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Destinations / Mackinac

Mackinac

Overview

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Nostalgia is never in short supply on Mackinac Island. Horse-drawn carriages, stately Victorian homes along the bluff, old-fashioned storefronts, time-worn cemeteries, and the venerable Grand Hotel all provide the backdrop for a step back into a gentler time.

It was "Somewhere in Time," the 1979 movie starring Christopher Reeve that brought the island and the Grand Hotel to the attention of a new generation (and reminded an older generation of remembrances of things past). Today, the hotel's front porch - stretching the length of two football fields - greets summer visitors to the island arriving by ferry from Lake Michigan, many of them looking forward to nothing more strenuous than sampling the wares of several Midwest-famous fudge shops.

About four-fifths of Mackinac (pronounced Mac-in-naw) is state park, where trails and bridle paths are the domain of the horse and buggy and bicycle. There are no cars on this Victorian isle. But curiously, in winter, when there are fewer visitors and many of trails are groomed for cross-country skiing, you may have to share some of that fresh snow with not-so-Victorian snowmobiles...

Plan your trip

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NATURE

Before exploring the island's woods, which carpet about 1,800 acres, stop in at the Mackinac Island State Park Visitor's Center to see exhibits on the island's natural history. Then hit the trails (and roads) - about 70 miles of them within the park - and bring binoculars for looks at woodpeckers and warblers (more than a dozen warbler species have been recorded here).

SIGHTSEEING

You can visit five historic buildings downtown, but military history buffs should march straight to Fort Mackinac, where, from May to mid-October, docents dressed in uniforms styled to the 1880s fire rifles and cannons and play the fife and drums during tours. The fort, which includes 14 original buildings filled with period settings, was built by the British in the late 1700s to help protect the thriving fur trade.

BICYCLING

There's only one state highway in the nation without cars, and about the only complaint you'll get from cyclists about M-185 around the island's lakefront perimeter is that the ride is too short -- about 8 miles. Pack a picnic and stretch the day, with a stop at Arch Rock on the southeast shore.

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