Northern Michigan— or more
properly Northern Lower Michigan, (known
colloquially to residents of more southerly parts of the state and
summer residents from cities such as Chicago as "up north"), is a
region of the U.S. state of Michigan
popular as a
tourist destination. It is home to several small- to medium-sized
cities, extensive state and national forests, lakes and rivers, and
a large portion of Great
Lakes
shoreline. The region has a significant
seasonal population much like other regions that depend on tourism
as their main industry.
Northern Michigan is distinguished from the
Upper
Peninsula
though television stations in Northern Michigan
include in the viewing area Chippewa
, Luce
, and Mackinac Counties
.
Geography
The southern boundary of the region is not precisely defined.
Some
residents in the southern part of the state consider its southern
limit to be just north of Flint
and Grand
Rapids
, but more northern residents restrict it to the
area north of Mount Pleasant
: the "fingers" of the mitten-like shape of the
Lower Peninsula.
Signs in
the Lower Peninsula that mark that line are at Mission Point
Light
. (just north of Traverse
City
), Sutton's Bay
, Cairn Highway in Elk Lake
, Gaylord
, and Alpena
.
These are five of 29 places in the U.S.A. where such signs or
monuments are known to exist.
One other such sign is in Menominee,
Michigan
in the Upper Peninsula
. People from Northern Michigan generally use
the term "downstate" to refer to people and places south of the
region.
The geographical theme of this region is shaped by rolling hills,
Great Lakes shorelines including
coastal
dunes on the west coast, large inland lakes, numerous rivers
and large forests. A
tension zone is
identified running from Muskegon to Saginaw Bay marked by a change
in soil type and common tree species. North of the line the
historic presettlement forests were beech and sugar maple, mixed
with hemlock, white pine, and yellow birch which only grew on moist
soils father south. Southern Michigan forests were primarily
deciduous with oaks, red maple, shagbark hickory, basswood and
cottonwood which are uncommon further north. Northern Michigan
soils tend to be coarser, and the growing season is shorter with a
cooler climate.
Lake effect weather
brings significant snowfalls to snow belt areas of Northern
Michigan.
Across the
Straits of
Mackinac
, to the north, west and northeast, lies the
Upper Peninsula
of Michigan
(the "U.P."). Despite its geographic
location as the most northerly part of Michigan, the Upper
Peninsula is not usually included in the definition of Northern
Michigan (although Northern Michigan University
is located in the U.P. city of Marquette
), and is instead regarded by Michigan residents as
a distinct region of the state. The two regions are
connected by the Mackinac
Bridge
.
All of the northern
Lower Peninsula
– north of a line from
Manistee
County on the west to
Iosco County
on the east (the second orange tier up on the map) – is considered
to be part of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of
Gaylord.
There are
149 lighthouses around Michigan's
Great
Lakes
coasts, including several in Northern
Michigan. They serve as functioning warnings to mariners,
but are also integral to the region's culture and history. See
the list of
Michigan lighthouses for more information on individual
lighthouses.
Adjacent
to the Traverse
City
Cherry Capital Airport
is a United
States Coast Guard air
station , which is responsible for both maritime and land-based
search and rescue operations in
the northern Great
Lakes
region.
The state forests in the U.S. state of Michigan are managed by the
Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Forest, Mineral and Fire
Management unit. It is the largest state forest system in the
nation at .
See List of Michigan state
forests. The Northern
lower
peninsula includes three forests:
- Mackinaw State Forest
- Atlanta FMU (Alpena, northeast Cheboygan, most of Montmorency,
and most of Presque Isle counties)
- Gaylord FMU (Antrim, Charlevoix, most of Cheboygan, Emmet, and
most of Otsego counties)
- Pigeon River Country FMU (southeast Cheboygan, northwest
Montmorency, northeast Otsego, and southwest Presque Isle
counties)
- Pere Marquette State
Forest
- Cadillac FMU (Lake, Mason, Mecosta, Missaukee, Newaygo, Oceana,
Osceola, and Wexford counties)
- Traverse City FMU (Benzie, Grand Traverse, Leelanau, Kalkaska,
Manistee counties)
- Au Sable State Forest
- Gladwin FMU (Arenac, Bay, Clare, Gladwin, southern Iosco,
Isabella, and Midland counties)
