2.4-mile loop trail circles the peninsula through this ancient forest to the lake shore.
    The Burke-Gilman Trail is a 27-mile multi-use path following a former rail corridor from Ballard through the University District, along the north shore of Lake Washington through Kenmore to Bothell. It is the backbone of Seattle’s recreational trail network and one of the finest urban cycling paths in the American West.

    Sports
    Seattle’s sports culture is passionate, occasionally heartbroken, and defined by a fierce regional pride that expresses itself most loudly on Sundays in the fall.
    The Seattle Seahawks of the NFL play at Lumen Field in SoDo — a stadium widely regarded as one of the loudest in professional football, where the noise generated by the crowd has literally triggered seismic sensors. The 12th Man tradition — celebrating the fans as an essential part of the team’s performance — is a genuine expression of the bond between the team and its city. The Seahawks’ two Super Bowl appearances in 2014 and 2015 produced the greatest victory and the most agonizing defeat in recent Seattle sports memory.

    The Seattle Mariners of MLB play at T-Mobile Park — considered one of the most beautiful ballparks in the American League, with a retractable roof that allows games to proceed regardless of rain, views of the downtown skyline beyond the outfield, and a genuine baseball atmosphere. The Mariners are the longest-running major league franchise never to have appeared in a World Series, a distinction their fans bear with a mixture of weary acceptance and undying hope. The team has featured some of the finest players in baseball history — Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Ichiro Suzuki, Edgar Martinez — and their legacies are celebrated throughout the ballpark.

    The Seattle Storm of the WNBA is the most consistently excellent franchise in Seattle sports over the past two decades, with four WNBA championships and a tradition of outstanding basketball that has made them the envy of the league. Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi are among the greatest players in the history of women’s basketball; the Storm’s commitment to athletic excellence, community engagement, and social advocacy has made them a model franchise.

    The Seattle Kraken of the NHL are the city’s newest major franchise, having begun play in 2021 at Climate Pledge Arena — a renovated and reimagined version of the former KeyArena that has become one of the most environmentally ambitious sports and entertainment venues in the world. The Kraken are building a fan base with considerable energy and the arena itself is worth a visit for its architectural ambition alone.

    Day Trips & Nearby Destinations
    Bainbridge Island, a 35-minute ferry ride from the downtown waterfront, offers an immediate and dramatic change of pace. The ferry crossing itself — with views of the Seattle skyline receding behind you and the Olympics growing ahead — is one of the finest short water journeys in America. Bainbridge is a prosperous residential island with excellent restaurants, wineries, galleries, and the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Exclusion Memorial — a moving outdoor monument commemorating the forced removal of the island’s Japanese American community in February 1942.

    The Skagit Valley, about 60 miles north of Seattle via Interstate 5, is one of the great agricultural landscapes of the Pacific Northwest. In April, the valley floor erupts in vivid stripes of red, purple, yellow, and white as thousands of acres of tulips and daffodils bloom — one of the most spectacular flower displays in North America. The Skagit Valley Tulip Festival draws visitors from around the world. The valley also supports a thriving agricultural economy of berries, vegetables, and seed crops throughout the summer.
    Leavenworth, a small town in the Cascade foothills about 130 miles east of Seattle via Highway 2, reinvented itself in the 1960s as a Bavarian-themed village — an improbable decision that has proven wildly successful. The Alpine architecture, German restaurants and bakeries, Christmas markets, and surrounding mountain scenery make it a popular year-round destination.
    Portland, Oregon, three hours south via Interstate 5 or a comfortable Amtrak Cascades train journey, is Seattle’s Pacific Northwest sibling and rival — a city with its own distinct culture of food, music, outdoor recreation, and progressive civic identity that rewards a weekend or longer.

    Victoria, British Columbia, accessible by the Victoria Clipper passenger ferry from the Seattle waterfront in about three hours, is a beautifully preserved British colonial city on the southern tip of Vancouver Island. Its Inner Harbour, the Fairmont Empress Hotel, the Royal BC Museum, the Butchart Gardens (one of the finest horticultural displays in North America), and the general atmosphere of a small, elegant, walkable city make it an outstanding day or overnight trip.

    Practical Information
    Best time to visit: Seattle’s weather is considerably more nuanced than its rain-soaked reputation suggests. The period from approximately late June through September is genuinely glorious — warm, dry, sunny, with long days that extend well past 9 PM at the summer solstice, and the mountains and water at their most spectacular. This is peak tourist season and prices are at their highest. The shoulder seasons of May and October offer milder crowds, more atmospheric conditions, and the particular beauty of the city in fog and cloud. November through March is the core rainy season — not dramatically cold, but gray, drizzly, and occasionally gloomy. Indoor cultural attractions, cozy coffee shops, and the authentic daily life of the city are compensation.

    What to pack: Layers are essential year-round. A waterproof jacket or shell is the single most important item to bring regardless of season. Comfortable walking shoes are necessary given the hills. Sunscreen is required during summer — the Pacific Northwest sun at these latitudes is stronger than visitors often anticipate.

    Accommodation: Seattle offers accommodation across all price ranges. Downtown and Capitol Hill have the highest concentration of hotels. Boutique options include the Ace Hotel in Belltown, the Sorrento on First Hill, and the Inn at the Market at Pike Place. The Four Seasons and Fairmont Olympic represent the luxury end. Vacation rentals are plentiful in residential neighborhoods for visitors who prefer a more local experience. Book well in advance for summer, particularly around major events.

    Safety: Seattle has experienced the challenges of homelessness, drug addiction, and property crime that have affected many West Coast cities in recent years. Visitors should exercise normal urban awareness particularly around the downtown retail core, parts of Pioneer Square, and the area around the bus tunnel entrances. The tourist-heavy areas of Capitol Hill, Pike Place Market, and the waterfront are generally safe. Standard precautions — securing valuables, being aware of surroundings, not leaving items visible in parked cars — are advisable throughout.
    Tipping: Standard American conventions apply: 18–20% at restaurants, $1–2 per drink at bars, $2–5 per day for hotel housekeeping.

    A Final Word
    Seattle rewards patience. It is a city that does not immediately reveal itself to the casual visitor — its famous reticence, the so-called Seattle Freeze, extends to the city itself, which keeps its deepest pleasures behind a veil of cloud and quiet self-sufficiency that requires some persistence to penetrate.

    But penetrate it, and what you find is extraordinary. A city of startling physical beauty — those mountains, that water, those enormous trees — combined with a cultural seriousness, a culinary ambition, a musical history, and a natural environment of incomparable richness. A city where the ferry to Bainbridge on a foggy morning feels like crossing into another world, where the smell of coffee and salt air and cedar is the smell of the city itself, where a sunny July afternoon on the deck of a boat in Lake Union with the Space Needle in one direction and Rainier in another is a moment of happiness so uncomplicated and so complete that it stays with you long after you have gone home.

    Come in the summer if you want the full, dazzling, blue-sky version of the city. Come in November if you want the real one — mist-wrapped, introspective, glowing from within, entirely at ease with its own particular beauty. Either way, come ready to be surprised. Seattle has been surprising people for a long time, and it is nowhere near finished.

  • Washington: Epic Landscapes, Endless Adventures

    From the Rain Forests of the Olympic Peninsula to the Volcanic Peaks of the Cascades, the Evergreen State Offers a Lifetime of Wonder

    There is a moment that arrives for nearly every visitor to Washington State, usually when they least expect it, that reorders something fundamental in their understanding of what landscape can be. It might happen on a ferry crossing Puget Sound when the clouds part and the white cone of Mount Rainier materializes above the horizon with an improbability that makes you question whether something so enormous and so perfect can actually be real. It might happen on a trail in the Hoh Rain Forest when the silence of the old-growth forest closes around you and you realize that you are standing among trees that were already ancient when the first Europeans arrived on this continent. It might happen on a beach on the Olympic Peninsula at dusk when the sea stacks rise from the surf like the ruins of some enormous cathedral and the light turns everything to copper and gold. Or it might happen simply on a clear winter morning in Seattle when you look east from almost anywhere in the city and the Cascades are white and sharp against the blue sky, and you think that no city in America has a more spectacular natural setting, and then you look west and realize that the Olympics are there too, another white range gleaming above the Sound, and the city is sitting in the middle of an embarrassment of natural riches that most of the world cannot begin to imagine.

    Washington State, the Evergreen State, is one of the most physically dramatic and ecologically diverse places in the United States. It encompasses rain forests that receive more than 140 inches of precipitation annually and desert landscapes that receive fewer than eight inches. It contains the most glaciated peak in the contiguous United States outside Alaska, a volcano that famously and catastrophically erupted in living memory, the deepest gorge in North America, ancient forests of Douglas fir and Sitka spruce that have never been cut, and nearly 160 miles of wild Pacific coastline. It has the largest population of orcas in the world in the waters of Puget Sound, the largest concentration of bald eagles in the lower 48 states along its rivers in winter, and salmon runs that have shaped the cultures of its indigenous peoples for thousands of years.

    It also has Seattle, one of the most livable, creative, and scenically situated cities in America, a place that has produced more than its share of cultural influence, from the music of Jimi Hendrix and the grunge revolution of the early 1990s to the coffee culture that Starbucks exported to the world, to the technology companies that have reshaped global commerce and communication. And beyond Seattle, it has Spokane, a significant and underappreciated city in its own right, and dozens of smaller communities of great character scattered across landscapes as varied as eastern Washington’s rolling wheat fields and the San Juan Islands’ forested shores.

    Washington is not a destination that reveals itself quickly or easily. It rewards patience, curiosity, and a willingness to venture beyond the well-worn paths. But for those who bring those qualities to their visit, it offers experiences that are genuinely, permanently transformative. This is a place where the natural world operates at a scale and with an intensity that reminds you of your own smallness in the most exhilarating possible way.

    Understanding Washington’s Geography
    Washington’s geography is organized around several major features that divide the state into dramatically different regions. The Cascade Range, running north to south through the center of the state, is the primary geographic dividing line, separating the wet, forested western part of the state from the drier, more arid eastern part. The Olympic Peninsula, in the state’s far northwest corner, is a world unto itself, a compact wilderness of rain forest, glacier-capped mountains, and wild Pacific coastline enclosed within Olympic National Park. Puget Sound, a complex system of interconnected marine waterways extending south from the Strait of Juan de Fuca, defines the character of the state’s most densely populated region. The Columbia River, forming much of the state’s southern border with Oregon, drains an enormous watershed and has shaped both the ecology and the economy of the region profoundly. Eastern Washington, the high plateau of the Columbia Basin and the rolling hills of the Palouse, is a landscape of surprising beauty and agricultural richness quite unlike the forested west side of the mountains.

    SEATTLE
    Seattle is the heart and soul of Washington State, a city of approximately 750,000 people within the city limits and more than four million in the broader metropolitan area, situated on a narrow isthmus between Puget Sound to the west and Lake Washington to the east, with Lake Union cutting into its center and the ship canal connecting salt and fresh water through the middle of the city. It is one of the most topographically dramatic major cities in America, built on a series of hills that provide constant views of water and mountains, and it is one of the most livable, with a culture that combines intellectual seriousness, environmental consciousness, culinary sophistication, and a genuine love of outdoor life in ways that feel organic rather than performed.

    Pike Place Market, perched on the bluff above the waterfront at the foot of Pike Street, is the oldest continuously operating farmers market in the United States, established in 1907, and it remains one of the finest and most atmospheric public markets in the world. The market is not primarily a tourist attraction, though it draws enormous numbers of visitors, but a living, working market where farmers from the surrounding valleys sell seasonal produce, fishmongers throw salmon with practiced theatrical skill, flower vendors create extravagant arrangements from locally grown blooms, craftspeople sell handmade goods, and small restaurants and food stalls serve everything from fresh chowder to piroshky to crumpets. The main arcade, the low-ceilinged corridor where the famous fish throwers operate and the produce stalls line both sides of the walkway, has a sensory intensity and a human warmth that makes it one of the great public spaces in American city life. Below the main arcade, the lower levels of the market descend in a warren of small shops, antique dealers, comic book stores, and specialty purveyors that reward thorough exploration.

    The Space Needle, built for the 1962 World’s Fair, is the iconic symbol of Seattle and one of the most recognizable structures in America. The observation deck, recently renovated with glass floors and tilting glass walls that provide vertiginous views straight down to the ground far below, offers panoramic views of the city, the Sound, the Olympic Mountains, Mount Rainier, and the Cascade peaks on clear days that fully justify the admission price and the lines. The surrounding Seattle Center, the campus built for the 1962 Fair, contains several of the city’s finest cultural institutions, including the Museum of Pop Culture, the Pacific Science Center, the Chihuly Garden and Glass, and the Seattle Children’s Museum, as well as the home arenas of the Seattle Storm WNBA team and the Seattle Kraken NHL team.

    The Museum of Pop Culture, designed by architect Frank Gehry in his characteristically sculptural, deconstructed style, is one of the most distinctive museum buildings in the country and houses collections and exhibitions dedicated to the history and cultural significance of popular music, science fiction, horror, and video games. The permanent Jimi Hendrix gallery, dedicated to the Seattle-born guitar genius who revolutionized rock music, is the museum’s emotional core, and the collection of Hendrix artifacts, instruments, and recordings is extraordinarily moving for anyone who cares about music. The Nirvana and grunge exhibitions connect the museum directly to Seattle’s own profound contribution to the history of rock and roll, and the interactive Sound Lab, where visitors can pick up instruments and play in soundproofed rehearsal spaces, is enormously enjoyable.

    Chihuly Garden and Glass, on the Seattle Center campus adjacent to the Space Needle, presents the extraordinary large-scale glass sculptures of Seattle-born artist Dale Chihuly in both indoor galleries and an outdoor garden setting. Chihuly’s work, characterized by organic forms in brilliant colors that seem to capture and concentrate light, is among the most distinctive and spectacular achievements in contemporary decorative arts, and the Seattle installation, including the extraordinary Glasshouse, a 40-foot-high steel and glass structure sheltering an enormous red and orange chandelier sculpture, is one of the finest presentations of his work anywhere in the world.

    The Seattle Art Museum, in the heart of downtown, houses one of the finest art collections on the West Coast, with particular strength in Northwest Coast Native American art, African art, and European and American painting and sculpture. The museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park, a nine-acre outdoor sculpture park on the downtown waterfront donated to the city by the museum, presents large-scale works by artists including Alexander Calder, Richard Serra, and Louise Bourgeois in a beautifully designed landscape overlooking Elliott Bay and the Olympic Mountains, and is free and open to the public every day of the year.

