| |
Michigan Travel Guide
Michigan is an American state in the Midwest and
the heart of the Great Lakes region. It has many attractions, famous
landmarks, and scenic state and national parks and forests. In
addition to the Great ones, it has about 12,000 inland lakes, 38
deep-water ports,
more miles of coastline than any state but Alaska, and more lighthouses
than any other U.S. state. Its agriculture features tourist-friendly
fare such as cherries, blueberries, peaches, apples, and grapes.
Michigan Travel Guide - Regions
* Southeast Michigan
* Central Michigan
* Northern Michigan
* Western Michigan
* Upper Peninsula (aka "the U.P.")
Michigan Travel Guide - Cities
Several of the major tourism destinations in Michigan
include:
* Ann Arbor -- Home of the University of Michigan
* Detroit -- Largest city in Michigan, the Motor City
* Grand Rapids -- Second largest city in Michigan
* Muskegon -- 3rd most visited county in MI, Ferry to Milwaukee, Summer Celebration
* Holland -- Beaches and Tulip Time
* Kalamazoo -- Home of Western Michigan University
* Lansing -- State capital
* Saginaw -- Historical logging city
* Saugatuck-Douglas -- Artsy beach resort
* Sault Ste Marie -- Upper Peninsula border town
* Traverse City -- Cherry capital of the world
Michigan Travel Guide - Other Destinations
* Isle Royale National Park
* Mackinac Island
* Michigan's Adventure - amusement park near Muskegon
* Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore
* Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore
Michigan Travel Guide - Understand
Michigan is the only state in the U.S. consisting of
non-contiguous non-island territory. The Lower Peninsula has the majority
of the population (in the south), while the Upper Peninsula, separated
from it by Lake Michigan and a bit of Lake Huron, is mostly rural. Until
1957 the only way to drive from one to the other was to go all the way
around Lake Michigan, or take your car onto a ferry.
It's also the only state where each person carries a map at all times.
Stick out your right hand (palm toward you) and you have a map of the
lower peninsula. Stick out your left hand (again with your palm facing
you, fingers pointing to the right) and you have an approximate map of
the upper peninsula. So don't be surprised if a resident tells you where
a city is by pointing at his hand.
Michigan's economy was previously dominated by the auto industry, but
has diversified somewhat as that and other traditional manufacturing
industries have moved their facilities elsewhere, and is beginning to
attract more information technology, life sciences, and high-tech manufacturing
jobs. Tourism is a growing segment of the economy, focusing in winter
on activities in the snow, and in summer on the state's extensive beaches,
lakes, and rivers. Hunting, fishing, and sailing are among the many outdoor
activities.
Michigan Travel Guide - Getting There
Michigan has several airports, but most international
or cross-country travelers will fly into Detroit Metro Airport (DTW)
just west of the city, or transfer there to a smaller airport elsewhere
in the state. Grand Rapids' Gerald R. Ford International (GRR) also has
daily flights from various parts of the country. Regional airports (which
also have direct flights from cities in nearby states, such as Chicago,
Cleveland, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Milwaukee, and Cincinnati) include Detroit's
Coleman A. Young (DET), Flint's Bishop (FNT), Lansing's Capital City
(LAN), Kalamazoo/Battle Creek (AZO), Muskegon (MKG), Midland/Bay City/Saginaw
(MBS), Traverse City's Cherry Capital (TVC), and Marquette's Sawyer (SAW).
Driving into Michigan can be accomplished by one of the highways that
enter and extend through Michigan. From Ohio, I-75 goes through Detroit,
Flint, and Bay City, and Mackinac city, ending in the U.P. city of Sault
Ste. Marie. From Indiana and Illinois, I-94 passes through Kalamazoo,
Battle Creek, Jackson, Ann Arbor, and Detroit, and ends in Port Huron
in the thumb of Michigan. I-196 branches from I-94 and continues up the
lakeshore to Grand Rapids. I-69 enters from east Indiana and Indianapolis,
crossing I-94, and passing through Lansing, Flint, and Port Huron. US-131
stretches from I-80/90 in northern Indiana through Kalamazoo, Grand Rapids,
Big Rapids, Cadillac, and northward. The Upper Peninsula can be entered
from Wisconsin via US-2 from Duluth, and US-41 from Green Bay or Milwaukee.