- Grayling FMU (Alcona, Crawford, Oscoda, and northern Iosco
counties)
- Roscommon FMU (Ogemaw and Roscommon counties)
In addition, large portions of this area are covered by the
Manistee National Forest
and the
Huron National Forest.
In the
former, a unique environment is present at the Nordhouse
Dunes Wilderness
. This relatively small area of , on Lake Michigan
's east shore, is one of few wilderness areas in the U.S. with an
extensive lake shore dunes ecosystem.
The dunes are 3500 to 4000 years old, and rise to nearly higher
than the lake. The Nordhouse Dunes are interspersed with woody
vegetation such as
jack pine,
juniper and
hemlock. Many
small water holes and marshes dot the landscape, and dune grass
covers some of the dunes. The wide and sandy beach is ideal for
walks and sunset viewing.
Glaciers shaped the area, creating a unique regional ecosystem. A
large portion of the area is the so-called Grayling outwash plain,
which consists of broad outwash plain including sandy
ice-disintegration ridges; jack pine barrens, some white pine-red
pine forest, and northern hardwood forest. Large lakes were created
by glacial action.
Michigan is a unique travel environment. Consequently, drivers
should be forewarned: travel distances should not be
underestimated. Michigan's overall length is only and width – but
because of the lakes those distances cannot be traveled directly.
The distance from northwest to the southeast corner is 'as the crow
flies'.
Unlike the crows, travelers must go around
the Great
Lakes
. For example, when traveling to the Upper
Peninsula, it is well to realize that it is roughly from Detroit to
the Mackinac
Bridge
, but it is another from St.
Ignace
to Ironwood
.
Likewise direct routes are few and far between
I-75 and
M-115 do angle from the southeast
to the northwest), but most roads are oriented either east-west or
north-south (oriented with township lines) (
See Land Ordinance of 1785). So travel
may take longer than newcomers might otherwise think.
Summer destinations
Boating, golf, and camping are leading activities. Sailing,
kayaking, canoeing, birding, bicycling, horse back riding,
motorcycling, and 'off roading' are important avocations. The
forest activities are available everywhere. There are a great many
Michigan state parks and other
protected areas which make these truly a 'pleasant peninsula.'
These
would include the Huron National
Forest and the Manistee
National Forest, plus the Sleeping
Bear Dunes National Lakeshore
(a 35 mile stretch of eastern Lake Michigan dunes)
and the Nordhouse Dunes Wilderness
.
- Many
city dwellers from "downstate" and nearby areas (notably Chicago
) have summer vacation homes in Northern
Michigan. The largest resort cities in Northern
Michigan are in the west on Lake Michigan
, with its sandy beaches and warm bays.
Popular
tourist towns in Northern Michigan include Traverse
City
, Elk Rapids
, Charlevoix
, Petoskey
, Manistee
, Bear Lake
, Empire
, Frankfort
, Harbor Springs
, and Leland
. It should also be noted that there is a
large wine district in the area along the Lake Michigan Shore.
- At
the top of the lower peninsula are
Mackinaw
City
, and Mackinac Island
(which lies between the Lower and Upper Peninsulas
in the Straits of
Mackinac
).
- Less
well known and less developed is the northeastern lower peninsula along the Lake Huron
shore. It offers many great vacation spots,
particularly along the coast. These are, in order from south-to-north,
Standish
, Omer
, Au
Gres
, Tawas City
, East Tawas
, Oscoda
, Greenbush
, Harrisville
, Alpena
, Presque Isle
, Rogers City
, Cheboygan
, and points in between. Some consider these
to be more 'up north' than the relatively congested west coast.
Indeed, the Detroit Free Press noted that the area between Oscoda
and Ossineke included beaches that are "overlooked" and among the
"top ten in Michigan." This would include the area around
Harrisville (and two state parks). It was noted that:
"Old-fashioned lake vacations abound on this pretty stretch of Lake
Huron."
- In between the two (or three, depending on how you count)
coasts, there are a large number of inland cities and lakes
(Michigan has 11,037 lakes), and a varied landscape that has many
rivers. Such places as Cadillac
, Kalkaska
, Grayling
, West Branch
and Gaylord
are also prized summer destinations for
Michiganders and visitors from other states. Among many others,
Houghton
Lake
, Higgins Lake
, Torch Lake
, called Grand Lake (there
are at least two in northern Michigan) and Hubbard
Lake
are massive inland lake resorts that are worth