    The Capitol Hill neighborhood, east of downtown on one of the city’s hills, has been the center of Seattle’s arts, music, and LGBTQ communities for decades and contains the highest concentration of excellent restaurants, bars, music venues, coffee shops, and independent businesses in the city. The neighborhood’s Broadway commercial strip and the Pike-Pine corridor are the arteries of a street life that feels genuinely urban and genuinely Seattle at the same time. The recently opened Cal Anderson Park is one of the best urban parks in the city and a constant gathering place for the neighborhood’s diverse community.

    The International District, adjacent to downtown and Pioneer Square, is the historic center of Seattle’s Asian American communities, with excellent Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese, and Filipino restaurants, tea houses, groceries, and cultural organizations that reflect more than a century of Asian immigration and community building. The Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience is one of the finest community history museums in the United States, presenting the history of Asian Pacific Americans in the Pacific Northwest with extraordinary depth and emotional intelligence. Uwajimaya, a large Asian supermarket and shopping center in the heart of the International District, is a wonderland of Asian food products, prepared foods, and household goods that rewards extended browsing.

    Pioneer Square, Seattle’s oldest neighborhood and the site of the original settlement, has been through multiple cycles of prosperity and decline and is currently experiencing a creative revival. The neighborhood’s Richardsonian Romanesque brick architecture from the late 19th and early 20th centuries gives it a cohesive historic character unique in Seattle, and its concentration of art galleries, making it the center of Seattle’s gallery scene, adds a cultural dimension that rewards exploration. The underground tours of the subterranean storefronts and streets that were buried when the city was re-graded after the Great Seattle Fire of 1889 are one of the city’s most popular and genuinely interesting historical experiences.

    Seattle’s coffee culture is so pervasive and so deeply embedded in the city’s identity that it barely requires description, but a few specific notes are in order. While Starbucks was founded in Seattle in 1971 and the original Starbucks at Pike Place Market is a genuine pilgrimage site for the brand’s devotees, the independent coffee culture that has flourished in Seattle’s wake has in many respects surpassed its originator in quality and sophistication. Victrola Coffee Roasters, Lighthouse Coffee Roasters, Caffe Vita, and Slate Coffee are among the many excellent independent roasters operating in the city, and the standard of espresso preparation throughout Seattle is genuinely among the highest in the world.

    The food scene in Seattle has expanded dramatically in quality and variety in recent decades, driven by proximity to extraordinary agricultural and seafood resources and by the diverse immigrant communities that have made the city their home. Canlis, a mid-century modern restaurant overlooking Lake Union that has been in continuous operation since 1950, remains one of the finest dining experiences in the Pacific Northwest, constantly evolving while maintaining its commitment to exceptional hospitality. The Ferry Building equivalent of Seattle’s food scene may be found in the combination of Pike Place Market and the surrounding first-ring neighborhoods, where restaurants like The Walrus and the Carpenter, a beloved oyster bar in Ballard, and Renee Erickson’s collection of Seattle restaurants represent a seafood-focused cuisine of great intelligence and beauty.

    The neighborhoods of Ballard and Fremont, north of downtown across the Lake Washington Ship Canal, deserve extended exploration. Ballard, originally a Scandinavian fishing and lumber community that was annexed by Seattle in 1907, retains a distinct neighborhood character in its old downtown commercial district along Ballard Avenue, lined with excellent restaurants, bars, and the Nordic Museum, a beautifully designed institution celebrating the Scandinavian heritage of the Pacific Northwest. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, where the ship canal meets Puget Sound, are one of the most fascinating urban infrastructure attractions in the Pacific Northwest, where pleasure boats, commercial fishing vessels, and enormous container ships pass through the locks while salmon migrate past on their way to and from their spawning grounds in the fish ladder below.

    OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK AND THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA
    Approximately two hours west of Seattle by ferry and car lies one of the most extraordinary concentrations of ecological diversity on the planet. Olympic National Park encompasses nearly a million acres of the Olympic Peninsula, protecting three distinct and dramatically different ecosystems: the temperate rain forests of the western valleys, the alpine meadows and glaciated peaks of the Olympic Mountains, and the wild, largely undeveloped Pacific coastline.

    The Hoh Rain Forest, on the western side of the Olympic Mountains, receives between 140 and 170 inches of rain annually and supports one of the finest examples of temperate rain forest in the world. The forest is a cathedral of towering Sitka spruce, western red cedar, western hemlock, and bigleaf maple draped in thick green carpets of moss and fern that create an atmosphere of green, filtered light and profound quietude quite unlike any other forest in America. The Hall of Mosses, a short trail through a grove of bigleaf maples whose branches are so heavily draped with club moss that they form long, weeping curtains of green, is among the most beautiful and otherworldly natural scenes in the United States. The Hoh River Trail, which begins at the rain forest visitor center and follows the Hoh River through the forest for 17 miles before climbing above treeline to the glaciers of Mount Olympus, is one of the great wilderness trails in the Pacific Northwest.

    The Quinault, Queets, and Quinault Rain Forests in the park’s southwestern section offer equally spectacular old-growth forest experiences in a somewhat less visited setting. The Quinault Rain Forest contains some of the largest individual trees of several species in the world, including the world’s largest Sitka spruce and western red cedar, trees of such size that they must be seen to be understood.

    Hurricane Ridge, in the park’s interior above the city of Port Angeles, provides the most accessible alpine experience in Olympic National Park. The ridge road climbs from sea level to nearly 5,200 feet in 17 miles, emerging above treeline into open meadows of wildflowers in summer, where black-tailed deer and Olympic marmots graze with apparent indifference to the presence of visitors, and where the views of the Olympic Mountains and across the Strait of Juan de Fuca to Vancouver Island in British Columbia are staggering.

    The Pacific coast section of Olympic National Park protects more than 60 miles of wild Pacific coastline, the longest stretch of undeveloped ocean beach in the contiguous United States outside Alaska. Rialto Beach and Ruby Beach are among the most accessible and most spectacular stretches, where enormous sea stacks of erosion-resistant rock rise from the surf, tide pools shelter sea stars, anemones, chitons, and other intertidal life, and driftwood logs of immense size accumulate in dense tangles at the high tide line. Hiking the Olympic Coastal Strip, a multi-day backpacking route along the wild Pacific shore, is one of the most demanding and most rewarding wilderness experiences available in Washington State.
    The Dungeness Spit, on the northern coast of the Olympic Peninsula near Sequim, is the longest natural sand spit in the United States, extending nearly six miles into the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge that surrounds it is one of the finest shorebird and waterfowl areas in Washington, and the walk out to the historic Dungeness Lighthouse at the spit’s tip is one of the most memorable coastal walks in the state.

    The town of Port Townsend, at the northeastern corner of the Olympic Peninsula, is one of the finest Victorian seaport towns in the American West, a community of extraordinary architectural richness that developed as an anticipated major port city in the late 19th century before the railroads bypassed it and left it frozen in architectural amber. The resulting collection of Victorian commercial buildings downtown and Victorian residential buildings on the bluff above has been preserved with great care and makes Port Townsend one of the most charming and architecturally distinguished small communities in Washington. The annual Wooden Boat Festival, held every September in Port Townsend’s harbor, is one of the premier maritime festivals in the country, drawing wooden boat builders and enthusiasts from throughout the Pacific Northwest and beyond.

    THE CASCADE RANGE AND MOUNT RAINIER
    The Cascade Range defines Washington State’s character as profoundly as any single geographic feature. This chain of volcanic peaks, running north to south through the center of the state, creates the dramatic rain shadow that divides the wet west side from the dry east side, provides the spectacular mountain backdrop that makes western Washington’s urban landscapes so extraordinary, and offers some of the finest mountaineering, skiing, and wilderness hiking in North America.
    Mount Rainier, at 14,411 feet the highest peak in the Cascade Range and the most glaciated mountain in the contiguous United States outside Alaska, dominates the skyline of the entire Puget Sound region with an authority that goes beyond mere elevation. When it is visible, which in the cloud-prone Northwest is not always the case, it commands attention from distances of 100 miles or more, its white cone seeming to float impossibly high above the surrounding ridgelines. The mountain has entered the regional consciousness so deeply that Seattle residents have their own shorthand for its appearances: when Rainier emerges from the clouds on a clear day after weeks of overcast, they say simply that the mountain is out, and everyone understands.

    Mount Rainier National Park, established in 1899 as the fifth national park in the United States, encompasses the mountain and its surrounding forests and meadows in 369 square miles of protected wilderness. The Paradise area, on the mountain’s southern slope, is the most visited part of the park and offers access to the most spectacular subalpine meadow scenery in the Pacific Northwest. In late July and August, when the snowpack finally melts from the high meadows, they burst into bloom with paintbrush, lupine, bistort, avalanche lily, and dozens of other wildflowers in displays that have been described as among the finest alpine wildflower shows in North America. The Skyline Trail from Paradise loops through these meadows and up to the edge of the Nisqually Glacier, providing views of the mountain’s ice-clad upper slopes and across the Tatoosh Range to the south that are genuinely breathtaking. The Paradise Inn, a magnificent 1916 log and timber structure that is one of the finest examples of National Park rustic architecture in the country, serves as the primary lodging and dining destination in the park and is a destination in its own right.

    The Sunrise area, on the mountain’s northeastern side and accessible by the highest paved road in Washington State, offers a different perspective on Rainier, with views across the Emmons Glacier, the largest glacier by area in the contiguous United States, and out to Mount Baker and Glacier Peak in the northern Cascades on clear days. The meadows around Sunrise bloom later than those at Paradise, typically in August, and the combination of alpine flowers, glacier views, and the relative solitude compared to the more popular south side makes Sunrise one of the most rewarding destinations in the park.

    North Cascades National Park, in the far northern part of the Cascade Range near the Canadian border, is one of the least visited national parks in the country and one of the most spectacularly beautiful. The park contains more than 300 glaciers, roughly half of all the glaciers in the contiguous United States, and a landscape of jagged peaks, turquoise glacial lakes, and deep, forested valleys of extraordinary wildness. The North Cascades Highway, State Route 20, is the primary road through the region and is generally considered the most scenic highway in Washington, passing through the Skagit Valley, climbing over Washington Pass with its extraordinary views of the Liberty Bell and Early Winter Spires, and descending into the Methow Valley on the east side of the mountains. The highway is closed by snow in winter and typically open from April through November.

    Mount St. Helens, in the southern Cascade Range near the Oregon border, is the most famous and most visited volcanic site in Washington, the mountain that erupted catastrophically on May 18, 1980, in the largest volcanic event in the history of the contiguous United States, killing 57 people, blowing 1,300 feet off the mountain’s summit, and laying waste to 230 square miles of forest in a matter of minutes. The Johnston Ridge Observatory, located at the end of State Route 504 on the mountain’s western flank, offers the most direct and dramatic view of the crater and lava dome from a distance of five miles, and the observatory’s excellent exhibits convey the science and human story of the eruption with great clarity.

    The recovery of the blast zone, now protected as Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, has become one of the most important natural laboratories for studying ecological succession in the world, and the evidence of recovery, from the first returning plants and animals to the young forests now covering much of the blast zone, is in its own way as moving as the devastation itself.
    Crater Lake it is not, and Mount Baker it has not the fame, but Mount Baker in the northern Cascades deserves mention as one of Washington’s most beautiful and snowiest peaks. The Mount Baker Ski Area regularly receives more snowfall than any other ski area in North America, and the Artist Point area above the ski area, accessible in summer by a spectacular road, offers views of the mountain and across to the North Cascades and British Columbia that rival anything in the Pacific Northwest. The mountain’s reflection in the still waters of Picture Lake, at the end of the road to Heather Meadows, is one of the most photographed natural scenes in Washington.

    The Methow Valley, on the eastern slope of the North Cascades, is one of Washington’s finest outdoor recreation destinations, a sun-drenched valley of ponderosa pine and sagebrush that offers exceptional cross-country skiing in winter on the largest groomed Nordic ski trail network in the country, and outstanding mountain biking, hiking, and river recreation in summer. The town of Winthrop, styled after an 1890s western frontier community with wooden boardwalks and false-fronted buildings, is the valley’s commercial center and a popular destination in its own right.

    THE SAN JUAN ISLANDS
    In the waters of northern Puget Sound and the Strait of Georgia, between the Olympic Peninsula and the Canadian border, lie the San Juan Islands, an archipelago of more than 170 named islands and hundreds of smaller rocks and reefs that constitutes one of the most beautiful and ecologically remarkable marine environments in the world. The islands, accessible primarily by Washington State Ferry from Anacortes, are sheltered from the open Pacific by the Olympic Peninsula and Vancouver Island, creating a rain shadow microclimate that gives them more sunshine than any other part of western Washington and a distinctive Mediterranean quality quite unlike the forested mainland.

    San Juan Island is the largest and most visited of the accessible islands, home to the town of Friday Harbor, the archipelago’s commercial center and ferry hub, and to San Juan Island National Historical Park, which preserves the sites of the curious Pig War of 1859, when American and British forces briefly occupied opposite ends of the island in a dispute over the boundary between the United States and British Canada that was resolved without bloodshed but that left two remarkably well-preserved military camps. English Camp, on the island’s sheltered northwest shore, and American Camp, on the exposed southern prairie with its views of the Olympic Mountains across the Strait of Juan de Fuca, are both fascinating and evocative historic sites.

    Lime Kiln Point State Park, on the island’s western shore, is known as the best place in the world to watch orcas from shore. The resident orca pods of the Salish Sea pass close to Lime Kiln regularly throughout the summer months, and the experience of watching these extraordinary animals from the rocky shoreline, their tall dorsal fins cutting the surface, their blows visible in the clear air, is one of the most powerful wildlife encounters available anywhere in North America. Whale watching boat tours operating from Friday Harbor provide an even closer encounter and are among the most popular tourist activities in the islands.

    Orcas Island, the largest of the San Juan Islands by area and the most topographically dramatic, rises to nearly 2,400 feet at the summit of Mount Constitution in Moran State Park. The views from the stone observation tower at the summit, looking across the entire San Juan Archipelago to the Cascades, the Olympics, and the British Columbia mainland, are among the finest in the entire Pacific Northwest. The island’s resort community of Rosario, centered on the historic Rosario Resort built by Seattle mayor and businessman Robert Moran in the early 20th century, is a landmark of the islands. The East Sound commercial village on Orcas is one of the finest small shopping and dining destinations in the islands.
    Lopez Island, the flattest and most agricultural of the main islands, has a culture of extraordinary friendliness, famous throughout the Northwest, where residents wave at every passing car as a matter of cultural tradition. Lopez is the preferred island for cycling, with its gentle terrain, quiet roads, and beautiful bay and farmland scenery making it ideal for a day or weekend of leisurely exploration by bicycle.

