America's freshwater Riviera
On Lake Michigan's gorgeous beaches, everyone can find a spot in the sun.
© Beth Gauper
On the Upper Peninsula, Wells State Park doesn't get the crowds of beaches in Lower Michigan.
It’s funny that some people in the Upper Midwest spend their summer vacations on the beaches of Cancun or Cape Cod, because the best beaches in the world are in their own back yard.
Lake Michigan is America’s freshwater Riviera, a nearly unending strand of sand that looks like Florida without the high-rise condos. It’s clean, blue and pleasantly cool, with water temperatures in the 60s, and in most places it looks just like the ocean.
Add in candy-striped lighthouses and even more ice-cream stands, and you’ve got the makings of a great beach holiday — a cheap one, too, if you're on a budget.
We spent a week there in June, driving from one spectacular beach to another. The entire east side of Lake Michigan seems to
be a beach; they’re at 18 Michigan state parks, dozens of city and county beaches and Sleeping Bear Dunes National
Lakeshore.
There’s also a national lakeshore in Indiana, a beach park in Illinois and unsung but beautiful city beaches in southern Wisconsin as well as sand-lined state parks farther north.
We can’t name a “best’’ beach, because the best is whichever one you’re at on a hot summer day, and there were way too many for us to check out, anyway. But here are a few we hated to leave.
For trip tips, see Circling Lake Michigan and
Planning a Circle Tour of Lake
Michigan.
For tips on camping, see Camping around Lake
Michigan.
For details on cabins in Michigan state parks, see Michigan's great lake cabins.
Michigan's Upper Peninsula
We started at J.W. Wells State Park, between Menominee and Escanaba. It's just 25 miles from the Wisconsin border, so we're guessing it's popular with cheeseheads.
This would be the place to go if you don't like crowds. On a gorgeous Saturday morning, less than a dozen people were on the well-kept beach, which is shallow and perfect for children.
Just east of the park, we saw O.B. Fuller Park and a sign for camping, picnicking and swimming. There were also lots of
mom-and-pop resorts and motels, all with vacancies, plus many of the soft-serve ice-cream stands that have been pushed out by
franchises elsewhere.
U.S. 2 hugs the lake from Menominee to Rapid River and around Manistique, and there are plenty of beach pull-outs. It struck us that the west part of the Upper Peninsula would make a great last-minute beach trip — it's so far from the big cities, it probably never fills up.
Michigan's Lower Peninsula
© Beth Gauper
The beach at Orchard Beach State Park north of Manistee is reached by stairs.
The first thing we noticed in Traverse City is that everyone swims. Old people, young people, at all times of the day. No wonder, because this summer-resort hub has more than its share of beautiful sand beaches.
On the East Arm of Grand Traverse Bay, Traverse City State Park shares a beach
with four hotel and condo resorts.
On the West Arm, the marina is flanked by West End Beach and Clinch Park Beach, where there's a miniature steam train that gives rides and a concession building that rents kayaks for use on the Boardman River, which connects Boardman Lake to Lake Michigan.
We know this town gets crazy busy in the summer, but when we were there in late June, it had a mellow beach-town vibe. "I could stay here a week,'' Torsten said.
We hoped to swim at the tip of the Old Mission Peninsula, while visiting Old Mission Point Lighthouse, but the rock-studded shoreline was shoe-sucking muck.
It was the same on the other side of the bay, at the tip of the Leelanau Peninsula in Leelanau State Park, home of the 1852 Grand Traverse Lighthouse.
But Leland and Northport have great little beaches, and we also saw one at Sutton's Bay, a boutique town closer to Traverse City.
Traveling down the back of Michigan's "mitten,'' we came to Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, which has lots of beaches. For more, see Grand sand.
We liked the one in the town of Empire best. It has basketball and volleyball courts, an old-fashioned playground and a picturesque little lighthouse, a memorial to a local fisherman who always wanted a light to guide him home.
For kids, there's a beach with warmer water on South Bar Lake, just across the parking lot, with a dock that children like to
run down and jump off.
Just north of Manistee, we came to Orchard Beach State Park. At the turn of
the century, this blufftop, from which stairs lead to the beach, had a theater, boardwalk and pavilion, connected to town by
streetcar. In 1921, the state bought it and put in a 166-site campground.
Now, campers get their own uncrowded beach, though they have to climb the stairs to use a bathroom or get a drink. It's a
gorgeous beach; on the morning after a storm, the lake was kicking up a few whitecaps, and the beach looked more like the
Caribbean than Michigan.
Some serious beach towns
© Beth Gauper
Big Red stands at the Lake Macatawa entry to Lake Michigan in Holland.
You'll find the crowds at Ludington State Park just north of Ludington. You could spend a week here without stepping out of the park, and no doubt many people do.
We watched families tubing down the Sable River, riding bikes on trails, swimming in Hamlin Lake and walking through the
dunes to the Big Sable Point Lighthouse. That night, a Dixieland jazz band played in the amphitheater.