exploring.
- The
Michigan Shore to Shore Riding
& Hiking Trail runs from Empire
to Oscoda
, and points north and south. It is a
interconnected system of trails.
- The Great Lakes Circle
Tour is a designated scenic road system connecting all of the
Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River.
Non-summer destinations
Some of
the downhill and Nordic skiing resorts located on the western
side include Boyne
Mountain
, Boyne
Highlands
, Crystal Mountain Resort, Nub's Nob
, Caberfae Peaks and
Schuss Mountain. Some of
these also serve as summer golf resorts.
Frederic,
Michigan
is a particularly noteworthy center for cross country skiing.
Fall activities include
harvest
festivals, and driving around in the woods to watch the
colorful fall leaves.
Hunting in Northern
Michigan is a popular fall pastime. There are seasons for bow
hunting and a muzzle-loader season as well as for using modern
rifle season. The opening day of
deer
season (
November 15) is a major day
for some residents.
In winter, a variety of sports are enjoyed by the locals which also
draw visitors to Northern Michigan.
Snowmobiling, also called sledding, is popular,
and with hundreds of miles of interconnected groomed trails cross
the region.
Ice fishing is also popular.
Tip-up
Town on Houghton
Lake
is a major ice-fishing, snowmobiling and winter
sports festival, and is unique in that it is a village that
assembles out on the frozen lake surface. Higgins Lake
also offers good ice fishing and has many
snowmobiling, cross country skiing, and snowshoeing trails at the
North
Higgins Lake State Park
. Grayling
and Gaylord
and their environs are recognized for Nordic
skiing. Cadillac
is reputed to be even more popular during the
winter than it is in the summer.
History and local culture
Northern
Michigan was inhabited by Native American
tribes, most recently Ojibwa, well before
English settlers founded a fort on Mackinac Island
. Later, industry depended on natural
resources such as lumber and fur trading which contributed to the
rise of Traverse City.
When the railroads connected Northern
Michigan to the large cities through Kalamazoo
, some wealthy urbanites established summer home
associations in Charlevoix and Bay View. As passenger
railroad usage ended in the 1960s because of increased automobile
travel, aggressive promotion of Northern Michigan by local chambers
of commerce led to many of the festivals and attractions that bring
visitors north even today.
The area
was populated by many different ethnicities, including groups from
New
England
, Germany
, and Poland
.
Native American reservations
exist at Mount Pleasant and on the Leelanau Peninsula
.
The
Lumberman's
Monument
honors lumberjacks that shaped the area, exploiting
the natural resource. It is located on
River
Road, which runs parallel with the beautiful
Au Sable River, and is a
designated
National Scenic
Byway for the that go into Oscoda.
The State of Michigan
has designated Oscoda
as the official home of Paul
Bunyan due to the earliest documented publications in the
Oscoda Press, August 10, 1906 by James
MacGillivray (later revised and published in the Detroit News
in 1910).
Hartwick
Pines State Park
is a State Park and Logging museum located in
Crawford
County
near Grayling
and Interstate
75. It is the third largest state park on Michigan's
Lower Peninsula and the state's fifth-biggest park overall. The
park contains an old growth forest of white pines and red pines
that resembles the appearance of all of Northern Michigan prior to
the logging era.
Also to be noted is Interlochen
State Park
, which is the oldest state park and the other
remaining stand of virgin Eastern
White Pine in the Lower
Peninsula.
The state has numerous
historical
markers, which can themselves become the center of a tour; one
man's record and photographs of a quest to 'capture' them all is
particularly interesting.
Education
Interlochen
Center for the Arts
is a notable arts center that offers a
high-school-level academy and summer camp near Traverse
City. There are also several institutions of
higher education in Northern Michigan.
Community colleges include
North Central Michigan
College (NCMC, pronounced "nuck-muck" by locals),
Alpena Community College,
Huron Shores
Campus-Alpena Community College,
Kirtland Community College, and
Northwestern Michigan
College including the
Great Lakes Maritime Academy,
the only U.S. maritime academy on freshwater.
Northern Lower
Michigan has arguably only one four-year university (depending on