    THE COLUMBIA RIVER GORGE AND CENTRAL WASHINGTON
    The Columbia River, forming Washington’s southern border with Oregon, has shaped the landscape, ecology, and history of the Pacific Northwest more profoundly than any other geographic feature. The Columbia River Gorge, where the river cuts through the Cascade Range in a canyon of extraordinary scenic drama, is a National Scenic Area of great beauty and recreational richness, shared between Washington and Oregon.

    The Washington side of the gorge, while less developed for tourism than the Oregon side, offers outstanding windsurfing and kiteboarding at the town of Stevenson and Hood River adjacent communities, as well as access to Beacon Rock State Park, where the 848-foot basalt monolith of Beacon Rock, the second-largest such monolith in the world, can be climbed by a trail of switchbacks and handrails to a summit with outstanding gorge views.
    Central Washington, east of the Cascades in the Columbia Basin, is the state’s primary agricultural heartland, a landscape of orchards, vineyards, hop yards, and wheat fields that produces an enormous proportion of the nation’s apples, pears, cherries, hops, and wine grapes. The Yakima Valley, centered on the city of Yakima and extending south and east through communities like Zillah, Sunnyside, and Prosser, is the state’s largest and most established wine region, with more than 120 wineries producing wines from Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Riesling, and Chardonnay in a warm, dry climate ideal for viticulture. The Walla Walla Valley, in the southeastern corner of the state, has developed an even more distinguished reputation for quality, producing Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Merlot of national and international significance from a growing number of wineries that have made the valley one of the premier wine destinations in the Pacific Northwest.

    The Wenatchee Valley, in north-central Washington on the eastern slope of the Cascades, is the apple capital of the world, producing more apples than any comparable region on earth in an extraordinary concentration of orchards covering the valley floor and the hillsides above. The Washington State Apple Blossom Festival, held in Wenatchee every spring when the orchards are in bloom, is one of the largest and oldest agricultural festivals in the Northwest.
    Lake Chelan, a long, narrow glacially carved lake extending 55 miles into the Cascades from the Columbia River, is one of the deepest lakes in the United States and one of Washington’s premier summer recreation destinations. The town of Chelan at the lake’s southern end is a popular resort community, but the far end of the lake, accessible only by the Lady of the Lake ferry or by small plane, terminates in the remote community of Stehekin, a tiny, car-free settlement at the edge of the North Cascades wilderness that is accessible only by the ferry, a small plane or on foot, and that represents one of the most truly isolated and peaceful destinations in Washington.

    The Palouse, in the southeastern corner of the state, is one of the most distinctive and beautiful agricultural landscapes in America. The Palouse Hills, great rolling swells of wind-deposited silt soil called loess, have been farmed in wheat, lentils, and barley for more than a century, and the resulting landscape of curved contour lines, changing colors with the seasons, is of a photogenic beauty that attracts landscape photographers from around the world. The viewpoint at Steptoe Butte, a quartzite island rising 3,600 feet above the surrounding hills that was left behind when the softer loess accumulated around it, offers panoramic views of the Palouse that are particularly spectacular in late spring when the winter wheat is at its most vivid green and in late summer when the harvested fields create geometric patterns of gold and brown across the hills.

    EASTERN WASHINGTON AND SPOKANE
    Eastern Washington, east of the Cascades, is a region that western Washingtonians sometimes condescend to and that almost always surprises visitors who arrive with low expectations. It is a land of big sky, agricultural abundance, volcanic geology, and genuine cultural vitality centered on Spokane, the second-largest city in Washington and a place of considerable charm and sophistication.

    Spokane, situated on the Spokane River at the edge of the Columbia Plateau, is a city that has spent much of its history in Seattle’s shadow and has in recent years come into its own as a destination of genuine interest. Riverfront Park, created from the industrial riverfront and railroad yards for the 1974 World’s Fair, is one of the finest urban parks in the Pacific Northwest, with walking and cycling paths along the Spokane River, historic pavilions from the fair, a gondola ride over the river falls, and views of the dramatic Spokane Falls, one of the most powerful urban waterfalls in the United States, thundering through the center of the city. The Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture is an outstanding regional museum with strong collections in the art, history, and natural history of the inland Northwest and an impressive adjacent historic house museum. The city’s Kendall Yards neighborhood, a redeveloped former industrial area on the river bluffs, has become a hub of excellent restaurants, cafes, and boutiques that give Spokane’s food and retail scene a quality and sophistication that rivals much larger cities.

    The Channeled Scablands, the extraordinary geological landscape of eastern Washington formed by the catastrophic Missoula Floods of the last Ice Age, when an ice dam in what is now Montana repeatedly failed and sent floodwaters of almost incomprehensible volume crashing across the Columbia Plateau, are among the most significant and dramatic geological landscapes in North America. The floods stripped away the loess soil cover across enormous areas, leaving bare basalt bedrock sculpted into coulees, dry waterfalls, and giant ripple marks visible from the air. Dry Falls, in Grand Coulee south of the town of Coulee City, was once the largest waterfall in the world, a cataract three miles wide and 400 feet tall that dwarfs Niagara in every dimension. Today it is a dry cliff face above a state park, but the interpretive center at the rim conveys the scale and violence of the floods with great effectiveness.

    Grand Coulee Dam, on the Columbia River in eastern Washington, is one of the great engineering achievements of the 20th century and was, at the time of its completion in 1942, the largest concrete structure ever built. The dam, three times the height of Niagara Falls, created Lake Roosevelt, stretching 150 miles upstream into British Columbia, and its power generation capacity supplied the aluminum smelters and plutonium production facilities that played crucial roles in the American war effort and in the development of the atomic bomb. The free visitor center and tours of the dam’s powerhouses are fascinating, and the summer laser light show projected onto the dam’s face every evening from Memorial Day through September is a spectacular if improbable attraction.

    NATIVE CULTURES AND FIRST PEOPLES
    Washington State is home to 29 federally recognized tribal nations whose relationships with this land span thousands of years and whose cultural presence is woven into the landscape, the place names, the ecology, and the living communities of the state in ways that demand acknowledgment and respect.
    The Makah Nation, at the northwestern tip of the Olympic Peninsula at Cape Flattery, America’s most northwesterly point, maintains a culture with deep connections to the sea. The Makah Cultural and Research Center in Neah Bay houses one of the finest collections of Northwest Coast Native American cultural objects in existence, including the extraordinary artifacts recovered from Ozette, a Makah village that was buried by a mudslide approximately 500 years ago and preserved with remarkable completeness until archaeological excavation beginning in the 1970s revealed thousands of objects of extraordinary significance. Cape Flattery itself, a short hike through Makah land, offers views across the turbulent waters where the Strait of Juan de Fuca meets the Pacific Ocean from dramatic sea cliffs that represent the edge of the continent.

    The Lummi Nation, Tulalip Tribes, and other Coast Salish peoples of Puget Sound have maintained their relationships with the salmon runs of the region for thousands of years, and the ongoing legal and political struggles to maintain those relationships in the face of development, pollution, and environmental degradation represent some of the most important environmental and human rights issues in the state.
    The Yakama Nation in central Washington, the Colville Confederated Tribes in northeastern Washington, the Spokane Tribe, and the many other interior nations have their own profound and complex histories of relationship with the landscapes of eastern Washington, histories of fishing the Columbia and its tributaries for salmon, of gathering the camas root that was a primary food source across the plateau, and of navigating the successive waves of American expansion that disrupted and attempted to destroy their cultures.

    FOOD, DRINK, AND CULINARY CULTURE
    Washington’s culinary culture is rooted in one of the most extraordinary natural pantries available to any state in the country. The Pacific Ocean provides salmon, Dungeness crab, halibut, albacore tuna, sea urchin, and razor clams of exceptional quality. Puget Sound and Hood Canal produce oysters of world-class distinction, particularly the Olympia oyster, the only oyster species native to the Pacific Northwest, and the larger Pacific oyster varieties grown at farms throughout the Sound. The rivers provide wild salmon in season that has no equal as a food product anywhere in the world. The agricultural lands of eastern Washington produce apples, pears, cherries, asparagus, potatoes, wheat, hops, and wine grapes that form the basis of an outstanding regional cuisine. The forests provide chanterelle, morel, matsutake, and porcini mushrooms of exceptional quality and quantity.

    Dungeness crab, harvested from the coastal waters of Washington, Oregon, and California, takes its name from the small community of Dungeness on the Olympic Peninsula’s north shore and is among the finest edible crabs in the world. The sweet, delicate meat, particularly in the large claws and legs, is at its best simply steamed and eaten with drawn butter, and the ritual of cracking a Dungeness crab at a waterfront restaurant or at a picnic table on a Washington beach is one of the great simple pleasures of Pacific Northwest food culture.
    Washington salmon, particularly king salmon and sockeye from the Columbia River and the rivers of the Olympic Peninsula, is so superior in quality to farmed salmon that experienced Pacific Northwest cooks refuse to use the farmed product. The flavor of a wild Washington king salmon fillet, grilled simply over alder wood in the traditional style of the region’s First Peoples, is one of the transcendent culinary experiences available in American cooking.

    Washington oysters have achieved national recognition for their quality and diversity. Taylor Shellfish Farms, the largest shellfish producer in the United States, operates growing sites throughout Puget Sound and the Hood Canal and retail oyster bars in Seattle and other cities where the full range of their production, from tiny Olympias to large Pacifics in multiple growing site varieties, can be tasted alongside simple accompaniments and local wine or beer.

    The Washington wine industry has developed dramatically in the past three decades and now encompasses more than 1,000 wineries producing wines of genuine national and international significance. The Columbia Valley, Yakima Valley, Red Mountain, Walla Walla Valley, and Horse Heaven Hills appellations are among the most significant wine regions, and the best Washington Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, Merlot, and Riesling now compete comfortably on the world stage. Leonetti Cellar, Quilceda Creek, Andrew Will, K Vintners, and Cayuse Vineyards are among the most celebrated producers, though the industry has expanded so rapidly that compelling wines are now being made at dozens of additional wineries throughout the state.
    The craft beer culture of Washington, centered heavily in Seattle but extending throughout the state, is one of the finest in the country. Elysian Brewing, Fremont Brewing, Georgetown Brewing, and Cloudburst Brewing are among the Seattle-area producers of national reputation, while Bale Breaker Brewing in the Yakima hop fields and numerous eastern Washington producers reflect the agricultural roots of the state’s brewing tradition.

    The Yakima Valley is the primary hop-growing region in the United States, producing approximately 75 percent of the nation’s hops in the rich volcanic soil and warm, dry climate of the valley. The hop harvest in September fills the valley air with a pungent, resinous fragrance that is intoxicating in the most literal sense, and the sight of the tall hop trellises stretching across the valley floor is one of the great agricultural landscapes of the Pacific Northwest.

    PRACTICAL TRAVEL INFORMATION
    Seattle-Tacoma International Airport is the primary air gateway to Washington State and one of the busiest airports in the country, with extensive domestic connections and direct international service to destinations throughout Asia, Europe, and North America. Spokane International Airport serves eastern Washington with a growing roster of direct routes. Alaska Airlines, which was founded in Washington and maintains its headquarters there, provides extensive service throughout the Pacific Northwest and beyond.
    Washington State Ferries, the largest ferry system in the United States by number of vehicles carried, operate an extensive network of routes connecting Seattle to the Kitsap Peninsula, the Olympic Peninsula, the San Juan Islands, and Sidney, British Columbia. Traveling by ferry is not merely a practical transportation option but one of the great travel experiences of the Pacific Northwest, offering views of the Sound, the mountains, and the islands that are unavailable from any other vantage point.

    Driving is essential for exploring most of Washington beyond the Seattle metropolitan area, and the state’s scenic highways, including US-2 over Stevens Pass, State Route 20 over Washington Pass in the North Cascades, US-12 through the White Pass and Yakima Valley, and the many roads of the Olympic Peninsula, are among the finest driving routes in the country.
    Washington’s climate varies enormously by region. Western Washington, including Seattle, has a marine climate characterized by mild temperatures year-round, abundant rainfall from October through May, and famously overcast winters. Contrary to popular belief, Seattle does not receive exceptionally heavy annual rainfall, but its rain comes in a persistent gray drizzle rather than dramatic downpours, which makes it feel more pervasive than it actually is. Summers in Seattle and the western part of the state are genuinely magnificent, with long days of brilliant sunshine, low humidity, and temperatures in the mid-60s to mid-70s that are universally agreed to be among the finest summer weather in America. Eastern Washington has a continental climate with hot summers, cold winters, and dramatically more sunshine than the west side, receiving an average of 300 sunny days per year in some locations.

    Accommodation ranges from world-class urban hotels in Seattle, where the Four Seasons, the Fairmont Olympic, and numerous boutique properties represent the highest end of Pacific Northwest hospitality, to wilderness lodges, national park inns, vineyard guest houses, and the full range of outdoor camping options in the state’s extraordinary public lands. The Paradise Inn at Mount Rainier and the Lake Quinault Lodge on the Olympic Peninsula are among the most beloved historic lodging properties in the state, offering the combination of spectacular natural settings and historic character that defines the best of American national park lodging.

    Conclusion
    Washington State defies the kind of summary that fits neatly onto a bumper sticker or a tourism brochure. It is too big, too varied, too layered in its history and ecology and human experience to be reduced to any single image or idea. It is the Space Needle and the Hoh Rain Forest and the Palouse hills and the Columbia River and the orca pods of the Salish Sea and the volcanic silence of Mount St. Helens and the hop fields of the Yakima Valley and the Victorian streetscapes of Port Townsend and the Friday Night Jamboree of Floyd and the laser light show on Grand Coulee Dam and the smell of wild salmon cooking over alder wood on a beach at the edge of the Pacific.

    It is a state that asks you to pay attention, because if you do not pay attention in Washington, you will miss things of extraordinary beauty and significance that will not announce themselves loudly or wait patiently for your notice. The mountain will go back behind the clouds. The salmon will finish their run and be gone. The chanterelles will be found by someone else on the forest floor. The orcas will have passed by while you were looking at your phone.

    But if you pay attention, if you bring to Washington the full presence of mind and senses that the place demands and deserves, it will give you back experiences that will stay with you for the rest of your life. The sight of Rainier materializing above the clouds. The silence of the old-growth forest. The cold, sweet meat of a just-caught Dungeness crab. The spray of the Pacific on a wild Olympic beach. The sound of a fiddle in a barn while snow falls on the Cascades outside.
    Washington is not merely a destination. It is an argument, made by the land itself in the most eloquent possible terms, for why wildness and beauty and the natural world matter, and for what we lose when we stop paying attention to them. It is one of the most important arguments available to an American traveler. Go and listen to it.