We picnicked along the river, rode bikes to the lighthouse, chatted with the volunteer keeper and a friendly campground host and looked inside the concession/gift shop, which sells rafts and tubes.
The road from Ludington is lined with dunes, and according to our park map, there's a state-park beach on Lake Michigan. But there was so much else to do, we completely forgot to check it out.
We skipped Mears, Silver Lake and Duck Lake state parks but drove through Muskegon. Flat, wide Pere Marquette Park looks like a beach in California, and houses across the street have sand in their yards.
It was the end of the day when we arrived at Holland State Park in Holland, but people still were heading toward the beach along Ottawa
Beach Road, the only access.
The park is a favorite spot to watch the sunset, which turns the harbor lighthouse flame-red, and to walk along the breakwall and boardwalk.
The next morning, we watched bicyclists laden with beach towels streaming into the park, whose parking lot fills by 10 a.m.
on holiday weekends. The beach is not as shallow as some of the others, so I got in a good swim.
I didn't get to try even one of the 24 flavors of soft-serve from the pavilion cafe, because we had to move on to Saugatuck. We had lunch and checked out the shops but not Oval Beach, which you can reach from downtown via a hand-cranked chain ferry across the Kalamazoo River.
© Torsten Muller
Three women walk along the beach at Warren Dunes State Park at dusk.
Farther on, in South Haven, there was an e-coli alert at
South Beach, so we kept going. Too bad — we know it's a favorite getaway for many people.
When we got to Warren Dunes State
Park, on the Red Arrow Highway near Sawyer, it was 86 degrees and I was dying for a swim. We stayed until the
sun went down, swimming and walking along the beach; like everyone else there, we were reluctant to leave.
Now that we were close to Chicago, we figured the beaches would become unbearably crowded and the towns unaffordably chic.
But we really liked the relaxed beach atmosphere in New
Buffalo, the closest town to the Indiana border.
People were streaming across a causeway from the little downtown, where a few boutiques mixed with a pharmacy, a dollar store and the ubiquitous fudge shop. We joined them and spend an hour on the beach.
We saw train tracks through town and stopped at the nearby Harbor Grand Hotel & Suites, where a friendly desk clerk
handed us a schedule for Amtrak's Wolverine and Blue Water Service. The train
leaves Chicago's Union Station three times a day and arrives in New Buffalo two and a quarter hours later.
Now there's a painless weekend getaway.
On to Indiana
And then we weren't in Michigan any more. Indiana made us nervous; according to our maps, we should have been in Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, but we couldn't find it.
© Beth Gauper
A decorative lighthouse stands on the town beach in New Buffalo, Mich.
Finally, after driving along a narrow unmarked road crowded by weeds, we found a beach, from which we were turned away
because the parking lot was full.
We kept driving and, half an hour later, finally made it to the inland national-park visitors center, where an
eager-to-please young ranger explained that the closest beach to Chicago, West Beach, actually was easiest to get into
because entry costs $6.
Before leaving the center, we watched a movie about the national lakeshore — created in 1966 on the same day U.S.
Steel, which had bought 1,200 acres of the dunes, got public funds for the Port of Indiana. Hmmm.
Then we kept driving west, past the ArcelorMittal steel mill in Burns Harbor to West Beach.
The park was lovely, with golden dunes reflected in wetland ponds lined with lily pads. We walked the Secession Trail through the dunes, and then I cooled off in the water, though it was the first place where we'd seen algae and silt.
The beach was beautiful, too, though flanked by steel mills, and we could see the skyscrapers of Chicago in the distance.
Lifeguards kept watch on swimmers and, while we were there, tracked down two 12-year-olds who had wandered off.
Swimming may not have been such a great idea, though. When I got home, I read that in 2007, in exchange for 80 jobs, Indiana regulators allowed BP to release 54 percent more ammonia and 35 percent more sludge — 1,584 pounds of ammonia and 4,925 pounds of sludge each day — into the lake from its refinery near Indiana Dunes.
Illinois
Chicago has 15 miles of beaches along its 29 miles of shoreline. The Ohio Street Beach is a stone's throw from Navy Pier, and Oak Street Beach adjoins the Gold Coast.
There's a party atmosphere more like a beach resort than a huge metropolis, with restaurants blaring '50s music, sand volleyball pick-up games and cafes set up on the sand.
There are lifeguards, too, keeping long hours. A fun and easy way to visit the beaches is by bicycle.
© Beth Gauper
The beach at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore is flanked by steel mills.
There's a different atmosphere at Illinois' only state beach park — call it neglect and decay. Illinois Beach State Park has six miles of sand from Waukegan to the Wisconsin border, but concession buildings and bathhouses are boarded up and parking lots overgrown.
Why? A concessionaire I found filling a pop machine next to a beach house condemned in 2002 attributed the sad state of the park to greed, political apathy and the state budget deficit. Only on the Fourth of July, he said, is the large parking lot full.