the definition of the southern boundary of the region), Ferris State
University
in Big Rapids
. Other nearby universities are in the
Upper
Peninsula
(Northern
Michigan University
and Lake
Superior State University), as well as Central
Michigan University
and Ferris State University
in the more southern reaches of the
state. The University of Michigan runs the University of Michigan
Biological Station out of Pellston, MI
. Central Michigan University
runs the CMU Biological Station on Beaver
Island
. Hillsdale
College runs the biological station in Lake
County
.
Economy
The economy of Northern Michigan is limited by its lower
population, few industries and reduced agriculture compared to
lower Michigan. Seasonal and tourism related employment is
significant. Unemployment rates are generally high. (In June 2007,
seven of the ten highest unemployment rates occurred in counties in
the Northern Michigan area.
The northeast corner has an industrial base. In particular, Alpena
is home to the LaFarge Company's holdings in the world's largest
cement plant and is home to Besser Block Co. (the inventor of
concrete block and maker of concrete block making machine), and has
a drywall board manufacturing facility owned by Abitibe; and Rogers
City is the locale of the world's largest limestone quarry, which
is also used in steel making all along the Great Lakes.
Nearer to the Lake Michigan shore, Cadillac and Manistee have
manufacturing and chemical industries, including the world's
largest salt plant.
Historically, lumbering and
commercial fishing were among the most
important industries.
Logging is still
important but at a mere fraction of its heyday output. Commercial
fishing is a minor activity.
A major draw to Northern Michigan is
tourism.
Real Estate,
especially condominiums and summer homes, is another significant
source of income. Because money spent in the real estate and
tourism market in Northern Michigan is dependent upon visitors from
southern Michigan and the Chicago area, the Northern Michigan
economy is sensitive to downswings in the
automobile and other industries.
See
Also: Economy of Detroit
and Economy of Chicago
Agriculture is limited by the climate and soil conditions compared
to southern regions of the state.
However, there are significant potato and dry bean farms in
the east. wine grapes, vegetables and
cherries are produced in the west in the
protected microclimates around Grand
Traverse Bay
. The Grand Traverse region has two of
Michigan's four federally-recognized
wine growing areas. The Grand
Traverse Bay area is listed as one of the most endangered
agricultural regions in the U.S. as its scenic land is highly
sought after for vacation homes.
Large
industries are sparse; cement-making and the
mining of limestone and gypsum on the Lake Huron
shore are the major exports of the area.
Much of Michigan's
natural gas
extraction is from wells in Northern Michigan. A small number of
men work on the
Great Lakes
freighters.
The only military presence in Northern Michigan is in two places:
Transportation
Airplanes
Airports
serving Northern Michigan include MBS
International Airport
near Freeland
, Pellston Regional Airport
, Traverse City Cherry Capital
Airport
and Alpena County Regional
Airport
in the Lower
peninsula. Depending on one's destination, Chippewa
County International Airport
in Sault Ste.
Marie
, in the eastern Upper peninsula
might be a viable alternative. Grand Rapids
and Bishop airport at Flint (although neither is within the area)
also have scheduled service proximate to parts of the
region.
The Oscoda-Wurtsmith Airport
is now a public airport which gives 24 hour
near-all-weather service for general aviation.
Automobiles
The primary means of transportation in Northern Michigan is by
automobile.
Northern Michigan is served by one interstate, and a
number of U.S. highways and Michigan state trunklines.
(Roads are organized by number.)
Interstate freeway
US routes
-
enters Michigan
after it crosses Lake Michigan
from Manitowoc to Ludington. US 10 is concurrent
with US 31 from Ludington to Scottville before US 31 heads north.
The road then heads east through Baldwin and Reed City before it
becomes a freeway west of US 127 near the
junction with M-115. US 127 and US 10 overlap for a short distance
near Clare. US 10 bypasses Midland and terminates at I-75 in Bay
City. Viewed from an east-west orientation, it provides a mainly
westerly road across Northern Michigan from Bay City off I-75
toward Ludington.
- comes out of Ohio merges near Flint with I-75, and then breaks