    Washington State — Ever Green, Ever Wild, Ever Magnificent, and Ever Worth the Journey.

  • Arizona: Where the Earth Reveals Its Most Spectacular Secrets

    From the Depths of the Grand Canyon to the Red Rock Cathedrals of Sedona, the Sonoran Desert to the Sky Islands, the Grand Canyon State Is America’s Most Visually Astonishing Destination.

    There is a moment that happens to virtually every first-time visitor to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, a moment so universal and so consistently reported that it has become one of the defining travel experiences of the American West. You walk toward the rim along a paved path, perhaps through a cluster of other visitors, perhaps through the piñon and juniper forest that grows right up to the edge, and then the earth simply stops and the world opens up before you in a way that the human mind is genuinely not prepared for. The canyon is so vast, so deep, so extravagantly colored, so layered in geological time, that the brain initially refuses to process it as a real thing. It looks like a painting, or a backdrop, or an elaborate hallucination. The far rim is ten miles away. The Colorado River, a mile below your feet, appears as a silver thread barely visible through the haze of distance. The walls of the canyon reveal two billion years of Earth’s history in their strata, painted in bands of red, orange, purple, cream, and brown that glow and shift as the light changes through the day.
    And then the brain catches up, and you realize that it is real, that you are standing at the edge of one of the greatest natural wonders on the planet, and something shifts in you that does not entirely shift back.

    That moment is Arizona’s most famous gift to its visitors. But it is far from the only one. Arizona is a state of such extraordinary geological drama, such ecological diversity, such depth of human history, and such concentrated natural beauty that the Grand Canyon, for all its magnificence, is only the beginning of what the state has to offer.
    Arizona encompasses landscapes of a variety and grandeur that astonish even visitors who think they know what to expect. The Sonoran Desert, the most biologically diverse desert in the world, covers much of the southern and central part of the state in a landscape of saguaro cactus forests, ironwood trees, ocotillo, palo verde, and an explosion of wildflowers in spring that transforms the desert into something resembling a garden. The Colorado Plateau, in the north, is a high-elevation landscape of mesas, buttes, canyon systems, and volcanic peaks that represents the greatest concentration of national parks and monuments in the United States. The Sky Islands of the southeastern corner, isolated mountain ranges rising like botanical islands from the desert floor, support extraordinary biodiversity, including species found nowhere else in the United States. The White Mountains of the east offer cool forests, trout streams, and outdoor recreation in a setting quite unlike the desert landscapes that define Arizona’s popular image.

    Arizona is also a state of profound and layered human history. The Ancestral Puebloans, the Hohokam, the Sinagua, and other ancient peoples left remarkable monuments across the landscape, from the cliff dwellings of Canyon de Chelly to the astronomical precision of Casa Grande. The Navajo Nation, the largest Native American reservation in the United States, covers an enormous swath of northeastern Arizona and contains some of the most sacred and spectacular landscapes on the continent. The Apache, Tohono O’odham, Hopi, Havasupai, Yavapai, and more than twenty other tribes and nations maintain living cultures across the state. The Spanish colonial legacy, the Mexican cultural heritage, and the mythology of the American West, from the gunfights of Tombstone to the cattle drives of the open range, add further layers to a human history of extraordinary depth and complexity.

    And then there are the cities. Phoenix, the fifth-largest city in the United States, is a sprawling, sun-drenched metropolis with world-class museums, restaurants, resorts, and a vibrant arts scene that surprises visitors who expect nothing but suburbs and strip malls. Tucson, the second-largest city, has a distinctive and deeply layered character shaped by its Mexican heritage, its university culture, its artistic communities, and its intimate relationship with the Sonoran Desert that surrounds it on all sides. Sedona, Flagstaff, Prescott, and Bisbee are among the smaller communities that offer their own compelling combinations of natural beauty, cultural richness, and genuine character.

    Arizona demands time and engagement to reveal its full depth. It is a state that conceals much of its finest beauty from the casual passer-by, that requires the willingness to leave the paved road, to hike a trail into a canyon, to drive a dirt road across a reservation, to sit in the desert at dusk and watch the light transform the rocks through a hundred shades of red and gold. But for those who bring that willingness, Arizona offers an encounter with the natural world at its most primordial and most magnificent, an encounter that changes the way you see the earth for the rest of your life.

    Understanding Arizona’s Geography
    Arizona sits in the American Southwest, bordered by Utah to the north, New Mexico to the east, Mexico to the south, and Nevada and California to the west. It covers approximately 113,990 square miles, making it the sixth-largest state in the country, and its geography is organized around several major physiographic regions that each have their own distinct character.
    The Colorado Plateau covers the northern third of the state at elevations generally between 5,000 and 8,000 feet, a high, semi-arid landscape of extraordinary geological complexity where the forces of erosion have carved the Colorado River and its tributaries into canyon systems of incomparable grandeur. The Transition Zone, a band of mixed terrain crossing the state roughly from northwest to southeast, separates the plateau from the Basin and Range province to the south. The Basin and Range is the dominant physiographic region of central and southern Arizona, characterized by elongated mountain ranges separated by broad, flat desert valleys, creating the alternating pattern of mountain and basin that gives the region its name. The Sonoran Desert, North America’s hottest desert, covers much of the Basin and Range province in Arizona and extends south into the Mexican state of Sonora.

    THE GRAND CANYON
    The Grand Canyon is 277 miles long, up to 18 miles wide, and more than a mile deep. It was carved by the Colorado River over millions of years through the rock of the Colorado Plateau, exposing geological formations that range from 270 million to nearly two billion years old. These numbers are easy to recite and impossible to truly comprehend, which is perhaps the most important thing to understand about the Grand Canyon: it operates at a scale that exceeds human cognition, and the experience of being in its presence is fundamentally one of confronting the limits of the mind’s ability to process what the eyes are seeing.

    The South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park is by far the most visited section of the canyon, receiving approximately five million visitors annually and offering the widest range of facilities, trails, and viewpoints. The Rim Trail, a paved and unpaved path running along the canyon’s edge for 13 miles from Hermit’s Rest to South Kaibab Trailhead, passes a series of overlooks, each offering a different perspective on the canyon’s immensity. Mather Point, the first overlook most visitors reach from the main visitor center, provides one of the most dramatic initial views of the canyon. Yavapai Point, a short walk east, has a geology museum that helps orient visitors to the extraordinary timeline of rock visible in the canyon walls. The Desert View Watchtower, at the eastern end of the South Rim drive, a 1932 structure designed by architect Mary Colter in a style inspired by ancient Puebloan towers, provides a 360-degree panorama that encompasses the canyon, the Colorado River, the Painted Desert, and the Navajo Nation extending to the east.

    Hiking into the Grand Canyon is one of the signature outdoor experiences of the American West, but it must be approached with genuine respect for the physical demands involved. The Bright Angel Trail, the most popular descent route, drops nearly 5,000 feet from the South Rim to the Colorado River in nine miles, a distance that is deceptively manageable in descent and brutally demanding on the return climb in the intense heat of the inner canyon. The National Park Service strongly discourages day hiking to the river and back, and the canyon claims the lives of several visitors each year who underestimate the combination of heat, distance, and elevation change. Hiking to the Plateau Point overlook, three miles below the rim on the Bright Angel Trail, and returning before the heat of midday is a superb day hiking option that provides genuine canyon immersion without the full commitment of a river descent. Camping at Bright Angel Campground at the bottom of the canyon, or at the Phantom Ranch lodge, requires advance reservations that are typically booked months ahead, and a night at the bottom of the canyon, with the sound of the Colorado River and the canyon walls rising thousands of feet above, is an experience of extraordinary intimacy with this geological wonder.

    The North Rim, accessible only from mid-May through mid-October due to heavy winter snowfall, receives far fewer visitors than the South Rim and offers a more intimate and atmospheric experience at the cost of greater remoteness and a five-hour drive from the South Rim through Utah and Nevada. The North Rim sits approximately 1,000 feet higher than the South Rim, giving it a cooler, wetter climate that supports a forest of ponderosa pine, spruce, and fir quite unlike the piñon-juniper woodland of the south side. The Grand Lodge on the North Rim, another Mary Colter design, has a sun porch hanging directly over the canyon’s edge that is one of the most dramatic sitting rooms in the world.

    Rafting the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon is a bucket-list experience of the highest order. Commercial river trips ranging from three days to three weeks traverse the canyon’s 225 miles of whitewater, passing through rapids with names like Lava Falls, Crystal, and Granite that are among the most challenging navigable whitewater in North America. Waiting lists for both commercial and private permits are long, and planning a Grand Canyon river trip typically requires years of advance preparation, but those who make the journey consistently describe it as one of the most profound travel experiences of their lives.
    Havasu Canyon, a side canyon of the Grand Canyon accessible from the Havasupai tribal lands southwest of the national park, contains a series of turquoise waterfalls, including Havasu Falls and Mooney Falls, that rank among the most beautiful natural features in Arizona. Access to the canyon requires a permit from the Havasupai Tribe, a ten-mile hike from the trailhead, and a willingness to plan well in advance as permits are extremely limited and in enormous demand.

    SEDONA AND THE RED ROCK COUNTRY
    If the Grand Canyon is Arizona’s most famous landscape, Sedona may be its most visually intoxicating. The red rock formations that surround the small city of Sedona in the Verde Valley, roughly 120 miles south of the Grand Canyon, create a landscape of such concentrated, saturated beauty that it consistently ranks among the most photographed places in America and attracts more than three million visitors annually to a community of fewer than 15,000 permanent residents.

    The red rocks of Sedona are formed from a layer of Permian-age sandstone called the Schnebly Hill Formation, deposited approximately 300 million years ago and subsequently uplifted, eroded, and carved by the Oak Creek and its tributaries into the extraordinary assemblage of buttes, mesas, spires, and canyon walls that surround the city. The rock glows a deep, saturated red-orange in the direct sun of midday and transforms through extraordinary shades of crimson, scarlet, magenta, and deep purple in the golden and red light of sunrise and sunset. Cathedral Rock, Bell Rock, Courthouse Butte, Coffee Pot Rock, and the Boynton Canyon formation are among the most photographed and most beloved individual formations, and each time of day, each quality of light, each weather condition transforms their appearance in ways that make them seem perpetually new.

    Sedona is also the center of a significant New Age spiritual culture that has grown up around the concept of energy vortexes, sites where the earth’s energy is believed by believers to be particularly concentrated and conducive to meditation, healing, and spiritual transformation. Whatever one’s views on the metaphysics of vortexes, the sites most often associated with them, Bell Rock, Cathedral Rock, Airport Mesa, and Boynton Canyon, are extraordinary natural formations that inspire genuine feelings of awe and transcendence in virtually every visitor regardless of their spiritual framework. The concentration of yoga studios, crystal shops, spiritual healers, and New Age service providers in Sedona gives the town a distinctive and occasionally surreal quality, but it also reflects a genuine culture of contemplation and intentional living that has attracted a permanent community of seekers and creatives.

    The hiking around Sedona is among the finest in Arizona, with trails ranging from easy strolls through the red rock landscape to demanding technical scrambles. The Cathedral Rock Trail, a short but steep scramble to the saddle between Cathedral Rock’s twin summits, provides one of the most dramatic and most photographed viewpoints in the area. The West Fork of Oak Creek Trail, which follows a cool, cottonwood-shaded canyon through a series of stream crossings into a narrowing gorge, is one of the most beautiful and peaceful hikes in the state. The Boynton Canyon Trail accesses a magnificent deep canyon that the Yavapai people consider one of their most sacred sites. The Broken Arrow Trail, accessible only to hikers and pink Jeep tours on a permit basis, traverses some of the most dramatic red rock terrain in the area.

    The Jeep tour industry in Sedona is extensive and, for visitors with limited mobility or time, provides access to backcountry red rock terrain that would otherwise require significant hiking. The pink Jeep tours are an institution and take visitors across rocky terrain, through creek crossings, and to viewpoints far from the paved road network.
    Oak Creek Canyon, the dramatic gorge carved by Oak Creek through the red rock country north of Sedona toward Flagstaff, is one of the most beautiful drives in Arizona. State Route 89A descends through the canyon in a series of tight curves, passing red and cream sandstone walls reflected in the clear, cold waters of Oak Creek, with swimming holes, fishing spots, and the beloved Slide Rock State Park, where visitors slide down a natural water chute in the creek, providing recreation opportunities throughout the warmer months.

    FLAGSTAFF AND THE COLORADO PLATEAU
    Flagstaff, sitting at 7,000 feet elevation on the Colorado Plateau at the foot of the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona’s highest mountains, is one of the most appealing small cities in the Southwest and an excellent base for exploring the extraordinary concentration of national parks and monuments in northern Arizona. The city has a lively, university-influenced downtown, a strong commitment to dark sky preservation that has made its night skies among the finest in urban America, excellent restaurants and craft breweries, and a historic Route 66 heritage that gives its main street a nostalgic character.

    The Museum of Northern Arizona, on the north edge of Flagstaff, is one of the finest regional natural history and cultural museums in the American West, with outstanding collections in the archaeology, geology, biology, and living cultures of the Colorado Plateau. The museum’s Navajo, Hopi, and Zuni galleries present the art and material culture of the plateau’s Native peoples with scholarly depth and genuine beauty, and the summer Heritage Program festivals, where tribal artists demonstrate and sell their work in the museum’s beautiful ponderosa pine grounds, are extraordinary cultural events.

    The San Francisco Peaks, a dormant volcanic complex rising to 12,633 feet at Humphreys Peak, Arizona’s highest summit, dominate the landscape north and northeast of Flagstaff. The Kachina Trail on the slopes of the peaks traverses an aspen and spruce forest of extraordinary beauty, particularly in late September and early October when the aspens turn gold. The Arizona Snowbowl ski area on the peaks’ western flank provides winter recreation and in summer offers a scenic gondola ride to the treeline for panoramic views of the Painted Desert and the Grand Canyon’s South Rim visible to the north.

    Wupatki National Monument, northeast of Flagstaff, preserves the remarkably well-preserved ruins of ancient Sinagua and Ancestral Puebloan pueblos built in the 12th and 13th centuries on the red Moenkopi sandstone of the Painted Desert. The Wupatki Pueblo, the largest structure in the monument, contained approximately 100 rooms and was one of the most populated communities in the entire Southwest during its occupation. The surrounding red rock and desert landscape gives the ruins a spare, monumental quality that is deeply moving.
    Walnut Canyon National Monument, east of Flagstaff, preserves a remarkable series of cliff dwellings built by the Sinagua people in the shallow alcoves and overhangs of the limestone walls of Walnut Canyon. The Island Trail descends into the canyon and passes directly alongside the cliff rooms, giving visitors an unusually intimate view of the construction and daily life of these ancient communities.

    Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument, adjacent to Wupatki, preserves the youngest and most recently active volcano on the Colorado Plateau, a cinder cone that erupted around 1085 CE and whose eruption dramatically altered the landscape and human settlement patterns of the entire region. The cinder cone, still sharply defined in the absence of significant erosion, rises 1,000 feet above the surrounding lava field in a landscape of eerie volcanic beauty.

    THE NAVAJO NATION AND MONUMENT VALLEY
    The Navajo Nation, covering approximately 27,425 square miles across northeastern Arizona, southeastern Utah, and northwestern New Mexico, is the largest Native American reservation in the United States, larger than West Virginia, and home to approximately 175,000 Navajo people. It is also a landscape of such extraordinary beauty and cultural significance that it constitutes one of the most important and most complex travel destinations in the American Southwest.

    Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, straddling the Arizona-Utah border in the heart of the Navajo Nation, is one of the most recognizable landscapes on earth. The great sandstone buttes and mittens rising from the valley floor, West Mitten Butte, East Mitten Butte, and Merrick Butte forming the iconic trinity that has appeared in countless Western films, photographs, and advertisements, have become synonymous with the American West itself. John Ford used Monument Valley as the setting for a series of classic Westerns beginning with Stagecoach in 1939, and the landscape has been imprinted on the global cultural imagination ever since. Visiting the actual place, seeing these formations in person rather than through a camera lens, carries an uncanny quality, like meeting a person you have known only through photographs, the reality at once more modest and more powerful than the image.

    The tribal park is operated by the Navajo Nation, and visiting it requires paying an entrance fee directly to the tribe. The 17-mile Valley Drive, a dirt road that loops through the valley floor past the major formations, is passable by most vehicles in dry weather and provides the basic visitor experience. Guided tours by Navajo guides, offered by numerous operators in the valley, provide access to areas of the valley not accessible on the self-guided drive and, more importantly, provide cultural context and personal connection that transforms the experience from landscape tourism to genuine cultural exchange. The View Hotel, operated by the Navajo Nation on the rim of the valley with a direct view of the three mittens, is the primary lodging in the park and offers one of the most spectacular hotel views in the American Southwest.

    Canyon de Chelly National Monument, in the Chinle area of the Navajo Nation, is one of the most significant and moving archaeological and cultural sites in Arizona. The monument encompasses a system of canyons carved by the Chinle Wash through the red sandstone of the Colorado Plateau, within whose walls Ancestral Puebloan and later Navajo people have lived for nearly 5,000 years. The White House Ruins, an Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwelling of extraordinary grace and preservation visible from the canyon rim and accessible by a trail, and the Spider Rock spire, an 800-foot sandstone needle rising from the canyon floor that holds deep significance in Navajo mythology, are the monument’s most celebrated individual features. The canyon floor, where Navajo families still maintain farms and hogans as they have for generations, is accessible only with a Navajo guide, and the experience of traversing the canyon floor in a Navajo-guided vehicle, with the red canyon walls rising hundreds of feet on either side and the ancient ruins visible in their alcoves overhead, is one of the most profound travel experiences available in the Southwest.

    The Hopi Mesas, in the center of the Navajo Nation, are the home of the Hopi people, whose three mesas rising above the surrounding desert floor have been continuously inhabited for more than a thousand years, making Old Oraibi on Third Mesa one of the oldest continuously inhabited settlements in North America. The Hopi people maintain a culture of extraordinary depth and continuity, centered on a ceremonial calendar of katsina dances and religious observances that connect the community to its agricultural traditions and cosmological beliefs. Some Hopi ceremonies are open to respectful non-Hopi visitors at the discretion of individual villages, while others are closed to outsiders. Visiting the Hopi Mesas requires genuine cultural sensitivity and a willingness to follow the protocols established by the Hopi people, and those who approach the visit with that respect are rewarded with an encounter with one of the most intact indigenous cultures in the United States.

    Antelope Canyon, near the town of Page on the Arizona-Utah border, is one of the most photographed slot canyons in the world, and for very good reason. The narrow passageways of Upper and Lower Antelope Canyon, carved by flash floods through the Navajo sandstone, create corridors of swirling, sinuous rock whose surfaces glow with reflected light in shades of orange, amber, and red that seem almost too beautiful to be natural. The narrow shafts of light that penetrate the upper canyon from above at midday create the ethereal light beams that appear in virtually every photograph of the place. Access to Antelope Canyon is managed exclusively by the Navajo Nation, and tours must be booked through Navajo-authorized tour operators. Lake Powell, the enormous reservoir created by Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River adjacent to Page, is a major water recreation destination with houseboating, kayaking, and powerboating in a landscape of extraordinary red rock scenery.

    PHOENIX AND THE VALLEY OF THE SUN
    Phoenix, the capital of Arizona and the fifth-largest city in the United States, sits in the heart of the Sonoran Desert at an elevation of roughly 1,100 feet in the Salt River Valley, a broad, flat basin surrounded by mountain ranges that glow in the evening light. It is a city that confounds expectations repeatedly, a place that reveals genuine cultural depth, outstanding museums, world-class resorts, and a culinary scene of growing national stature beneath the sprawling suburban surface that visitors first encounter.

    The Heard Museum in downtown Phoenix is one of the finest museums dedicated to Native American art and culture in the world. Founded in 1929, the museum has grown into a world-class institution with outstanding collections of historic and contemporary Native American art, a particularly important collection of Hopi katsina figures, and a deeply moving permanent exhibition on the history of the Indian boarding school system that attempted to eradicate Native American languages and cultures throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The museum’s programming, which consistently centers and amplifies Native American voices in the curation and interpretation of the collections, sets a standard for cultural museum practice that few institutions match.

    The Phoenix Art Museum is the largest art museum in the Southwest, with strong collections in American art, European art, Latin American art, and fashion design, and an active temporary exhibition program that brings major traveling shows to the Valley of the Sun. The Desert Botanical Garden, in Papago Park east of downtown, presents the flora of the world’s deserts, with particular depth in the plants of the Sonoran Desert, in beautifully designed landscape settings that are spectacular during the spring wildflower season and magical during the holiday season when the garden is illuminated by Las Noches de las Luminarias. Papago Park itself, a city park of red buttes and desert landscape, contains the Phoenix Zoo, Hole-in-the-Rock, a natural geological formation significant in the history of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa people, and several excellent hiking trails.

    South Mountain Park and Preserve, at the southern edge of Phoenix, is the largest municipal park in the United States, covering more than 16,000 acres of Sonoran Desert mountain terrain with an extensive trail network for hiking, mountain biking, and equestrian use. The summit of Dobbins Lookout, accessible by road as well as on foot, provides the finest panoramic view of the Phoenix metropolitan area and the surrounding desert ranges.

    Scottsdale, immediately east of Phoenix, is the Valley’s premier destination for luxury resort tourism, with a concentration of world-class resorts, excellent restaurants, high-end shopping, and a thriving arts community centered on the Scottsdale Arts District and the Old Town area. The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art presents ambitious programming in a striking minimalist building. The Taliesin West campus of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, in the McDowell Mountains north of Scottsdale, is one of the most important architectural sites in America, the winter home and school that Wright designed and built beginning in 1937 as a desert laboratory for his architectural philosophy. Guided tours of the campus, which Wright conceived as an organic architecture growing from and responding to the desert landscape, are deeply illuminating for anyone interested in architecture, design, or the relationship between built and natural environments.

    Camelback Mountain, rising abruptly from the flat floor of the Valley between Phoenix and Scottsdale, is one of the most beloved and most demanding hiking destinations in the Phoenix area. The Echo Canyon and Cholla trails to the summit are short but extremely steep and technically challenging, and the summit views across the Valley and to the surrounding mountain ranges are magnificent. The mountain receives enormous use and reservations are required for hiking during peak periods.
    The greater Phoenix metropolitan area encompasses dozens of individual communities, each with distinct personalities, including Tempe, home to Arizona State University and a lively young adult culture along Mill Avenue, Mesa, the third-largest city in Arizona with its own cultural institutions and the Mesa Arts Center, and Chandler and Gilbert, rapidly growing communities that have developed their own independent restaurant and entertainment scenes.

    TUCSON AND THE SONORAN DESERT
    Tucson, 120 miles southeast of Phoenix at an elevation of 2,389 feet, is a city of authentic character and considerable charm, shaped by its Mexican heritage, its university culture, its arts communities, and its deep, intimate relationship with the Sonoran Desert. Where Phoenix sometimes feels as though it has been imposed on the desert, Tucson feels as though it has grown from it, a city whose architecture, cuisine, culture, and consciousness are infused with the desert in ways that give it a distinctive regional identity unlike any other city in America.

    The University of Arizona, founded in 1885, anchors the city’s intellectual and cultural life. The University of Arizona Museum of Art, the Arizona State Museum, with its outstanding collections of Southwest Native American material culture, the Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium, and the Biosphere 2, the remarkable closed ecological system 30 miles north of Tucson that was the site of the famous 1991-93 experiment in which eight people lived in a sealed artificial environment for two years, are all associated with the university and collectively constitute an outstanding cultural resource.

    The Tucson Museum of Art, in the heart of the city’s historic district, is a fine regional art museum with particular strength in Western American art and pre-Columbian art. The surrounding El Presidio Historic District, centered on the site of the original Spanish colonial presidio established in 1775, contains some of the finest historic adobe architecture in Arizona, including the Steinfeld Mansion and the Edward Nye Fish House, now part of the museum complex.

    The Mission San Xavier del Bac, nine miles south of Tucson on the Tohono O’odham Nation’s San Xavier District, is the finest example of Spanish colonial mission architecture in the United States and one of the most beautiful buildings in America. The white stuccoed church, built between 1783 and 1797 by Franciscan friars with the labor of the local Tohono O’odham people, rises from the Sonoran Desert in a vision of baroque exuberance, its ornate facade a masterpiece of mestizo architectural decoration combining Spanish baroque, Moorish, and indigenous artistic traditions. The church is still an active parish for the Tohono O’odham community and receives visitors who come to admire its architecture and its extraordinarily rich interior, decorated with painted statuary, frescoes, and decorative elements of great complexity and beauty.

    Saguaro National Park, in two units flanking Tucson on the east and west, protects the Sonoran Desert and its most iconic resident, the giant saguaro cactus. The saguaro, which can grow to 40 feet tall, live 150 to 200 years, and weigh several tons when fully hydrated, is the defining image of the American desert, and the forests of saguaro that cover the bajadas and mountain slopes of the park create a landscape of surreal, magnificent strangeness. The western Tucson Mountain District contains the densest saguaro forests, while the eastern Rincon Mountain District, which climbs from desert floor to pine forest on the Rincon Mountain slopes, offers a remarkable ecological transect from Sonoran Desert to boreal forest in a single hiking day.

    The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, west of Tucson adjacent to Saguaro National Park’s western unit, is one of the finest natural history museums in the world, presenting the full ecological community of the Sonoran Desert in an outdoor setting that functions simultaneously as a zoo, a botanical garden, a natural history museum, and an art gallery. The museum’s commitment to presenting the desert’s ecology in its full complexity, from the birds of prey aviaries and the underground tunnel exhibit presenting burrowing desert animals to the magnificent cactus and succulent gardens and the hummingbird aviary, creates an experience of the Sonoran Desert that is both educational and deeply moving. The raptor free-flight demonstrations, where trained hawks and owls perform in an outdoor amphitheater against a backdrop of real saguaro desert, are among the most extraordinary wildlife presentations available anywhere in America.
    Biking the Loop, a paved multi-use trail network that now extends for more than 130 miles through Tucson’s parks and river corridors, is one of the finest urban cycling experiences in the Southwest, and Tucson’s designation as a Platinum Bicycle Friendly Community by the League of American Bicyclists reflects a genuine commitment to cycling culture that distinguishes the city.

    The food scene in Tucson has been recognized internationally through UNESCO’s designation of Tucson as an American Creative City of Gastronomy in 2015, the first city in the United States to receive that designation. The recognition reflects Tucson’s extraordinary depth of food culture, rooted in its position at the intersection of Mexican, Native American, Spanish colonial, and Anglo-American culinary traditions and its access to an outstanding array of locally grown ingredients. The cuisine of Sonora, the Mexican state immediately south of Tucson, is one of the great regional cuisines of North America, centered on flour tortillas, carne asada, Sonoran hot dogs wrapped in bacon and loaded with toppings, and green corn tamales that represent a culinary tradition of great refinement and depth.

    SOUTHERN ARIZONA AND THE SKY ISLANDS
    The southeastern corner of Arizona is one of the most ecologically extraordinary regions in North America, a landscape where the southern Rocky Mountains, the Chihuahuan Desert, the Sonoran Desert, and the Sierra Madre of Mexico converge in a biological crossroads of exceptional diversity. The Sky Islands, isolated mountain ranges rising like biological islands from the surrounding desert and grassland seas, support an astonishing variety of plant and animal life, including species found nowhere else in the United States.

    The Chiricahua National Monument, in the far southeastern corner of the state, preserves one of the strangest and most spectacular geological landscapes in Arizona. The monument’s rock formations, columns, balanced rocks, and pinnacles of volcanic rhyolite eroded into improbable shapes, were called the Land of Standing Up Rocks by the Chiricahua Apache, and the name captures their quality precisely. The Massai Point overlook, the Echo Canyon Trail, and the Natural Bridge Trail provide the best access to the monument’s most extraordinary terrain.
    The Chiricahua Mountains, surrounding the monument, are one of the finest birding destinations in North America, a center of the Southeast Arizona birding culture that draws enthusiasts from around the world to seek species found nowhere else in the United States. The elegant trogon, the sulfur-bellied flycatcher, the painted redstart, and numerous species of hummingbird that breed in the cool canyon woodlands of the Sky Islands are among the sought-after species that make southeastern Arizona a birding destination of global significance. Cave Creek Canyon in the Chiricahuas is widely considered the premier birding site in the region.

    Kartchner Caverns State Park, near the town of Benson, protects one of the most remarkable limestone cavern systems in the world. The caverns were discovered in 1974 by two cavers who kept their discovery secret for fourteen years while working to ensure that the cave would be preserved before being developed. The result of that extraordinary act of conservation stewardship is a cavern of remarkable biological vitality, featuring formations including a 21-foot-tall column called Kubla Khan and enormous stalactite formations, all maintained at natural humidity levels through an elaborate system of airlock entries that preserve the cave’s living ecosystem. The Big Room is home to a colony of more than 1,000 cave myotis bats from April through October, and the bat program, which allows visitors to observe the bats emerging from the cave in the evening, is one of the most popular wildlife experiences in Arizona.

