Michigan’s Leelanau Peninsula: A Day by the Lakes
I love discovering new places and today’s excursion onto the Leelanau peninsula outside of Traverse City, Michigan was a fascinating series of discoveries.
I never knew about the vast fishery of the Great Lakes and that only native Americans are allowed to fish for chub, whitefish, lake trout and salmon here, nor have I ever seen so many different ways you can market cherries, or that there are almost 40 wineries in these two large counties in Northern Michigan.
But that’s why I’m a travel writer and why I always say yes to visiting a new place, so I can share these wonderful things with you, my dear readers.
Mike Norton picked me up in a snow squall and we set out heading west from Traverse City across the flatlands where cherry and apple orchards dot the landscape. Vast open tracts of land looked like places you’d find deer–and that’s correct.
Our first stop was the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore’s visitor center, where we looked over a diorama which showed the steep cliffs that plunge down to the shore of Lake Michigan. A hike on a snowy path took us up about a mile to a bluff where the magnificent dunes shone bright and we could see the North and South Manitou, small uninhabited islands just off the coast.
We drove up the coast to the town of Glen Haven, which is home to a small maritime museum (closed this time of year) and then to the summer town of Glen Arbor, which was mostly windswept and closed, and felt like being in Cape Cod in February.
This part of the world is cherry country and to find out all about the fruit we visited The Cherry Republic in Glen Arbor. From cherry flavored coffee, to jams, jellies, dried and fresh cherries, the theme here was pretty clear, and a sign said it all: Apples Smaples, Peaches, Smeaches, Oranges, Smoranges.
Hell yeah!
We continued up north until we got to Leland, where ferries depart for the islands and a member of the Carlson family was smoking salmon and beef in a wood fired smoker.
Joan Seibenick
November 17, 2014 @ 9:25 pm
We spend time in Glen Arbor every summer and hope to buy a place there sometime in the near future. We’ve been “Up North” vacationers for about 24 years and we’ve watched all of the changes to the area. It is one of the most beautiful places in America, in my opinion … and we are avid travelers. We’ve been to nearly every state, and lots of other countries as well. We love Leelanau County! M22 is a way of life for us!