away at Standish. It then proceeds along (or parallel with)
the Lake
Huron
shoreline, eventually rejoining I-75 at the
Mackinac Bridge at Mackinaw City. This section of US 23 has
been designated the Sunrise Side Coastal Highway.
- mainly parallels the Lake Michigan shore, and runs for in a
northerly direction from the Indiana-Michigan state line southwest
of Niles to its terminus at I-75 south of Mackinaw City. From
Traverse City, it runs west across the base of the Leelanau
peninsula to Benzonia before continuing south to Manistee and other
points on the Lake Michigan shore. Northwards, it continues along
the east shore of Grand Traverse Bay to Charlevoix and Petoskey,
ending just before reaching Mackinaw City and the Mackinac
Bridge.
- ends its 758 mile (1,220 km) journey at Grayling. and
directly connects northern Michigan (and the Mackinac Bridge via
I-75) to Lansing, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee (all the way down to
Chattanooga)
- is a
primary north-south highway that is a freeway from north of
Cadillac south to major cities such as Grand Rapids
and Kalamazoo
. North of the freeway terminus, the highway
is mostly two lanes, connecting Kalkaska, Mancelona, and ending at
US-31 in Petoskey
.
Michigan state trunkline highways
- is a north-south highway that cuts through the bay region of
the U.S. state of Michigan. The southern terminus is at I-69 south
of the town of Lennon with its northern terminus located south of
Standish. It is a shorter alternative route, instead of I-75, from
Bay City to US 23 in Standish.
- follows the Lake Michigan shoreline from Traverse City to
Manistee and is a scenic drive. It is long and traverses Manistee,
Benzie, Leelanau and Grand Traverse counties. For most of its
length, it closely parallels the Lake Michigan shore. It also passes
through the Sleeping Bear Dunes National
Lakeshore
.
- is a short state highway which runs along the old route of US
27. It officially begins at exit 313 (Indian River) off of I-75 and
runs through Topinabee into Cheboygan, where it meets US 23. An old
stretch of US 27 which runs from Wolverine to Indian River is
designated as the "Straits Highway," but is not an actual part of
M-27.
- is long. Although it is not a true 'cross-peninsular' highway –
it crosses the Lower Peninsula from near Lake Michigan to Lake
Huron – it is close, and there are efforts being made to restore
the road and the status.
- is a transpeninsular road, as is M-55 and M-72.
- is a transpeninsular road. It starts in Tawas City and ends two
miles (3 km) north of Manistee across the Lower
Peninsula.
- runs northward from US 23 at Au Gres (just north of Standish),
and is the most direct route to Rogers City and Alpena from the
south.
- is the only state highway to traverse almost the entire
north-south distance of the lower peninsula. It runs from the
Indiana state line in the south to Charlevoix in the north. It
starts as a continuation of State Road 9 and gives access to the
Indiana Toll Road.
- is an east-west state highway that runs from US 31 in Alanson
to BUS US 23 in Rogers City. It passes through Indian River, Afton,
Tower, and Onaway.
- starts at downtown Harrisville as its eastern terminus and ends
at Empire on the west. In 133 miles (214 kilometers) M-72 runs
across the Lower Peninsula, and is one of three true
cross-peninsular highways.
- is a 'diagonal highway,' taking a generally
northwest-to-southeast direction from Frankfort, at a junction with
M-22 on Lake Michigan to an intersection with US 10 to the east of
Clare.
- is one of the shortest state highways in Michigan, extending
from a junction with M-22 in downtown Elberta northwest to the
former Ann Arbor
Railroad ferry docks.
Ferries and bridges
Several ferries still operate in the region.
The major
bridge in Northern Michigan is the Mackinac Bridge
connecting Northern Michigan to the Upper
Peninsula.
Trains
Alpena is situated along the Lake State Railway, formerly the
Detroit and Mackinac
Railway (D&M). Several other railroads have existed in
Alpena's history.
While train lines like the
Chicago and West Michigan
Railway (later the
Pere
Marquette Railway) and several commercial cruise lines were
early in generating traffic to Northern Michigan destinations, most
of these have been discontinued.
Festivals
A number of annual festivals occur in Northern Michigan including:
Flora and fauna
Northern Michigan has many tree types including
maple,
birch,
Oak,
white cedar,
aspen,
pine, and
beech.
Ferns,
milkweed,
Queen Anne's
lace, and
chicory grow in the open