    Tombstone, in Cochise County in southeastern Arizona, is the most famous ghost town in the American West, the site of the O.K. Corral gunfight of October 26, 1881, in which Wyatt Earp, his brothers, and Doc Holliday faced the Clanton and McLaury factions in what has become the most mythologized 30 seconds in the history of the American frontier. The town has embraced its reputation for gunfighting mythology and Western kitsch with unabashed enthusiasm, and the daily re-enactments of the gunfight, the restored Bird Cage Theatre, the Crystal Palace Saloon, and the Boot Hill Graveyard constitute an experience somewhere between historical site, living museum, and theatrical entertainment. The surrounding desert landscape, the authentic Victorian architecture of the town’s commercial district, and the extraordinary story of Tombstone’s brief, blazing prosperity in the 1880s, when it was the largest city between St. Louis and San Francisco, give the place a historical depth beneath the showmanship.

    Bisbee, perched in the Mule Mountains south of Tombstone near the Mexican border, is one of the most charming and surprising small communities in Arizona. A former copper mining town of considerable prosperity, Bisbee declined dramatically when the mines closed but has been reinvented as an arts community of genuine vitality. The town’s extraordinary topography, its buildings stacked up the steep canyon walls in layers connected by hundreds of steps, its Victorian and Craftsman architecture, its independent galleries, restaurants, and hotels, and its layered mining heritage displayed at the outstanding Bisbee Mining and Historical Museum and the Queen Mine underground tour, make it one of the most distinctive and rewarding small-town destinations in the American Southwest.

    THE WHITE MOUNTAINS AND EASTERN ARIZONA
    The White Mountains of eastern Arizona, rising to nearly 11,500 feet at Mount Baldy on the White Mountain Apache Tribe’s Fort Apache reservation, offer a dramatically different Arizona experience from the desert landscapes that dominate the state’s image. This is a landscape of ponderosa pine and spruce-fir forest, mountain meadows, trout streams, lakes, and cool summer temperatures that have made the region a popular retreat from the heat of the lowland desert for generations of Arizonans.

    The Salt River Canyon, carved by the Salt River through the Tonto and Fort Apache Apache reservations between the Phoenix metropolitan area and the White Mountains, is one of the most spectacular and least visited canyon landscapes in Arizona. The highway drops more than 2,000 feet into the canyon in a series of dramatic switchbacks before crossing the river and climbing the far wall, and the views of the canyon walls and the turquoise river below are breathtaking.
    The town of Show Low, the primary commercial hub of the White Mountains, takes its name from a card game that decided the ownership of a large ranch in the 1870s, the winning hand being a show low card. The surrounding landscape, including the Mogollon Rim, the dramatic escarpment forming the southern edge of the Colorado Plateau that drops more than 2,000 feet to the desert lowlands below, offers some of the finest forest hiking in Arizona.

    Petrified Forest National Park, on the high desert plateau of northeastern Arizona, preserves one of the world’s largest and most colorful collections of petrified wood, the fossilized remains of ancient trees that fell in a Triassic-era forest more than 225 million years ago, were buried in sediment, and had their organic material gradually replaced by colorful silica over millions of years. The resulting logs, scattered across the desert in brilliant reds, yellows, purples, and whites, are among the most beautiful and unusual geological features in Arizona. The park also contains outstanding examples of Ancestral Puebloan ruins and petroglyphs and a section of the Painted Desert, the vast badlands of pastel-colored Triassic sediment extending across northeastern Arizona, that is particularly spectacular in the early morning and late afternoon light.

    PRESCOTT AND THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS
    Prescott, in the Bradshaw Mountains of central Arizona at 5,400 feet elevation, is one of the most livable and most historically significant small cities in the state, the former territorial capital of Arizona and a community of Victorian elegance quite unlike the desert towns that define Arizona’s popular image. The town’s Courthouse Plaza, surrounded by Victorian commercial buildings and anchored by the 1916 Yavapai County Courthouse, is one of the finest historic town squares in the Southwest, and Whiskey Row, the saloon-lined block of Montezuma Street adjacent to the plaza, has been restored as a lively entertainment district that maintains a genuine connection to its frontier history.

    The Sharlot Hall Museum, named for the remarkable territorial-era poet, author, and historian who served as the first woman appointed to official government position in any Arizona territory, is an outstanding complex of historic buildings and exhibits presenting the history of Prescott and the surrounding region with great depth and care. The Phippen Museum of Western Art, on the north edge of town, presents an outstanding collection of traditional and contemporary Western American art in a beautiful setting.
    The Granite Dells, a remarkable landscape of rounded granite boulders accumulated in a jumble of extraordinary geological beauty on the north edge of Prescott, provide superb hiking, rock climbing, and paddling on Watson Lake, the reservoir that sits among the boulders in one of the most photographed lake settings in Arizona.

    Jerome, perched on the steep slope of Cleopatra Hill above the Verde Valley northwest of Prescott, is Arizona’s most famous former ghost town, a copper mining community that once housed 15,000 people and is now home to approximately 450, most of them artists, gallery owners, restaurateurs, and the operators of the exceptional boutique hotels that have transformed the old mining town’s buildings into some of the most atmospheric accommodations in the state.

    FOOD AND DRINK IN ARIZONA
    Arizona’s culinary culture is one of the most distinctive and underappreciated in the American Southwest, rooted in the intersection of Native American, Spanish colonial, Mexican, and Anglo-American food traditions and increasingly shaped by a generation of talented chefs who have found in the state’s extraordinary agricultural resources and cultural heritage a basis for a genuinely regional cuisine.
    The flour tortilla of Sonoran Mexican cooking, large, thin, and extraordinarily delicate, is one of the great breads of North America, and the Sonoran-style burrito wrapped in a large flour tortilla has achieved a purity and simplicity of expression in the taquerias of Tucson and the border region that make the national fast-food versions seem like a cruel parody. The green corn tamale, made from fresh corn ground with its milk and mixed with masa and green chiles, is a seasonal delicacy of extraordinary deliciousness that appears at festivals and in restaurants throughout southern Arizona in late summer. The Navajo taco, a creation of the Navajo Nation built on a base of fry bread topped with beans, ground beef, lettuce, tomatoes, and chile, is a beloved staple food of both the reservation and the state fair circuit.

    The native foods of the Sonoran Desert, increasingly celebrated and incorporated into contemporary restaurant cooking, include the prickly pear cactus fruit, whose brilliant magenta juice flavors everything from lemonade to margaritas to sorbets; the saguaro cactus fruit, harvested by the Tohono O’odham people using traditional tools in a ceremony that marks the Tohono O’odham new year; mesquite flour, ground from the pods of the mesquite tree and used in baking and cooking by Native peoples for thousands of years; and tepary beans, small, intensely flavored beans native to the Sonoran Desert that have extraordinary drought resistance and are being revived by Native farmers and chefs as a climate-adapted food crop.
    The Arizona craft beer scene has grown dramatically in the past decade and now encompasses more than 100 breweries throughout the state, with particular concentration in Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, and Sedona. Four Peaks Brewing in Tempe, SanTan Brewing in Chandler, Huss Brewing in Phoenix, and Flagstaff Brewing Company are among the most respected producers. The wine industry, centered in the Willcox and Sonoita-Elgin appellations in southeastern Arizona, has developed a small but growing number of producers working with varieties suited to the state’s warm, high-elevation vineyard conditions.

    OUTDOOR RECREATION
    Arizona’s outdoor recreation opportunities are as varied as its landscapes, encompassing world-class hiking, rock climbing, mountain biking, whitewater rafting, birding, stargazing, and more in settings that range from the Sonoran Desert floor to the alpine forests of the Sky Islands and White Mountains.

    The state trail network includes the Arizona Trail, a 800-mile long-distance hiking and mountain biking route running the full length of the state from the Mexican border to Utah, traversing desert, canyon, mountain, and plateau country in a journey that encapsulates the full geographic diversity of Arizona. The trail passes through or near the Huachuca Mountains, Tucson, the Rincon Mountains, the Santa Catalina Mountains, Oracle, Superior, the Mazatzal Wilderness, Flagstaff, the Grand Canyon’s North Rim, and the Arizona Strip before reaching Utah, creating a continuous 800-mile transect through some of the finest landscapes in the American West.

    Stargazing in Arizona, particularly in the dark-sky areas of the state away from metropolitan light pollution, is among the finest available anywhere in the United States. Arizona has more certified International Dark Sky Places than any other state, and the combination of high elevation, dry air, and distance from large urban areas creates conditions for astronomical observation that professional astronomers prize highly. Kitt Peak National Observatory, west of Tucson, is one of the premier astronomical research facilities in the world and offers public programs and nighttime observation sessions of exceptional quality.

    PRACTICAL TRAVEL INFORMATION
    Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport is the primary air gateway to Arizona, one of the busiest airports in the country and a hub for American Airlines and Southwest Airlines, with extensive domestic and international connections. Tucson International Airport serves the southern part of the state with a more limited route network. Flagstaff Pulliam Airport connects the northern part of the state to Phoenix with commuter service.

    Driving is essential for exploring Arizona beyond the metropolitan areas, and the state’s highway and byway network encompasses some of the finest road trips in America. US-89 and US-89A through the Navajo Nation and up through the canyon country of northern Arizona to Flagstaff, US-180 from Flagstaff to the Grand Canyon’s South Rim through the San Francisco Peaks, State Route 77 through Globe and the Salt River Canyon to the White Mountains, and the network of roads through southeastern Arizona’s Sky Islands are among the most scenically extraordinary drives in the country.

    Arizona’s climate is dominated by heat in the lowland desert areas, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees Fahrenheit in Phoenix and Tucson from June through September. Winter is the primary tourist season in the desert lowlands, when daytime temperatures are mild and pleasant and the desert landscape is at its most accessible. Spring, particularly late February through April, is the most spectacular season for desert wildflowers and is widely considered the finest time to visit the Sonoran Desert. The higher elevation areas of northern Arizona, including Flagstaff and the Grand Canyon, experience genuine four-season weather with cold winters and significant snowfall, cool and magnificent summers, and spectacular autumns when the aspens turn gold in the San Francisco Peaks and the canyon country glows in the low-angle autumn light.

    Conclusion
    Arizona is a state that operates at geological time scales, and visiting it properly requires accepting that you are an extremely small and temporary presence in a landscape that was ancient before the first human beings arrived and will endure long after the last ones have departed. The Grand Canyon does not care about your schedule. The saguaro forest does not acknowledge your presence. The red rocks of Sedona are indifferent to your camera. And yet the experience of being in their presence, of standing at the edge of that impossible abyss or walking among those enormous cactus columns at dawn or watching the light turn Cathedral Rock to fire at sunset, is one of the most powerful and most humbling available to a human being.
    It is a state that demands physical engagement, that asks you to leave the air-conditioned vehicle and the comfortable resort and put your feet on the actual earth, to feel the heat of the desert rock under your hands, to breathe the air that smells of creosote after rain, to listen to the absolute silence of a desert night. It demands cultural respect and humility, asking you to recognize that the landscapes you are visiting as a tourist have been home to human communities for thousands of years, that the ancient ruins are not merely picturesque ruins but the homes and ceremonial centers of peoples whose descendants are still here, still maintaining living cultures of extraordinary depth and continuity.

    And it rewards both the physical engagement and the cultural humility with experiences that cannot be replicated anywhere else on earth. The Grand Canyon at sunrise, the color coming up slowly through the canyon walls from blue to gray to pink to gold to blazing orange. The silence of the Hoh Rain Forest transposed to the Sonoran Desert in the stillness before dawn when the coyotes stop calling and the quail have not yet begun. The night sky over Monument Valley with no light pollution for a hundred miles in every direction and the Milky Way overhead in a density of stars that makes you feel simultaneously infinitely small and part of something infinitely large.

    Arizona is not a destination. It is an education. It teaches you about time, about scale, about the relationship between human beings and the natural world, about the cultures that have found meaning and sustenance in landscapes that appear inhospitable to the uninitiated. It is one of the most important classrooms available to an American traveler, and its lessons, learned on the rim of the canyon or in the silence of the desert or in the presence of a thousand-year-old ruin, tend to stay with you for the rest of your life.
    Go to Arizona. Go with time to spare and a willingness to be surprised. Go with respect for the land and for the people who call it home. Go with the understanding that you will not see it all and that what you do see will change something in you that does not entirely change back.
    That is what Arizona does. It changes you. And that is precisely why it is worth the journey.

    Arizona — The Grand Canyon State. Grand in everything: its canyons, its deserts, its mountains, its skies, its history, and its hold on the imagination of everyone who has ever stood at the edge of its earth and looked out at the ancient, magnificent, indifferent, astonishing world below.

  • Nashville, Tennessee: Where City Beats Meet Green Retreats

    Nashville, Tennessee: Where City Beats Meet Green Retreats

    Nashville occupies a singular place in the American imagination. Known the world over as Music City, the capital of Tennessee sits in a broad basin of the Cumberland River, surrounded by rolling hills, and powered by a creative energy that has made it one of the most visited and most talked-about cities in the United States over the past two decades. It is a city that has always known how to tell a story — through a three-minute country song, through the neon glow of a honky-tonk on Broadway, through the biography of a sharecropper’s son who walked into a recording studio and changed the sound of American music forever.

    But Nashville has never been only one thing, and the lazy shorthand of “country music capital” undersells a city of genuine depth and diversity. This is also a city of serious universities and outstanding museums. A city whose food scene has evolved from meat-and-three diners into one of the most exciting culinary landscapes in the American South. A city of striking architecture, of world-class healthcare and higher education institutions, of a booming tech and creative economy that has drawn hundreds of thousands of new residents over the past decade. A city where the Grand Ole Opry broadcasts on Friday and Saturday nights as it has since 1925, where the Fisk Jubilee Singers have been performing since 1871, and where new recording studios, restaurants, and neighborhoods reinvent themselves with a restless ambition that never quite loses sight of where it came from.

    Nashville is also, it must be said, one of the premier bachelorette and bachelor party destinations in the country, a status that has reshaped parts of the city’s nightlife and brought its own complicated consequences. The crowds on Lower Broadway on a Saturday night are a genuine phenomenon — a river of humanity moving between honky-tonks under a canyon of neon light and live music pouring from every direction. It is loud, celebratory, occasionally overwhelming, and undeniably exhilarating. It is also only one small corner of a city with far more to offer than a boot-scootin’ good time, though there is absolutely nothing wrong with that either.

    Come to Nashville with curiosity and an open appetite — for music, for food, for history, for the particular warmth of a Southern city that genuinely enjoys having company — and it will reward you with more than you expected.

