40 Amazing Experiences for Midwest Summer Water Getaways

Couple walking along grassy dune with Lake Michigan to the left
Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. Photo: Tony Demin

A bucket-list guide to the most Midwest ways to float in, swim through and chill out by a lake, river or creek. Summer is here. Drink it up.

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Michigan and Ohio: Ferry to an Island

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Beaver Island. Kevin J. Miyazaki/Redux

Charlevoix, Michigan: A two-hour ferry ride from Charlevoix brings you to Beaver Island—54 square miles that remain largely undeveloped, inhabited by foxes, migrating cranes and, naturally, beavers. In town, you'll find a few hotels and shops, a working lighthouse, sand beaches and all the fresh whitefish you can eat.

Marblehead, Catawba, Sandusky, Ohio: Leave your cares (and maybe your car) behind on a getaway to the Lake Erie shore. Kelleys Island and Put-In-Bay are the marquee names in a cluster of Lake Erie isles west of Cleveland. Highlights include beaches, a state park, a towering war memorial, small resorts—and a lifestyle that moves at a golf-cart pace.

Mackinaw City and St. Ignace, Michigan: Everything you've heard about Mackinac Island is true: The fudge. The gingerbread architecture. The carriages. And, yes, the hordes of tourists. (Escape the bustle after you've departed your ferry from Mackinaw City or St. Ignace, and get big Lake Huron views on an 8-mile bike ride or hike around the island.)

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Lake Superior: Take The Plunge

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Black Rocks, Marquette, Michigan. Aaron Peterson

Sunshine turns Lake Superior a tempting blue-green, but the Caribbean this is not. Most years, the lake's surface temp maxes out around 65 degrees. Roll up your cuffs and let the surf lick your toes, or leap in for an unforgettable baptism in the world's largest body of fresh water. Good jumping-off spots for your Lake Superior adventure include Duluth, Minnesota; Bayfield, Wisconsin; and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

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Minnesota: Go to The Source

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Itasca State Park. Justin Salem Meyer

Park Rapids: The Mississippi River cuts through our nation's heart—a 2,300-some-mile artery of commerce and culture. Hero of literature and song. Life-giving and life-taking. Where it flexes its muscle, the river stretches miles wide. But at the headwaters in Itasca State Park, the Mississippi spills from a serene Minnesota lake as a slim channel, shallow, clear and cold. To avoid tourists, come early. In the quiet of a new day, you can cross the infant river on stepping stones, alone with your thoughts, save for an occasional chortling loon.

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South Dakota: See an Urban Waterfall

Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Falls Park.

Sioux Falls: At Falls Park—a highlight of South Dakota's largest city—7,400 gallons of water cascade over gorgeous pink Sioux quartzite boulders every second.

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Cast Away

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Todd Zawitowski

Fish come in all sizes, and all spirits too. Little bluegills hang out under docks, their curiosity piqued by nothing more than a bit of hot dog on a child's hook. Walleye lurk deep in cold waters and fight back with Melvillean furor. Trout play coy, chasing feathered flies that flit on the surface of rippling streams. Catfish just seem dopey. But big or small, easy or tough, in a pond or on a Great Lake, catching them always follows the same arc. The bait. The wait. The tug on the line. The leap of the heart. The reeling in—a timeless battle of survival and will, energy coursing between two species along a single taut filament, the victor never a guarantee.

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Minnesota: (Re)Visit Highway 61

Split Rock Lighthouse, Minnesota's North Shore
Split Rock Lighthouse. Jay Wilde

Duluth to Canada: Made famous by native son Bob Dylan, Minnesota's North Shore Scenic Drive is thick with gems. Historic Split Rock Lighthouse. Rocky beaches. Family-run smokehouses. And so very many waterfalls, plunging through pristine woods, out to Lake Superior.

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Indiana: Stroll an Ancient Reef

For fossil lovers
Falls of the Ohio. Courtesy of fallsoftheohio.org

Clarksville: Time travel 390 million years back at Falls of the Ohio State Park, where amateur paleontologists can hunt for 600-plus different types of Devonian fossils on rock beds washed clean by the Ohio River. Some creatures are as big as a bus, others tinier than a pencil tip.

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Illinois and Nebraska: Pick Up a Paddle

Niobrara River near Smith Falls State Park
Niobrara River near Smith Falls State Park. Ackerman + Gruber

With the right attitude, any kayak trip is an adventure. But these three rivers are truly one of a kind.

Valentine, Nebraska: The Niobrara National Scenic River offers days' worth of calm paddling in the scenic Sandhills, with countless spots to pull off and hike (including to Nebraska's tallest waterfall, Smith Falls).