fields and along roadsides. Forest plants include wild
leeks,
morel
mushrooms, and
trilliums.
Marram grass grows on beaches.
Several
mosses cover the land.
Common animals in Northern Michigan include
white-tailed deer,
fox,
racoons, and
rabbits.
black bear,
elk,
coyote, and
bobcat are also present. There have also been various
wolf and
mountain
lion sightings in Northern Michigan. Fish include
whitefish,
yellow
perch,
trout,
bass, northern
pike,
walleye,
muskie,
and
sunfish.
Common
birds are ducks, seagulls, wild turkey
, blue herons, cardinals, blue
jays, black-capped
chickadees, Hummingbirds, Baltimore Oriole, and ruffed grouse. Canada Geese may be seen flying over head in
spring and fall. Less well known birds that are unique in Michigan
to the Northern Lower Peninsula are
spruce
grouse,
sharp-tailed grouse,
red-throated loon,
Swainson's hawk, and the
boreal owl.
[117210] [117211].
The
Au Sable State Forest is a
state forest in the north-central Lower Peninsula of Michigan. Much
of the forest is used for wildlife game management and the
fostering of endangered and rare species, such as the
Kirtland's warbler – there are regular
controlled burns to maintain its habitat. The
Kirtland's Warbler has its habitat in an
increasing part of the area. There is a Kirtland's Warbler
Festival, which is sponsored in part by Kirtland Community
College.
The
American Bird Conservancy
and the National Audubon Society
have designated several locations as
internationally Important Bird
Areas.
Insect populations are similar to those found elsewhere in the
midwestern United States.
Lady bugs,
crickets,
dragonflies,
mosquitoes,
ants,
house flies, and
grasshoppers are common, as is the
Western conifer seed bug,
and several kinds of
butterflies and
moths (for example,
monarch butterflies and
tomato worm moths). Notable deviations in insect
populations are a high population of
June bugs during June as well as a
scarcity of
lightning bugs because of the
lower average temperatures year round and especially in the
summer.
There are no fatally poisonous snakes native to Northern Michigan.
The poisonous
Eastern
Massasauga Rattlesnake lives in Michigan, but it is not common,
particularly in Northern Michigan. In any event, its nonfatal bite
may make an adult sick, but it should be medically treated without
delay.
Snakes present include the
eastern hog-nosed
snake,
brown snake,
common garter snake,
eastern milk snake and the
northern ribbon snake.
The only common reptiles and amphibians are various pond
frogs,
toads,
salamanders, and small
turtles.
Business
Prominent Northern Michigan corporations include:
Notable persons
More comprehensive lists are available at individual cities,
villages, etc.
Petoskey
Manistee
Traverse City
- Mark Brammer,
Michigan
State University
football player
who received the All-America accolade in
1978.
- Jeremy Davies, an actor in
Saving Private Ryan and other
films.
- Jazz musician Bob James,
who created the instrumental theme song Angela for the
sitcom Taxi.
- Dan Majerle, former NBA basketball player who played for the Phoenix Suns, Miami
Heat and the Cleveland
Cavaliers
- William G. Milliken, Republican Governor of Michigan from 1969 to 1983
- Doug Mirabelli, MLB baseball
player who played for the Boston Red
Sox, San Diego Padres, Texas Rangers and the San Francisco Giants resides in
Traverse City.
- Matt Noveskey, musician in the
bands Blue October and machines.
- Kenny Olson, guitarist for the pop
music artist Kid Rock
- Craig Thompson, cartoonist and
graphic novelist best known for
Blankets
- Barry Watson, an actor
whose credits include the television
programs 7th Heaven and
What About Brian
- Composer and producer Jeff Gibbs,
"Fahrenheit 9/11" and "Bowling for Columbine," has a
residence in Traverse City.
Media
Northern Michigan is in the
Designated Market Areas of "" (116),
""(208), and some portions of the ""(66) .
Newspapers
Magazines
- Traverse is
published monthly with a focus on regional interests.
Radio
FM
// designates a simulcast.
- 88.1
W201 cm
Traverse City - Christian - Rejoice
Radio
- 88.5 WIAB Mackinaw City - //88.7 WIAA
- 88.5 WSFP Rust Twp/Alpena - Smile
FM
- 88.7 WIAA Interlochen - Classical "IPR
Music Radio"
- 89.3 WTLI Bear Creek Twp. (Petoskey) -
Contemporary Christian; Smile FM (//88.1
WLGH Lansing)
- 89.7 WJOJ Harrisville/Alpena - Smile FM
- 89.9 WLJN Traverse City - Religious
- 90.5 WPHN Gaylord - Adult Contemporary
Christian "Northern Christian
Radio"; also airs on 99.7 FM translator in Petoskey
- 90.7 WNMC Traverse City - Variety,
College
- 90.9 WTCK Charlevoix - Catholic; also airs