Michigan has major bridge/tunnel border crossings from Ontario, Canada
located in Detroit (from Windsor) and Port Huron (from Sarnia), with
a less heavily used crossing at the northern twin cities of Sault Ste.
Marie.
Amtrak provides daily rail service on three routes to Michigan, out
of its hub in Chicago. The Pere Marquette travels through St. Joseph
and Holland to Grand Rapids. The Wolverine travels through Kalamazoo,
Jackson, Ann Arbor, and Detroit, to Pontiac. The Blue Water passes through
Kalamazoo, Lansing, and Flint, on the way to Port Huron. A connecting
bus also runs from Kalamazoo north on US-131 to St. Ignace.
Car/passenger ferries from Milwaukee and Manitowoc, Wisconsin operate
during warm months, crossing Lake Michigan to Muskegon and Ludington,
respectively.
Michigan Travel Guide - Getting Around
As the historic base of the U.S. auto industry, Michigan's
intra-state travel system is almost entirely dependent on the internal
combustion engine. The most extensive public transit system is
the Greyhound bus network, which reaches most population centers
in much of the state. Amtrak's three daily rail routes from Chicago
connect certain cities in southern Michigan (see "Get in").
Most intra-state air service is out of Detroit Metro; there is
no regular service
between the state's
small regional airports. Several of the larger cities have local
bus services (Detroit also has light rail), but the personal automobile
remains
the best way to get around within Michigan. Interstate, US, and
state highways permeate southeast Michigan, crisscross the rest
of southern Michigan, stretch up into northern Michigan, and trickle
across
the Upper
Peninsula.
Michigan Travel Guide - Things To See
Michigan is blessed with many natural beauties. Primary
on that list are its Great Lakes (much of Superior, Michigan, and Huron,
and a little bit of Erie), the waters of which are now depicted on official
maps of the state. The upper peninsula region contains many of Michigan's
natural wonders, including the Pictured Rocks, Mackinac Island, Isle
Royale, Tahquamenon Falls, the Porcupine Mountains, and the Seney National
Wildlife Refuge. The lower peninsula however has expansive forests, rivers,
and inland lakes in the north (such as Huron and Manistee National Forests),
humongous sand dunes (such as at Sleeping Bear Dunes), and countless
miles of beautiful shoreline. In the autumn, "color tours" of
the changing leaves in northern Michigan are popular.
Michigan Travel Guide - Things To Do
If it can be done on or in the water, Michigan probably
offers at least a little of it, somewhere in the state. Fishing, sailing,
and motorboating are popular on both the Great Lakes and inland lakes.
The Great Lakes are a bit cool for some tastes, even in the summer, but
are still very popular beach destinations, along with swimming in the
warmer lakes inland. Canoeing is also popular on the rivers snaking through
protected forests. Some people do surf, mostly the often-substantial
waves coming across Lake Michigan, but it won't impress the dudes back
home at Hermosa Beach or Waikiki.
In winter, replace water with snow and ice. Hardcore anglers keep fishing
through the ice. Although serious alpine skiers might find the idea of
skiing in glacier-smoothed Michigan laughable, there are many downhill
ski areas, with the most popular resorts in the still-textured Charlevoix/Grand
Traverse region of the state. Some great cross-country skiing can be
found in both peninsulas, and any incline with a population of kids nearby
becomes a sledding hill.
