If you’re looking for help to plan your trip, Traverse City Tourism shares a few suggestions. 1. Explore the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore
Traverse City’s most distinctive architectural treasure is the sprawling Grand Traverse Commons, our former mental asylum, whose castle-like buildings are slowly being converted into a complex of apartments, shops, galleries, offices and restaurants. Great shopping, and the 480-acre wooded campus is a beautiful place for people to walk, run and bicycle. Each summer, thousands of visitors flock to Traverse City for the National Cherry Festival. From the first window-rattling roar of the jets at the air show to the last float in the Cherry Royale Parade, we are big fans of this annual event. Everything is located conveniently within walking distance, and since almost all the events are free, it offers more than a week of affordable family fun.
In a secluded forest setting (about 20 minutes from downtown Traverse City) Interlochen is a magnet for lovers of music, drama and dance. Over 200,000 people visit each year. Come for a show, or simply for a stroll around the campus.
In the 19th century, Bohemian immigrants came to work in Traverse City’s waterfront sawmills. They built their homes with slabs of scrap lumber from the mills, so their neighborhood came to be known as Slabtown. Many of their cottages are still standing – and so are two great bars: Sleder’s Family Tavern, and the Little Bohemia Pub & Grill. Both places still preserve the feel of an earlier, more authentic Traverse City. Traverse City has more tall ship sailing vessels than any other port on the Great Lakes. Taste the exhilaration of the Days of Sail is to take a two-hour cruise aboard the 114-foot Tall Ship Manitou, a replica of a 19th-century schooner, or on the Nauti-Cat, the largest commercial sailing catamaran on the Great Lakes. At the Grand Traverse Lighthouse Museum near Northport, visitors can see how lighthouse keepers and their families lived in the early 1920s. One of the oldest lighthouses on the Great Lakes, it has been in service for over 150 years. The smaller Mission Point Lighthouse at the tip of the Old Mission Peninsula is another scenic treasure. Traverse City is a shopper’s paradise. Our pedestrian-friendly downtown has scores of fascinating boutiques, restaurants and galleries, plus lots of places to sit and relax. Nearby are picturesque lakeport towns like Leland, Glen Arbor, Elk Rapids and Northport -- filled with hidden byways, cozy cottages, quaint shops and stunning galleries. This time of year, fresh fruits and vegetables – including cherries! – can be found almost everywhere around Traverse City. The community has lots of farmer's markets, roadside stands, and U-pick orchards where you can enjoy picking your own fruit. It tastes so much better that way! (责任编辑:) |