on translators 92.1 FM Gaylord/95.3 FM Mackinaw City
- 90.9 WMSD Rose Township (Ogemaw County) -
Religious
- 91.1 WOLW Cadillac - //90.5 WPHN
- 91.3 WJOG Good Hart/Petoskey - Smile
FM
- 91.3 WZHN East Tawas - //90.5 WPHN
- 91.5 WICA Traverse City - NPR, Public News/Talk
- 91.7 WCML Alpena - Public Music
Variety/News/Talk "CMU Public Radio"
- 92.1 WTWS Houghton Lake - Hot Country "92-1
The Twister"
- 92.3 WOUF Beulah - currently silent
- 92.5 WFDX Atlanta - //94.3 WFCX
- 92.9 WJZQ Cadillac/Traverse City - Hot
Adult Contemporary "92.9 the Breeze"
- 93.5 WBCM Boyne City - //103.5 WTCM
- 93.7 WKAD Harrietta/Cadillac - Oldies
"Oldies 93.7"
- 93.9 WAVC Mio - //102.9 WMKC
- 94.3 WFCX Leland/Traverse City - Classic
Hits "94.3 the Fox FM"
- 94.5 WLJZ Mackinaw City - Classic Country
"Big Country Gold"
- 94.9 WKJZ Hillman/Alpena - //103.3 WQLB;
also airs on 98.1 FM translator in Alpena proper
- 95.5 WJZJ Glen Arbor - Modern Rock "The
Zone"
- 95.7 WCMB Oscoda - CMU Public Radio
- 96.1
WHNN
Bay City -
Classic Hits; listenable in the West Branch and Tawas
areas
- 96.3 WLXT Petoskey - Adult Contemporary
"Lite 96"
- 96.7 WLXV Cadillac - Hot Adult Contemporary
"Mix 96"
- 96.7 WRGZ Rogers City - //99.3 WATZ
- 96.9 WWCM Standish - CMU Public Radio
- 97.3 WDEE-FM Reed City/Big Rapids -
Oldies "Sunny 97.3"
- 97.5 WKLT Kalkaska/Traverse City - Classic
Rock "KLT the Rock Station"
- 97.7 WMLQ Manistee - Soft Adult
Contemporary/EZ Listening "97 Coast-FM"
- 97.7 WMRX-FM Beaverton - Oldies/Adult
Standards "Timeless
Favourites"
- 98.1 WGFN Glen Arbor/Traverse City -
Classic Rock "The Bear"
- 98.5 WUPS Harrison/Mount Pleasant - Classic
Hits "98.5 UPS"
- 98.9 WKLZ Petoskey - //WKLT 97.5
- 99.3 WATZ Alpena - Country
- 99.3 WBNZ Frankfort - Soft Rock
- 99.9 WHAK-FM Rogers City - Oldies "99-9
The Wave"
- 100.3 WGRY Grayling - Country
"Y100"
- 100.7 WWTH Oscoda - Country "Thunder
Country" also airs on 94.1 FM translator in Alpena
- 100.9 WICV East Jordan/Charlevoix - //88.7 WIAA
- 101.1 WQON Roscommon/Grayling - Adult
Contemporary "Decades 101"
- 101.5 WMJZ Gaylord - Adult Hits "Eagle
101.5"
- 101.5 WMTE Manistee - Classic Hits "Kool
101.5"
- 101.9 WLDR Traverse City - Country "Sunny
Country"
- 102.1 WLEW Bad Axe - Adult Hits;
listenable on the Lake Huron west shore up to Harrisville.
- 102.7 WMOM Ludington/Pentwater - Top 40
"Always Listen to your Mom"
- 102.9 WMKC St. Ignace - Country "102.9 Big
Country Hits"
- 103.3 WQLB Tawas City - Classic Hits "Hits
FM"
- 103.5 WTCM-FM Traverse City - Country
"Today's Country Music"
- 103.9 WCMW Harbor Springs - CMU Public Radio
- 104.3 WRDS-LP Roscommon - Southern Gospel
"The Lighthouse"
- 104.7 WKJC Tawas City - Country
- 104.9 WAIR Lake City/Cadillac - Smile
FM
- 105.1 WGFM Cheboygan - //98.1 WGFN
- 105.5 WSJR Honor/Traverse City - //106.7
WSRT
- 105.5 WBMI West Branch - Classic
Country
- 105.9 WKHQ
Charlevoix
- Contemporary Hits "106 KHQ"
- 106.1 WHST Tawas City - //90.5 WPHN
- 106.3 WKLA Ludington - Hot Adult
Contemporary "The Lakeshore's Hit Music Station"
- 106.7 WSRT Gaylord - Adult Contemporary
"106.7 You FM" also airs on 95.3 FM translator in Petoskey
area
- 107.1 WCKC Cadillac - //98.1 WGFN
- 107.5 WCCW Traverse City - Oldies
"Oldies 107.5"
- 107.7 WHSB Alpena - Hot Adult Contemporary
"107-7 The Bay"
- 107.9 WCZW Charlevoix/Petoskey - //107.5 WCCW
Streaming Internet Radio
AM
- WTCM 580 50000 watt day, 1100 night,
directional day and night, Talk, Traverse City
- WARD 750 1000 watt day, 330 night,
directional day and night, Country (with WLDR-FM 101.9),
Petoskey
- WMMI 830 1000 day only, talk, Shepherd
- WHAK 960 5000 watt day, 137 night,
Country (simulcasting WWTH FM Oscoda), Rogers City - simulcast of
WWTH 100.7 FM
- WJML 1110 10000 watt day, 10 night,
directional day and night, Talk, Petoskey
- WJNL 1210 50000 watt day, 2500 critical
hours, day only, Talk (with WJML-AM), Kingsley
- WGRY 1230 1000 watt day and night,
Adult Standards, Grayling
- WATT 1240 1000 watt day and night, Talk,
Cadillac
- WCBY 1240 1000 watt day and night, Adult
Standards, Cheboygan
- WMKT 1270 27000 watt day, 5000 night,
directional night, Talk, Charlevoix
- WMBN 1340 1000 watt day and night, Adult
Standards, Petoskey
- WLJW 1370 5000 watt day, 1000 night,
directional day and night, Christian Talk, Cadillac
- WLJN 1400 1000 watt day and night,
Christian, Traverse City
- WATZ
1450 -
news, talk and sports, Alpena
- WIOS 1480 1000 watt day only, directional,
Adult Standards, Tawas City "The Bay's Best"
Broadcast Television
See also
Cities, villages and towns
- Alpena, Michigan