The city of Detroit hosts four major professional sporting teams: the
Tigers (baseball), the Lions (American football), the Red Wings (hockey),
and the Pistons (basketball). The Lions, Redwings and Tigers all play
in stadiums in downtown Detroit, the Pistons play in Auburn Hills approximately
25 miles northwest of Detroit. Detroit also hosts the North American
International Auto Show each January. Big-city casino gambling with four
major casinos (supplementing the several Native American casinos in more
remote areas of the state) is Detroit's latest addition. Detroit serves
as the cultural and entertainment hub of the metropolitan region, with
major concert venues, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Detroit Institute
of Art, and an active theatre scene.
In Lansing, you can visit the State Capitol Building, which was renovated
in 1992. Many other state government and historical buildings are located
in Lansing and East Lansing.
There are many small towns of interest in Michigan. Frankenmuth, a town
in Mid-Michigan, is a replica German town. Very famous is the Zendher's
and Bavarian Inn, two restaurants known for their fried chicken.
If crossing from the Lower to Upper Peninsula, or vice-versa, visit
Mackinaw City, St. Ignace, and Mackinac Island. Fort Michilimackinac
and an old lumber mill are located on the latter, and these are both
open to the public. In order to get to the Island, you must take a ferry.
Three different services are available.
Michigan Travel Guide - Eat
If you're planning a trip into Michigan and you want
to check off the "must-eat" local specialties, then there are
four things you really should be sure to try while you're here. Interestingly,
they're all centered around the northern parts of the state, so if you
want to try them in their homeland, you'll want to be sure to visit the
area from Traverse City to the UP.
* The pasty (which rhymes with "nasty", not "hasty")
is a traditional food in the Upper Peninsula, made with meat (usually
beef), potato, onion, and sometimes rutabaga, wrapped in a light dough
with a crimped edge. They originated from Cornwall, in southwestern England,
and were brought to the area by Cornish miners who emigrated to the UP.
The miners' wives would take everything that was left from the Sunday
dinner, chop it up and wrap it in a semicircular pastry case, for their
husbands to warm on their shovels and eat for lunch. These days, you
can find pasty shops along highways in the UP, although their hours of
operation may be limited.
* Michigan produces rich, creamy fudge, made from milk, sugar and usually chocolate,
although you can find vanilla, peanut butter, mint, praline, cranberry, and
many more flavors. The most famous fudge in the state has been made on Mackinac
Island since 1887, still by hand, shaping and cooling it on marble slabs, right
there at the shop.
* Not surprisingly, lake fish is popular in Michigan, particularly whitefish
and lake perch. Most restaurants in Michigan that offer seafood will have at
least one of the two somewhere on their menu; you can find it broiled, fried,
smoked, made into salad, or planked on cedar with whipped mashed potatoes piped
around the edge. Lake fish are most commonly associated with Lake Superior,
so you'll find it more prominent on menus in the Upper Peninsula.
* Michigan produces over 70 percent of the tart cherries grown in the US, as
well as around 20 percent of the sweet cherries. The main cherry-growing region
in the state is around Traverse City, where you'll find a cherry festival every
July. Cherries, particularly dried ones, get added to some dishes to give them
local flair; you may see restaurants offering a "Michigan salad" that
includes dried cherries.
But although these four foods are most commonly associated with Michigan,
they're by no means the state's only specialities.
* Cudighi ("COO-duh-ghee"), a sausage-patty hoagie served
with mozzarella cheese and tomato sauce, is relatively popular in the
Upper Peninsula. It was brought to the area by immigrants from northern
Italy who moved into the Iron Mountain region, around Ishpeming and Negaunee,
and is flavored with sweet spices like cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg.
* In southeastern Michigan, a popular treat to celebrate Fat Tuesday and the
beginning of Lent is paczki ("poonch-key"), which are baked annually
in the Polish village of Hamtramck in metro Detroit. The version made in Hamtramck
are like large fried jelly doughnuts, covered in powdered sugar or glazed,
and most commonly filled with custard, fruit or chocolate, with plum being
a particularly popular flavor.
Aside from cherries, Michigan is a surprisingly prominent agricultural
region, well-known for a variety of products:
* Michigan ranks third in the nation's production of apples, which fill the
grocery stores to overflowing when they're in season.
