Perfectly Prepared Walleye – 5 Easy Steps & Tips
Preparing perfectly cooked walleye for a Michigan summer meal easy and delicious. Here are step by step technique to impress your guests.
News History & Fun in Michigan
Preparing perfectly cooked walleye for a Michigan summer meal easy and delicious. Here are step by step technique to impress your guests.
Caseville – Stepping into a new era of family entertainment, Key North Family Fun Center introduced its innovative adventure golf course on June 30. Co-owners Charlotte and Clint Braun unleashed a new dimension of fun, leading the way for future renovations …
Soar through the stunning landscapes of Michigan’s Thumb Region, where quaint small towns meet rich farmlands and stunning shorelines. With the rise of aerial drone videography, you will witness these breathtaking vistas from an angle once reserved for birds.
A task for all early pioneers in Michigan was to make a log cabin. The Bad Axe Historical Society is the curator of the largest collection of authentically restored pioneer log buildings in the state.
Immerse yourself in the fusion of art and nature at the Huron County Nature Center. Experience the Detroit Institute of Arts’ Inside|Out Program’s masterpieces nestled within the tranquil forest environment.
The Upper Thumb offers some of the finest Michigan kayaking areas for both the novice and expert.
Across Saginaw Bay from Michigan’s Thumb sits one of the prettiest lighthouses in Michigan.
The Michigan History Center has produced a video that offers viewers a virtual tour of climbing the lighthouse tower. As each step is made up of the tower, bits of history and fascinating design and functional aspects of the lighthouse are revealed. In the end, there is a little test you can take to on seven of the little aspects of the Tawas Point Lighthouse.
The times of greatest shipbuilding in the Great Lakes region was during the lumbering era. From 1839 until the early 1890s, the virgin old-growth Michigan forests were cut down to produce lumber for growing towns and cities in the lower Great Lakes. Michigan was the nation’s leading lumber producer from 1869 until about 1900. The only way to transport finished milled lumber from the shore side mills in the Great Lakes was by ship.