- Atlanta, Michigan

- Au Gres, Michigan

- Beaver Island

- Boyne City, Michigan

- Boyne Falls, Michigan

- Charlevoix, Michigan

- Cheboygan, Michigan

- East Jordan, Michigan

- East Tawas, Michigan

- Elk Rapids, Michigan

- Empire, Michigan

- Fairview, Michigan

- Frankfort, Michigan

- Gaylord, Michigan

- Glennie, Michigan

- Grayling, Michigan

- Greenbush, Michigan

- Harbor Springs, Michigan

- Harrisville, Michigan

- Hubbard
Lake, Alcona County, Michigan

- Indian River, Michigan

- Interlochen, Michigan
- Kalkaska, Michigan

- Kaleva, Michigan

- Lincoln, Michigan

- Ludington, Michigan

- Mackinac Bridge

- Mackinac Island, Michigan

- Mackinaw City, Michigan

- Manistee, Michigan

- Mio, Michigan

- Northport, Michigan

- Onaway, Michigan

- Oscoda, Michigan

- Ossineke, Michigan

- Pellston, Michigan

- Petoskey, Michigan

- Posen, Michigan

- Presque Isle, Michigan

- Rogers City, Michigan

- Roscommon, Michigan

- Spruce, Michigan

- Tawas City, Michigan

- Thompsonville, Michigan

- Traverse City, Michigan

Notes
- Photographs, Old Mission 45th Parallel
signs.
- Photographs, Cairn Highway 45th Parallel cairn (83
county-named rocks) and sign.
- Gaylord signs denoting the 45th Parallel.
- Alpena, Michigan 45th Parallel sign
- List and map of 45th Parallel markers, with links
to pictures (accessed 12/17/2007).
- Managing Michigan Wildlife: A Landowners Guide.,
Sargent, M.S and Carter, K.S., 1999, Michigan United Conservation
Clubs, East Lansing, MI.
- * Mackinac Island Tourism Bureau.
- Detroit Free Press, May 26, 2007
- Great Lakes Circle Tour.
- Michigan Historical Markers Traveling Through time: A guide to Michigan
Historical Markers
- Michigan
employment rates.
- Picture of northern terminus US 127 at Grayling,
Michigan
- History of Michigan highways.
- Weyerhauser Au Sable River Canoe Marathon
- Great Lakes Lighthouse Festival causes.
- Sled Dog Central, Kalkaska race.
- Michigan Michigan Important Bird Areas (IBA) Program
See also, American Bird Conservancy -- Important Bird Areas
in Michigan.
Further reading
- Bogue, Margaret. Around the Shores of Lake Michigan: A
Guide to Historic Sites. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press,
1985. ISBN 9780299100049.
- McRae, Shannon, Images of America: Manistee County
(2003).
- Reed, Earl H. The Dune Country. Berrien
Springs, MI: Hardscrabble Books, 1979. Reprint of 1916 Edition.
- Ruchhoft, Robert H. Exploring North Manitou, South Manitou,
High and Garden Islands of the Lake Michigan Archipelago.
Cincinnati, OH: Pucelle Press, 1991. ISBN 9780940029026.
- Russell, Curran N., and Dona Degen Baer, The Lumberman's
Legacy (1954).
- Wood, Mable C. Scooterville, U.S.A. Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 1962.
External links
- Clarke
Historical Library, Central Michigan University, bibliographies
organized by county and region.
- Clarke
Historical Library, Central Michigan University, Bibliography on
Michigan (arranged by counties and regions).
- Enchanted forest, Northern Michigan source for
information, calendars, etc.
- Great
Lakes Coast Watch
- Info
Michigan, detailed information on 630 cities
- Life and Activities in the Area, from
lifeinnorthernmichigan.com
- Michigan Geology – Clarke Historical Library, Central
Michigan University.
- List of Museums, other attractions compiled by
state government.
- Michigan's
Official Economic Development and Travel Site, including
interactive map, information on attractions, museums, etc.
- Michigan Historical Markers.
- Northern Michigan Culture and Community Website.
- Michigan
Department of Natural Resources Harbors, hunting,
resources and more.
- Northern Michigan history from
insiders.com
- Northern Michigan travel article from the
Petoskey News Review
- Webcams for
Northern Michigan