* The western side of the state, near the shore of Lake Michigan, is a prolific
region for blueberries, growing 45 percent of the nation's total. They're not
as ubiquitous on menus as cherries, but if you're in the region during the
blueberry season (July through October) watch for roadside stands and "U-pick" farms
in rural areas.
* Michigan's morel mushrooms grow wild throughout the state, but are particularly
common in the northern Lower Peninsula. Locals often go mushroom-hunting, and
Michigan morels are sought-after by chefs statewide. There's a morel festival
every May in Boyne City.
* The growing season for the small, sweet Michigan strawberries is short, but
worth taking advantage of. There's a national strawberry festival every year
in Belleville.
* Perhaps less enticing, Michigan ranks second in the nation's production of
celery, mainly around Kalamazoo. There's even a celery interpretive center
in the area, where you can learn about the region's celery farming heritage.
* Maple syrup has been produced in Michigan as long as Native American tribes
have lived here, and it can also be found in the form of maple candy.
* Finally, less of a "natural resource" but still important, Battle
Creek is the home of Kellogg's cereals. You can take a tour of the Cereal City
USA museum if you visit the town, and of course everyone gets a free sample
at the end.
Michigan Travel Guide - Drink
Although not as prestigious as Californian or overseas
varieties, Michigan wines are growing in respectability, with
significant vineyards in the southwest (e.g. St. Julian, Tabor
Hill, Fenn Valley)
and northwest Lower Peninsula (e.g. Leelanau Cellars, Good Harbor,
Chateau Grand Traverse).
Stroh's was one of the last of the great traditional Michigan breweries
and a Detroit-area staple, but is now made out of state. However, local
breweries can now be found throughout Michigan. Some of the more widely
available Michigan beers are Bell's, Arcadia, Michigan Brewing, and Founder's.
Two native brands of soft drinks (called "pop" by the locals)
are Faygo (perhaps best known for strawberry-flavored "Redpop" and
the 1970s top-10 single based on their TV jingle), and Vernor's ginger ale
(with its distinctive tangy taste and gnome mascot). The national brands
own the restaurant and vending-machine business, but these are available
in stores.
Michigan's bountiful apple harvest is often used to make fresh apple cider,
and cider mills are abundant in the apple-growing region. They're only open
during the harvesting season in autumn, but if you stop by, you can get
cider by the gallon (not "hard" cider, mind you) or just a cup
of it, hot or cold. In Michigan, cider is traditionally drunk with cake
doughnuts; most cider mills make their own doughnuts fresh on the premises,
so you can get them piping hot, and rolled in cinnamon sugar. Most also
sell other apple products, like baked goods, apple jellies and butters,
and apple-related products like cookbooks and mulling spices.
Michigan Travel Guide - Transportation
Interstate highways
Interstate 75 is the main thoroughfare between Detroit and Flint, and
it extends all the way to Sault Saint Marie and provides access to Sault
Saint Marie, Ontario. The interstate crosses the Mackinac Bridge between
the Lower and Upper Peninsulas. Branching highways include I-275 and
I-375 in Detroit; I-475 in Flint; I-675 in Saginaw.
Interstate 69 enters the state near the Michigan-Ohio-Indiana border,
and it extends to Port Huron and provides access to the Blue Water Bridge
crossing into Sarnia, Ontario.
Interstate 94 enters the western end of the state at the Indiana border,
and it travels east to Detroit and then northeast to Port Huron and ties
in with I-69.
Interstate 96 runs east-west between Detroit and Muskegon. I-496 loops
around Lansing. I-196 branches off from this highway at Grand Rapids
and connects to I-94 near Benton Harbor. I-696 branches off from this
highway at Novi and connects to I-94 near St Clair Shores and Eastpointe.
U.S. State Highways
Include: US 12, US 10, US 223, US 23, US 127, US 27, US 31, US 131,
US 2, US 41, US 45, US 141.