Cypress, Illinois: Ancient cypress trees rise from the swampy Cache River Wetlands, part of a state-run natural area you'll want to explore on a southern Illinois getaway. Hushed and eerily beautiful, it's the northernmost marsh of its kind in the U.S.

Chicago: For a new perspective on the Windy City, join a guided float down the Chicago River and get an architecture lesson in the shadows of glittering skyscrapers.

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Wisconsin: Eat Fish by The Fire

Fish boil at Pelletier's
Fish boil at Pelletier's, Door County.

Door County: Six ingredients make up a Door County fish boil: whitefish, water, potatoes, salt, butter and lemon. Well, seven, if you count the kerosene, splashed on the open fire for the grand finale.

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Wisconsin: Explore a Sea Cave

Exploring sea caves around the Apostle Islands Bayfield Wisconsin
John Noltner

Bayfield: Apostle Islands National Lakeshore encompasses 12 miles of rugged Lake Superior coast and most of a 22-island archipelago. You can take a narrated cruise from Bayfield, gateway to the Apostle Islands, but the real thrill is guiding a kayak through caves carved over millennia by the water.

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Michigan: Meet Mac

Ways to water in the Midwest
Mackinac Bridge. Aaron Peterson

Opened in 1957, the Mackinac Bridge stretches for 5 miles between Mackinaw City and St. Ignace, spanning the point where lakes Michigan and Huron kiss. As many as 30,000 people come each Labor Day to hike across it. If you're there another day of the year, you might be driving from Lower Peninsula destinations like Traverse City or Petoskey to the towns and parks of the Upper Peninsula.

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Missouri: Row, Row, Row A Boat

St. Louis: Forest Park

St. Louis: Hey, Bridget Jones fans. You know that scene where Bridge and Daniel recite bawdy limericks in a rowboat on a gauzy afternoon? That could be you, in Forest Park, drifting with your sweetie around the 1904 World's Fair-era Grand Basin. Parasol recommended.

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Great Lakes States: Comb a Beach

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Sea glass. Anne Marie Gorham/@lakesuperior_beachglass

No promise of a message in a bottle, but freshwater waves polish and deliver treasure, same as any salt sea. Keep your eyes down to find fossil-freckled Petoskey stones by Lake Michigan, agate along Lake Superior or colorful glass on any Great Lakes shore in Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin.

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Minnesota and Michigan: Camp With a Moose

Moose at Isle Royale National Park
Moose at Isle Royale National Park. Per Breiehagen

Ely, Minnesota: A moose sighting up north is a rite of passage. Just about the best odds are at dawn and dusk in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, a million-acre patchwork of lakes and forest along the Canada border.

Michigan: More than 2,000 moose roam Isle Royale National Park, a cluster of 450-plus islands in Lake Superior accessible only by air or water. See moose feeding at inland lakes and beaver ponds, or cooling off in the forest shade. (Always be sure to maintain a safe distance from a moose and follow other safe-viewing guidelines.)

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Wisconsin: Let It All Slide

Wisconsin Dells: Water Park Capital of the World

Wisconsin Dells: Every once in a while, a gushy marketing nickname is actually correct. Case in point: the Waterpark Capital of the World. Swoosh around every flume the Dells throw at you, then line up (with a zillion other families) to do it again.

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Ohio: Look Back—And Forward

Smale Riverfront Park, Cincinnati
Smale Riverfront Park. John Carrico/ Alias Imaging

Cincinnati: For slaves in the antebellum South, the Ohio River marked the boundary of freedom. With its meditation labyrinth, Black Brigade Monument to volunteer soldiers, and zany all-ages toys, free Smale Riverfront Park cleverly invites both play and reflection. Rock on riverfront porch-swing benches and take in the view—then take in the rest of what Cincinnati has to offer.

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Kick Back in a Tube

Hayward KOA tubing
Tubing at Hayward, Wisconsin, KOA Campgrounds..

Philosophical question: If a summer passes without floating downriver in a big inflated donut tethered to your friends—and to a tube you've rented just to carry the cooler—have you really summered at all?

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Indiana and Michigan: Scale a Sandy Ridge

Couple walking along grassy dune with Lake Michigan to the left
Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. Tony Demin

Lake Michigan's epic dunes are living mountains—shaped by wind, stitched together by plant roots and subtly changed each time we walk upon them.

Portage, Indiana: Some 50 miles of trails crisscross Indiana Dunes National Park's diverse and fragile ecosystem. Look for Chicago from the Dune Succession Trail at West Beach.