The beach itself is perfectly nice, and the park, which includes campsites, was filled with a gorgeous array of wildflowers,
many more than we'd seen anywhere else. Too bad, Illinois.
Wisconsin
Just across the border, Kenosha has a beautiful sand beach dotted with vintage play equipment. Simmons Island Beach is bordered by a long concrete pier, and at the end sits the red 1901 Pierhead Light.
A shorter breakwater light, white with a green stripe, is on the other end of the harbor entrance. Up on the hill is the 1866
Southport Lighthouse, built of Cream City brick.
Racine has North Beach, a broad expanse of lovely white sand with a wooden castle
playground called Kids Cove.
Concerts are held downtown at the marina, where there’s a red 1910 breakwater light. Nearby, Pershing Park has a
fountain with two dozen jets that kids like to run through on hot days.
© Beth Gauper
Lifeguards keep vigil in rowboats along Chicago's beaches.
Milwaukee also has beautiful beaches, including the
gleaming white sand of Bradford Beach, which has
lifeguards, a bathhouse, concession buildings and volleyball courts.
Between Port Washington and Sheboygan, Harrington Beach State Park has a mile of beach and a new campground.
Just south of Sheboygan, Kohler-Andrae State Park has a long beach lined by dunes. It also has an accessible beach trail and two beach wheelchairs.
In Sheboygan, Deland
Park has a large, lovely white-sand beach with playgrounds, restrooms and the salvaged wreck of the Lottie Cooper. It's also
a favorite of surfers, who show up on on windy days and after gales.
Point Beach State Forest, north of Two Rivers on Lake Michigan, has a lovely white-sand beach and a classic lighthouse. There's a nature lodge/concession center, too. For details, see Two trails from Two Rivers.
In Door County, Peninsula State Park on Green Bay is almost like a resort, with bicycle trails, a professional theater and a golf course as well as beaches.
Newport State Park, Wisconsin's only wilderness park, includes Europe Bay, a beautiful, quiet crescent of sand lined by wildflowers.
In Baileys Harbor, the beach at Ridges Road County Park is breezy, cool and a favorite of kiteboarders.
At the tip of the peninsula, the east side of Rock
Island State Park is lined with beaches, mostly enjoyed by campers. Access requires two ferry crossings. For more, see
Wisconsin's Icelandic outpost.
Trip Tips: Beaches of Lake Michigan
What to know: Most Lake Michigan beaches tend to be shallow, which makes the water a lovely blue. The gradual drop-offs make them good for children, but few beaches have lifeguards, so keep an eye on them anyway.
© Beth Gauper
Vintage play equipment adorns Kenosha's broad, flat beach.
Temperatures vary from the low 60s early in the season to the upper 60s; the surface can be warmer. At state parks (except Illinois), you'll need a vehicle permit, and some town beaches charge $5 or $6 for parking. Or, you can bicycle or walk in.
When to go: The first three weeks of June are less crowded, and days are long. Late August is less crowded, and
September is a very good time to visit.
Where to stay: Reserve up to a year in advance for the best places.
For camping, see Camping around Lake Michigan.
For cabins in Michigan state parks, see Michigan's great lake cabins.
Planning: For more about travel around Lake Michigan, see Circling Lake Michigan, Planning a Circle Tour of Lake Michigan and
Lake Michigan with kids.
2012 events in Michigan: May 26-28, Fort Michilimackinac Pageant
at Colonial Michilimackinac in Mackinaw City. June 16, Taste of Charlevoix. June 15-17, Lilac Festival parade weekend on Mackinac Island. June 28-30, St. Ignace Car Show.
July 7-14, National Cherry Festival in Traverse City. July 13-15, Blissfest music festival near Harbor Springs. July 21, Inland Seas Summer
Festival and Leelanau Wine, Food & Music Festival in Suttons Bay. July 21-28, Venetian Festival in Charlevoix.
July 27-Aug. 5, Coast Guard Festival in Grand Haven. Aug., Waterfront Festival in Menominee. July 27-29, Sleepy Bear Music Festival in Lake Ann, between Traverse City and Empire. Aug. 9-12,
National Blueberry Festival in South Haven. Aug. 10-12, Ship & Shore Festival in New Buffalo.
Aug., Rendezvous at the Straits traditional powwow in St. Ignace. Sept.
3, Mackinac Bridge Walk across the Mackinac Straits.
And consider the Fourth of July and Labor Day weekends a big festival everywhere.
2012 events in Wisconsin: June 8-10, Lighthouse Festival in Door County. June 1-3, Pirate Festival in Port Washington. Aug. 17-19, Maritime Heritage Festival in Port Washington.
Milwaukee has non-stop festivals in its 90-acre lakefront Henry Maier Festival Park. They include Polish Fest in June, the big Summerfest music festival in June-July, Festa Italiana and German Fest in July, Irish Fest and Mexican Fiesta in August and Indian Summer Festival in September.
For more, see our Events Calendar.
More beaches in the Upper Midwest: See Great beaches of
lakes country.
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