Major bridges include the Ambassador Bridge, Blue Water Bridge, Mackinac
Bridge, and International Bridge. Michigan also has the Detroit-Windsor
Tunnel crossing into Canada.
Michigan Travel Guide - Important Cities and Towns
The following are the largest metropolitan areas in
Michigan, along with their 2000 population and 2000 national ranking
(according to the 2000 census and the census bureau's 2003 definitions
of "Metropolitan Statistical Area" and "Micropolitan Statistical
Area "):
* Detroit-Warren-Livonia, population 4,452,557 (9th)
* Grand Rapids-Wyoming, population 740,482 (63rd)
* Lansing-East Lansing, population 447,728 (99th)
* Flint, population 436,141 (104th)
* Ann Arbor, population 322,895 (140th)
* Kalamazoo-Portage, population 314,866 (146th)
* Holland-Grand Haven, population 238,314 (172nd)
* Saginaw-Saginaw Township North, population 210,039 (188th)
* Muskegon-Norton Shores, population 170,200 (219th)
* Niles-Benton Harbor, population 162,453 (231st)
The census bureau also consolidates some of the above metro areas into "Combined
Statistical Areas". These areas are listed below along with their 2000
population and 2000 national ranking (according to the 2000 census and the
census bureau's definition of "Combined Statistical Area"):
* Detroit-Warren-Flint, population 5,357,538 (8th)
* Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland, population 1,254,661 (34th)
* Lansing-East Lansing-Owosso, population 519,415 (60th)
* Saginaw-Bay City-Saginaw Township North, population 320,196 (79th)
The largest municipalities in Michigan are (according to the 2000 census):
* Detroit, population 951,270 (also known as "Motor City", Motown, "Hockeytown",
and "The D")
* Grand Rapids, population 197,800 ("The Furniture City")
* Warren, population 138,247
* Flint, population 124,943 (The birthplace of General Motors, also known as "The
Vehicle City")
* Sterling Heights, population 124,471
* Lansing population 119,128, (the state capital)
* Ann Arbor population 114,024, (the home of the University of Michigan, also
known as "A²", "A-squared", "Tree Town", "Ace
Deuce")
* Livonia, population 100,545
* Dearborn, population 98,000 (headquarters of the Ford Motor Company; birthplace
of Henry Ford)
* Clinton Township, population 95,648
Other important cities include:
* Battle Creek ("Cereal City U.S.A.")
* Bay City (major port on the Saginaw River)
* East Lansing (home of Michigan State University)
* Grand Haven (Coast Guard City, USA)
* Holland (Home of the Michigan Dutch)
* Kalamazoo ("Celery City")
* Marquette (largest city in the Upper Peninsula with 19,661 people).
* Midland (headquarters of the Dow Chemical Company and the Dow Corning Corporation)
* Port Huron (major international crossing and home of the Blue Water Bridge)
* Sault Ste. Marie (home of the Soo Locks and Sault Ste. Marie International
Bridge)
* Saginaw (The largest of the Tri-Cities)
* Traverse City ("Cherry Capital of the World")
Half of the wealthiest communities in the state are located in Oakland
County, just north of Detroit. Another wealthy community is located just
north of the city, in Grosse Pointe. Only three of these cities are located
outside of Metro Detroit. Detroit, with a per capita income of $14,717,
ranks 517th on the list of Michigan locations by per capita income. Benton
Harbor is the poorest city in Michigan, with a per capita income of $8,965.
Michigan Travel Guide - Stay Safe
The majority of Michigan is very safe, though of course
there are hazards. Some urban areas can be intimidating to travelers,
such as downtown Detroit and some of its inner suburbs, but this is based
on somewhat exaggerated sensational stories. Most places are completely
safe during daylight hours and important main entertainment and cultural
centers are heavily policed after dark. Use common sense traveling in
and through urban areas especially after dark. Outside of urban areas
Michigan is the typical friendly-as-can-be Midwest state.
Article Source: Wikipedia |
|
|
|