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.