    Getting There
    Nashville International Airport (BNA), located about eight miles southeast of downtown, is one of the fastest-growing airports in the United States, reflecting the city’s explosive population and tourism growth. It serves dozens of domestic destinations with direct flights and has expanded its international offerings significantly in recent years, with direct service to London, Cancún, and several Canadian cities. Major carriers including American, Delta, Southwest, United, and Spirit all operate here, and the airport has undergone a substantial modernization and expansion program.

    Ground transportation from the airport to downtown is available via taxi, ride-sharing services, and the WeGo Public Transit bus system (Route 18 connects the airport to downtown). The journey takes approximately 15 to 25 minutes depending on traffic.

    Amtrak does not currently serve Nashville — a gap that frustrates many residents and visitors — though there are ongoing conversations about regional rail development. Greyhound and Flixbus connect Nashville to Atlanta, Memphis, Louisville, Birmingham, and other regional cities from the downtown bus terminal. For those driving, Interstate 40 is the primary east-west corridor connecting Nashville to Memphis (three hours west) and Knoxville (three hours east). Interstate 65 runs north to Louisville and south to Birmingham. Interstate 24 connects to Chattanooga and Atlanta to the southeast.

    Getting Around
    Nashville is a car-friendly city built around the automobile, and many visitors find that renting a car is the most practical option, particularly for exploring attractions beyond the downtown core and for day trips into the surrounding countryside.
    That said, the central entertainment districts — Lower Broadway, the Gulch, Midtown, 12 South — are increasingly walkable and well-served by ride-sharing. The WeGo Public Transit system operates bus routes throughout the city, though service frequency and coverage are limited by the standards of a major metropolitan area. The city has been expanding its greenway trail network for cycling and pedestrians, and electric scooters are available throughout the central neighborhoods.

    Parking downtown, particularly on weekends, can be expensive and competitive. Most visitors staying downtown find that walking and ride-sharing cover their needs without requiring a car for the central attractions. A car becomes more useful for the Grand Ole Opry complex in Music Valley, the historic sites along the Music Highway, day trips to the surrounding countryside and small towns, and exploration of the city’s more spread-out neighborhoods.
    Pedal taverns — multi-person pedal-powered bars on wheels — are a highly visible feature of Lower Broadway on weekend nights, along with party buses and horse-drawn carriages. They contribute to the festive atmosphere and occasionally to traffic.

    Neighborhoods to Know
    Nashville’s neighborhoods have distinct characters that reward exploration well beyond the downtown entertainment corridor.
    Downtown and Lower Broadway constitute the tourist and entertainment heart of the city. Lower Broadway — the stretch of Broadway between First and Fifth Avenues — is the most famous honky-tonk corridor in the world, lined with multi-story bars featuring live music on every floor from mid-morning until the small hours of the morning. Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge, Robert’s Western World, Legends Corner, the Stage, Layla’s, and dozens of other venues operate continuously, with musicians playing for tips on rotations throughout the day. The music is live, the boots are real, and the energy is relentless. Adjacent to Broadway, the Printer’s Alley district offers a quieter, slightly more intimate nightlife alternative in a historic alley that has hosted clubs and bars since Prohibition.

    The Gulch sits just southwest of downtown and has transformed from an abandoned rail yard into one of the most fashionable neighborhoods in Nashville over the past fifteen years. Its streets are lined with upscale restaurants, cocktail bars, boutique fitness studios, luxury residential towers, and the kind of Instagram-friendly street art that draws a photogenic crowd. The Gulch is where Nashville’s new-money energy is most concentrated and most visible.

    12 South is a neighborhood that manages to feel simultaneously hip and neighborly — a few blocks of Twelfth Avenue South lined with independent boutiques, coffee shops, restaurants, and the beloved Pinewood Social (a bar, restaurant, bowling alley, and coffee shop that somehow works as all four). The I Believe in Nashville mural on the side of a building on 12th Avenue has become one of the city’s most photographed street art pieces. 12 South has a young professional energy but remains genuinely walkable and community-oriented.

    East Nashville across the Cumberland River from downtown is the city’s most bohemian and creative neighborhood — a sprawling area of Victorian and craftsman homes, independent restaurants and coffee shops, recording studios, art galleries, and dive bars. Five Points, the neighborhood’s main intersection, anchors a commercial district of considerable charm. East Nashville has a strong LGBTQ+ community, a thriving music scene that operates somewhat in the shadow of Broadway but with considerably more artistic ambition, and a neighborhood pride that expresses itself in bumper stickers, yard signs, and an almost tribal loyalty among its residents. The neighborhood was devastated by a tornado in March 2020 and rebuilt with remarkable speed and community solidarity.

    Germantown sits just north of downtown along the Cumberland River and is one of Nashville’s oldest neighborhoods, settled by German immigrants in the mid-nineteenth century. Its streets are lined with beautifully restored Victorian brick buildings now occupied by some of the city’s finest restaurants, upscale boutiques, and the Nashville Farmers’ Market. The neighborhood has a sophisticated, slightly quieter character than the entertainment districts to its south and has become one of the most desirable addresses in the city.
    Hillsboro Village and Belmont are adjacent neighborhoods centered around Belmont University and Vanderbilt University, giving them a youthful but intellectually oriented energy. Hillsboro Village’s main commercial strip on 21st Avenue contains independent bookstores, vintage clothing shops, coffee shops, and excellent restaurants. The Belcourt Theatre, a beloved independent cinema that has operated since 1925, is a neighborhood anchor and one of the finest art house theaters in the South.

    Music Row is the legendary district of studios, labels, publishing houses, and music industry offices that built Nashville’s commercial music infrastructure beginning in the 1950s. Stretched along 16th and 17th Avenues south of downtown, it is quieter and less glamorous than its mythology might suggest — many of the historic studios have given way to offices and condominiums as real estate pressure has reshaped the district — but it remains the administrative heart of the country music industry and a place of genuine historical significance. RCA Studio B, where Elvis Presley, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, and hundreds of other artists recorded, is open for tours and is one of the most important historic sites in American popular music.
    Wedgewood-Houston (WeHo to locals) is Nashville’s most exciting emerging arts district — a former industrial neighborhood southwest of downtown now thick with galleries, studios, alternative performance spaces, chef-driven restaurants, and craft cocktail bars. The COOP and the Wedgewood-Houston Art Crawl have helped establish the neighborhood as the center of Nashville’s visual arts scene.

    Sylvan Park and Nations are residential neighborhoods west of downtown with a genuine neighborhood character — family-friendly, increasingly restaurant-rich, and popular with the young professionals and young families who want proximity to downtown without the noise of the entertainment districts. Charlotte Avenue, running through both neighborhoods, has become one of the better restaurant corridors in the city.

    Music
    Nashville’s relationship with music is foundational, constitutional, and all-pervasive. The city does not merely host a music industry; it is built around one, shaped by one, and still defined by one in ways that no amount of tech-sector growth or culinary sophistication has fundamentally altered.

    Country music is the genre most identified with Nashville, and its history here is the history of the city’s modern identity. The story begins with WSM Radio’s Barn Dance program, launched in 1925 and soon renamed the Grand Ole Opry — a weekly live radio broadcast of country and folk music that became the most important institution in the development of American country music. Artists from Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family to Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, and Garth Brooks have performed on the Opry stage, and the show continues every Friday and Saturday night, now broadcast from the Grand Ole Opry House in Music Valley. Attending a Grand Ole Opry performance is one of the essential Nashville experiences — not merely a tourist attraction but a living piece of American cultural history in which the past and present of country music are woven together in a single evening’s entertainment.
    The Nashville Sound, developed by producers Chet Atkins and Owen Bradley in the late 1950s and 1960s, smoothed the rough edges of honky-tonk country music with orchestral strings, background vocal choruses, and sophisticated arrangements, producing a polished, commercially accessible style that made Nashville the undisputed center of the country music industry. Artists like Jim Reeves, Eddy Arnold, and Patsy Cline defined the sound; its influence can be traced through decades of subsequent country music evolution.

    But Nashville’s musical identity extends well beyond country. The city has a deep and too-little-celebrated history in gospel and sacred music — it was here that the Fisk Jubilee Singers, a group of formerly enslaved students from Fisk University, began touring in 1871 to raise money for their institution, introducing the world to African American spirituals and jubilee songs that would ultimately influence every form of American popular music. The National Museum of African American Music (opened in 2021) tells this story with power and rigor.
    Americana, folk, and roots music have found a natural home in Nashville, with artists and venues throughout East Nashville, Germantown, and 12 South operating in creative spaces that prioritize artistic ambition over commercial formula. The Americana Music Association, headquartered in Nashville, holds its annual AmericanaFest in September — a week of showcases, conferences, and performances across dozens of venues that draws artists and industry professionals from around the world.

    The recording studio culture of Nashville is world-class and accessible to visitors in ways that few other music cities can match. RCA Studio B tours are outstanding. Ocean Way Nashville, Blackbird Studio, and Starstruck Studios are among the active facilities where contemporary artists record; some offer public events and tours.
    The live music ecosystem beyond Lower Broadway is rich and varied. The Station Inn in the Gulch is the premier bluegrass venue in Nashville and one of the finest in the world — an unpretentious, beloved room where serious practitioners of the form perform for audiences who listen with genuine devotion. The Bluebird Cafe in Green Hills is a small, listening-room venue that has served as a launching pad for some of the most important singer-songwriters in Nashville history — Garth Brooks was discovered at an open mic here in 1987. Seats for the regular songwriter rounds at the Bluebird are limited and hotly sought; advance reservations are essential. The Ryman Auditorium, the Exit/In, Brooklyn Bowl Nashville, and Marathon Music Works round out a landscape of venues that offers live music of extraordinary variety every night of the week.

    The Ryman Auditorium
    The Ryman Auditorium deserves its own consideration, because it is not merely a venue but one of the most hallowed spaces in American music. Built in 1892 by riverboat captain Thomas Ryman as a tabernacle for religious revival meetings, the building served as the home of the Grand Ole Opry from 1943 to 1974 and hosted virtually every significant figure in American country, folk, and popular music during that period. Its acoustics — created entirely by accident, through the combination of its Gothic Revival brick architecture, curved wooden pews, and stained glass windows — are extraordinary. Performers who have played the Ryman routinely describe it as one of the finest-sounding rooms they have ever experienced.

    After the Opry moved to its new home in Music Valley, the Ryman fell into disuse and near demolition before being saved and restored in the 1990s. Today it operates as a full-schedule concert venue and museum, hosting everyone from major country stars to rock, folk, and classical artists who seek out its incomparable acoustics and historical resonance. Daytime tours of the building are available and highly recommended. An evening concert at the Ryman — sitting in the original wooden pews, looking up at the Mother Church of Country Music’s stained glass and exposed brick, listening to music in one of the greatest acoustic environments in the world — is an experience of rare and genuine power.

    History & Culture
    Nashville’s history is layered and complex, and the city has been making serious efforts in recent years to tell a fuller and more honest version of it.
    The region was home to Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Shawnee peoples for centuries before European contact. French Canadian traders established a fur trading post at the site of present-day Nashville in 1710, and permanent American settlement followed in 1779 when James Robertson led a group of settlers across the frozen Cumberland River to establish Fort Nashborough. The city grew rapidly as a center of trade and agriculture in the antebellum period, its prosperity built substantially on the labor of enslaved African Americans who cultivated the cotton and tobacco plantations of the surrounding region.

    Nashville was a significant Civil War battleground. The Battle of Nashville in December 1864 was one of the most decisive Union victories of the war, effectively destroying the Confederate Army of Tennessee as a fighting force. The battlefield, spread across what are now suburban neighborhoods south of the city, is commemorated at multiple sites, and the ongoing efforts of preservation organizations to protect what remains of it from development constitute one of the most important historic preservation battles in the American South.
    The Tennessee State Museum, recently relocated to a magnificent new facility adjacent to the Bicentennial Capitol Mall, offers an outstanding survey of Tennessee history from prehistoric times through the twentieth century, with particular attention to the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the civil rights movement. It is one of the finest state history museums in the country and admission is free.

    The Fisk University Galleries on the campus of historically Black Fisk University contain an extraordinary collection of American art, including the Alfred Stieglitz Collection — a group of paintings and works on paper donated by Georgia O’Keeffe that includes pieces by Marsden Hartley, Arthur Dove, Charles Demuth, and O’Keeffe herself, along with a remarkable Cézanne and a Renoir. The collection came to Fisk through one of the most remarkable acts of institutional philanthropy in American art history and is displayed in a small, intimate gallery on campus.
    The National Museum of African American Music opened in January 2021 on Fifth Avenue North in downtown Nashville and fills a gap in the American cultural landscape that is difficult to overstate. Its comprehensive, technologically sophisticated, and deeply moving exploration of the African American roots of virtually every genre of American popular music — blues, jazz, gospel, R&B, soul, funk, hip-hop, and yes, country — is essential viewing for anyone who cares about where American music comes from. The interactive exhibits, oral history recordings, and artifact collections are outstanding.

    The Parthenon in Centennial Park is one of Nashville’s most improbable and magnificent landmarks — a full-scale, architecturally accurate replica of the Parthenon in Athens, built in 1897 for Tennessee’s Centennial Exposition and rebuilt in permanent concrete in the 1920s. Inside stands a 42-foot-tall gilded statue of Athena — the largest indoor sculpture in the Western Hemisphere — and a permanent collection of American paintings. The building’s exterior, reflecting pool, and surrounding park create a scene of surreal grandeur in the middle of a Midwestern American city.

    The Belle Meade Historic Site on the western edge of the city preserves the mansion and grounds of one of the most famous Thoroughbred horse farms in nineteenth-century America. The tours are notable for their increasingly honest engagement with the role of enslaved workers — including skilled horsemen and trainers whose expertise was central to the farm’s success — in building the plantation’s wealth and reputation.

    The Cheekwood Estate and Gardens combines a magnificent 1920s Georgian Revival mansion, filled with an excellent collection of American art, with 55 acres of meticulously designed gardens that vary dramatically with the seasons. The BULB! tulip festival in spring and the holiday lights installation in winter are among the most popular events on Nashville’s social calendar.

    Country Music Attractions
    For visitors drawn specifically by Nashville’s country music heritage, the city offers an extraordinary concentration of dedicated attractions.
    The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in downtown Nashville is one of the finest popular music museums in the world. Its permanent collection spans the full history of country music from its folk and string band roots through contemporary Nashville, with exceptional displays of costumes, instruments, vehicles, and personal artifacts belonging to the genre’s greatest artists. The rotating special exhibitions — often devoted to specific artists or eras — are consistently excellent. The museum also operates a research library and archive that is invaluable to scholars and serious enthusiasts. The building itself, designed to evoke a piano keyboard and a bass clef when viewed from above, is a striking piece of architecture.

    RCA Studio B on Music Row is operated as a living museum by the Country Music Hall of Fame. The studio, in continuous use from 1957 to 1977, hosted recording sessions by Elvis Presley, Dolly Parton, Roy Orbison, the Everly Brothers, Willie Nelson, and hundreds of other artists. The tour, led by knowledgeable guides who explain both the technical history of the studio and the stories of the recordings made there, is one of the most genuinely moving experiences Nashville offers to music lovers. The original equipment, the acoustic tiles, and the layout of the room are preserved essentially as they were during the studio’s golden era.

    The Grand Ole Opry House in Music Valley, about eight miles from downtown, has been the home of the Grand Ole Opry since 1974. The 4,400-seat theater is modern and comfortable, and attending a Friday or Saturday night Opry performance — which typically features a mix of established country legends, current stars, and emerging artists, all performing a few songs each in a variety show format — is the single experience most deeply rooted in Nashville’s musical identity. Backstage tours are available on non-show days and offer access to the green rooms, the famous circular piece of stage wood taken from the Ryman’s original stage and embedded in the Opry House stage floor, and the broadcast facilities.

    The Johnny Cash Museum and the adjacent Patsy Cline Museum on Fifth Avenue in downtown Nashville are privately operated but serious institutions devoted to two of the most significant artists in country music history. The Cash museum in particular — with its extensive collection of personal artifacts, handwritten lyrics, stage costumes, photographs, and audio and video recordings — offers an intimate and emotionally resonant portrait of one of the most complex and compelling figures in American popular culture.

    Loretta Lynn’s Ranch in Hurricane Mills, about 75 miles west of Nashville, is the home of the Coal Miner’s Daughter, one of the greatest figures in country music history. The ranch offers tours of Loretta Lynn’s antebellum mansion, a museum of her memorabilia, camping facilities, and (on special event weekends) live music and motorsports events.

    Food & Drink
    Nashville’s food scene has undergone a transformation over the past fifteen years that has attracted national and international attention, elevating the city from a meat-and-three stronghold — excellent in its own right — to a genuinely sophisticated culinary destination with James Beard Award winners, innovative chefs, and a dining landscape of remarkable variety and ambition.

    Hot chicken is Nashville’s most famous culinary contribution to the American canon, and it deserves every bit of the attention it has received. The dish — fried chicken coated in a paste of cayenne, lard, and spices that ranges from mild to genuinely punishing, served on white bread with pickle chips — was invented, according to the most widely accepted account, by Thornton Prince’s family in the 1930s as a revenge dish: a jealous girlfriend allegedly dosed Prince’s fried chicken with an extreme quantity of hot spices, intending to punish him, only to have him enjoy it and eventually turn it into a restaurant concept. Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack, still operating today, is the original and most hallowed temple of the form. Bolton’s Spicy Chicken and Fish, 400 Degrees, Hattie B’s, and the Pepperfire are among the other essential hot chicken destinations. Visitors should approach the upper heat levels with genuine caution — “Extra Hot” at the serious establishments is not a marketing claim.

    Meat and three restaurants are the backbone of Nashville’s everyday food culture — a Southern dining tradition in which diners choose a meat (fried chicken, country-fried steak, meatloaf, pork chops, catfish) and three side dishes (mac and cheese, collard greens, field peas, mashed potatoes, fried okra, turnip greens, creamed corn) from a steam-table display. Arnold’s Country Kitchen on Eighth Avenue South is the most beloved and the most justly famous, a cash-only, cafeteria-line institution with a devoted following that includes construction workers, lawyers, musicians, and visiting food writers in equal measure. Swett’s in Clifton is the oldest continuously operating meat-and-three in Nashville, having served the community since 1954.
    The biscuit is another essential Nashville food experience. Loveless Cafe, on the western edge of the city at the entrance to the Natchez Trace Parkway, has been serving its legendary scratch biscuits with house-made preserves and country ham since 1951 in a setting of genuine Southern roadside charm. The lines on weekend mornings are long and entirely worth it. Dozens of younger establishments have elevated the biscuit into a vehicle for more elaborate preparations — fried chicken biscuits, biscuit sandwiches with local eggs and Tennessee country ham — but Loveless remains the standard against which all Nashville biscuits are measured.

    The broader restaurant scene encompasses an extraordinary range. Germantown Café and Rolf and Daughters in Germantown represent the farm-to-table fine dining end of the spectrum. The 404 Kitchen in the Gulch is one of the most consistently excellent upscale restaurants in the city. Husk Nashville, occupying a gorgeous Victorian house in Rutledge Hill, applies chef Sean Brock’s commitment to Southern ingredients and culinary heritage to a menu of extraordinary depth and creativity. Otaku Ramen in the Gulch makes some of the finest ramen outside of Japan. Epice in Hillsboro Village brings Lebanese flavors to the Nashville dining landscape with exceptional skill.

    The bar and cocktail scene has matured considerably. The Patterson House in Midtown is generally credited with launching Nashville’s craft cocktail movement and remains a benchmark. Attaboy on Five Points in East Nashville (an offshoot of the legendary Manhattan bar) brings serious cocktail craft to the neighborhood. Pinewood Social in 12 South combines excellent cocktails with a genuinely fun multi-use space. The Tennessee whiskey tradition — Jack Daniel’s in Lynchburg, George Dickel in Tullahoma, and a growing number of craft distilleries throughout the state — gives Nashville’s cocktail bars exceptional raw material.
    The food market scene includes the Nashville Farmers’ Market in Germantown, open year-round with an indoor market house and seasonal outdoor produce sheds, as well as numerous neighborhood farmers markets in 12 South, East Nashville, and beyond on weekend mornings.

    Parks & Outdoor Spaces
    Centennial Park is Nashville’s most iconic urban green space, centered on the Parthenon replica and surrounding a large lake with walking paths, picnic areas, and a bandshell that hosts free summer concerts. The park’s 132 acres are particularly beautiful in spring when the dogwoods and cherry trees bloom.

    Percy Warner Park and Edwin Warner Park together form one of the largest urban park systems in the American South — nearly 3,000 acres of forested hills, creekbeds, and meadows in the Belle Meade area west of the city. The network of hiking and equestrian trails through these parks offers genuine wilderness immersion within the city limits, with views of the Nashville basin from the higher ridgelines that are particularly beautiful in fall foliage season.

    Radnor Lake State Park in the Oak Hill neighborhood south of the city is a 1,100-acre natural area centered on a reservoir created in the early twentieth century by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. Its six miles of hiking trails wind through mixed hardwood forest along the lakeshore and ridgetops, offering outstanding wildlife viewing — great blue herons, wood ducks, white-tailed deer, river otters, and occasional sightings of bald eagles are all possible. It is one of the most beloved natural areas in Middle Tennessee and a genuine respite from urban life.

    The Cumberland River Greenway follows the banks of the Cumberland through downtown and East Nashville, offering a paved multi-use trail that connects several neighborhoods and parks along the river. The Shelby Bottoms Greenway and Nature Park in East Nashville extends the river trail system through 810 acres of floodplain forest and meadow with excellent birding.
    Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park sits at the foot of the State Capitol on the north side of downtown and serves as an outdoor history lesson — its grounds incorporate a 200-foot granite map of Tennessee, a timeline of state history carved in stone, a World War II memorial, a carillon tower, and a reflecting pool, all oriented on an axis toward the Capitol dome above. It is a beautifully designed civic space and an underutilized gem in the downtown landscape.

    Sports
    Nashville has emerged as a legitimate major sports city over the past two decades, with professional franchises in hockey and soccer joining the college sports powerhouses that have always defined Tennessee athletics.
    The Nashville Predators of the NHL play at Bridgestone Arena in downtown Nashville, and the franchise has developed one of the most passionate and raucous fan bases in professional hockey. Predators home games are loud, festive, and wildly entertaining even for casual hockey fans — the Lower Broadway honky-tonks fill before and after games with fans in gold and navy jerseys, and the party atmosphere inside and outside the arena is a Nashville experience unto itself.
    The Tennessee Titans of the NFL play at Nissan Stadium across the Cumberland River from downtown. The stadium, opened in 1999, offers outstanding sight lines and hosts not only Titans games but major concerts and events throughout the year.

    Nashville SC of Major League Soccer debuted in 2020 and plays at GEODIS Park in the Nations neighborhood — a purpose-built soccer stadium opened in 2022 with a capacity of 30,000 that is the largest soccer-specific stadium in the United States. The team has rapidly developed a devoted and vocal fan base.
    Vanderbilt University athletics — particularly baseball, which has produced multiple national championships and a remarkable number of Major League Baseball draft picks under coach Tim Corbin — attract strong local followings. The Tennessee Volunteers and the other SEC schools dominate Saturday fall conversations throughout the state.

    The Nashville Sounds, the Triple-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers, play at First Horizon Park in Germantown — a beautiful, intimate minor league ballpark opened in 2015 with outstanding sight lines, local food options, and an atmosphere that makes it one of the finest minor league baseball experiences in the American South.

    Day Trips & Nearby Destinations
    The Jack Daniel’s Distillery in Lynchburg, Tennessee, about 75 miles southeast of Nashville, is one of the most visited distillery tourist attractions in the world. The original distillery, operating since 1866 in the hollow of Cave Spring Hollow where the limestone spring water that defines the whiskey’s character flows cold year-round, offers tours of the distilling and barrel aging facilities and the famous charcoal mellowing vats. Lynchburg is in a dry county — an irony so perfect that it has become part of the distillery’s mythology — so whiskey can be purchased at the distillery gift shop but not consumed by the glass on-site (though tasting experiences have been carefully expanded in recent years within the limits of local ordinance).

    The Natchez Trace Parkway begins at the Loveless Cafe on the western edge of Nashville and winds 444 miles southwest through Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi to Natchez on the Mississippi River — one of the most beautiful and historically significant scenic drives in America. The parkway follows the route of an ancient trail used by Native Americans, later by flatboatmen walking home after floating goods down the Mississippi, and by soldiers during the early American republic. No commercial vehicles, no billboards, and a 50 mph speed limit make it a genuine escape from the contemporary world. Day trips along the northern section reveal forested ridges, historic markers, ancient mound sites, and the timeless beauty of the Middle Tennessee landscape.

    Franklin is a small city 20 miles south of Nashville that combines genuine Civil War history — the Battle of Franklin in November 1864 was one of the bloodiest hours in American military history, with nearly 10,000 casualties in five hours of fighting — with a beautifully preserved Victorian downtown, outstanding independent restaurants and shops, and the Carter House and Carnton, two exceptional Civil War historic sites. It has also become extremely desirable as a Nashville suburb, and its growth has brought both prosperity and the usual tensions of rapid development.

    Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky, about two hours north, is the longest known cave system in the world — more than 400 miles of surveyed passages beneath the Kentucky hills. The National Park Service offers tours of varying length and difficulty, from short introductory walks to challenging wild cave crawls.
    The Tennessee Walking Horse country around Shelbyville and Lewisburg, about an hour south of Nashville, preserves a distinctive Tennessee agricultural and equestrian tradition. The Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration, held each August in Shelbyville, is one of the premier horse shows in America.
    Chattanooga, two hours southeast, has reinvented itself in recent decades as one of the most livable and visitor-friendly mid-sized cities in the South, with the outstanding Tennessee Aquarium, the historic Walnut Street pedestrian bridge, the Hunter Museum of American Art, and access to outdoor recreation in the surrounding mountains of the Cumberland Plateau and the Appalachian foothills.

    Practical Information
    Best time to visit: Nashville is a year-round destination, but spring (April and May) and fall (September and October) offer the most comfortable weather for exploring the city on foot. Spring brings dogwood and redbuilt blooms and the CMA Fest announcement season; fall brings football and the spectacular foliage of the surrounding hills. Summers are hot and humid — temperatures regularly reach the low to mid-90s Fahrenheit — but the city’s entertainment life continues without interruption and outdoor spaces remain enjoyable in the mornings and evenings. Winter is mild by northern standards, with temperatures typically in the 40s and 50s, though the city occasionally receives significant ice storms that disrupt transportation.
    CMA Fest, held every June at Nissan Stadium and venues throughout downtown, draws over 80,000 country music fans from around the world for four days of performances by hundreds of country artists. It is the largest country music festival in the world and utterly transforms the city. Accommodation must be booked six months to a year in advance and prices reach their annual peak.
    Accommodation: Nashville offers accommodation across all price ranges, concentrated heavily downtown and in the Gulch. The boutique hotel scene has flourished — the Graduate Nashville, the Dream Nashville, the Joseph, the Thompson, and the Virgin Hotels Nashville are among the more distinctive options. The historic Union Station Hotel, converted from Nashville’s magnificent 1900 Romanesque Revival railroad station, is one of the most atmospheric lodging options in the city. East Nashville, Germantown, and 12 South have smaller boutique inns and vacation rentals for visitors who prefer a more residential experience.

    Safety: Nashville is a generally safe city for visitors in the tourist and entertainment districts. Lower Broadway on weekend nights is heavily policed and, despite its boisterous atmosphere, is not particularly dangerous. Normal urban precautions apply throughout the city. Some neighborhoods away from the tourist core have higher crime rates; visitors should use the same awareness they would in any major American city.

    Tipping: Standard American conventions apply: 18–20% at restaurants, $1–2 per drink at bars, $2–5 per day for hotel housekeeping. On Lower Broadway, where musicians play for tips in addition to whatever the venue pays, tipping the performers is both customary and directly supports working musicians.

    A Final Word
    Nashville is a city that moves fast and remembers deeply. It tears down old buildings and builds gleaming towers, draws hundreds of thousands of new residents who have never heard of the Grand Ole Opry, reinvents its restaurant scene with each passing year — and yet it holds onto something essential, something rooted in the particular genius of three-minute songs and front porch music-making and the idea that the most important human experiences are the ones worth singing about.

    You can feel it on Lower Broadway at midnight, when the pedal taverns have gone home and the serious music is still playing — a fiddle cutting through the noise, a voice landing a note with precision and feeling, a room of strangers momentarily sharing something true. You can feel it at the Bluebird Cafe when a songwriter performs a song they wrote for someone else and the entire room goes still. You can feel it at the Ryman on any given Tuesday night, or at the Station Inn when the banjo and the upright bass lock into something ancient and unstoppable.
    Nashville will sell you a good time on Broadway with great efficiency and considerable skill. But if you look beyond the neon, if you follow the music to where it comes from and sit still long enough to listen, the city will give you something considerably more lasting.