Empire, Michigan: Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, northwest of Traverse City, stretches for 35 achingly gorgeous miles; the highest dune drops 450 feet into the cerulean abyss of Lake Michigan.

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Nebraska: Go Tanking

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Ackerman + Gruber

Some water sports are, you know, sports. Others are acts of pure sloth. Enter tanking, a uniquely Nebraskan pastime of floating down a river in a cattle tank. No oar. No pole. No motor. In fact, no steering, acceleration or propulsion of any kind. (Though some outfitters rig tanks with bench seats and tables for playing cards or holding drinks.) You can hitch a tank most anywhere in the state, but the Calamus, Middle Loup and Cedar rivers are hot spots.

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Visit Chicago

Ways to water in the MIdwest
North Avenue Beach, Chicago. Courtesy of Choose Chicago

That's it. Just go to Chicago and feel how water courses through the Windy City's veins. Zip down Lake Shore Drive, flanked by high-rises and Lake Michigan. (Or rent a bike to ride on the parallel trail.) Watch bridges lift for sailboats along the revived Chicago River. (Or see it happen from the inside out at the Bridgehouse Museum.) Join the party on Oak Street Beach. (Or escape it on 12th Street Beach.) Wade in Crown Fountain, where glowing portraits "spit" on gleeful kids. (Or stay dry watching Buckingham Fountain's regular light and water shows.) Take to the sky on Navy Pier's Ferris wheel for a 360-degree view of how water shapes this town. (Or get a four-state vista from the Willis Tower.) We could go on—but you're probably already there.

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Michigan: Hunt for a Shipwreck

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, Michigan. Courtesy of NOAA/Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary

Alpena: Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary protects a swath of Lake Huron known as Shipwreck Alley. Peer into the depths of maritime history on a glass-bottom boat tour.

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Iowa: Cruise Like a Victorian

LeClaire: Sure, it's a little old-school, but the Riverboat Twilight is one of the Mississippi's most memorable rides, with stops in historic towns, narrated sightseeing and pitch-perfect live banjo music on deck.

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Michigan: Cruise Colored Cliffs

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.

Munising to Grand Marais: Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore gets its name from striking sandstone cliffs streaked by minerals. It's especially lovely at sunset. See the Lake Superior lakeshore by tour boat or kayak, or explore the forested shoreline to hike to beaches and waterfalls.

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Picnic on a Pontoon

Pontoon boat
Cedar Bluff State Park, Kansas. Jason Lindsey

All hail the minivan of the not-so-high seas. Comfy. Roomy. Trusty. (Aerodynamics are so overrated.) Head out early, stop for a swim, snack on potato chips—and when the sun sets, put on home.

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Great Lakes States: Climb to a Lighthouse lookout

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Old Presque Isle Light, Michigan.

Hundreds of lighthouses ring the Great Lakes, many open seasonally for visitors (some even for overnight guests). Get ready for a steep climb up spiral steps to see sweeping lake vistas—and hear or read tales about lighthouse keepers' solitary lives. Find your happy lighthouse spot in Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Minnesota or Indiana.

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Missouri: Love a Lily Pond

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Water lilies, Missouri Botanical Garden.

St. Louis: Starting in July, giant water lilies bloom in the reflecting pools of the Missouri Botanical Garden. The plants—which can grow as fast as an inch an hour—have leaf spans of up to six feet. If St. Louis isn't on your summer itinerary, most Midwest botanical gardens boast one or more lakes or ponds that might show off aquatic plants, fountains or waterfalls.

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South Dakota: Escape into a Canyon

Spearfish Canyon, SD
Spearfish Canyon, South Dakota. Darren Squashic

Spearfish: Home to some of the best scenery in the Black Hills, the Spearfish Canyon gorge holds cliffs, waterfalls and forests, easily accessible from the 22-mile Spearfish Canyon Scenic Byway.

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Kansas: Sail on a Prairie Wind

25 Ways to Water
Cheney State Park. Robin Lorenson

Cheney: Unfettered by hills or trees, breezes roll into mighty winds outside Wichita, making Cheney State Park and Reservoir one of the most unlikely big-time sailing destinations in the United States.

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Minnesota: Vacation in a Houseboat

Ways to water in the MIdwest

International Falls: At Voyageurs National Park, a maze of waterways carries boaters into boreal forest where the namesake fur trappers once reigned. Rented houseboats are a popular choice for multiday trips in the 340-square-mile park.

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Michigan: Raft Across a Spring

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Kitch-ikit-kipi, Palms Book State Park, Manisque.

Manistique: At Palms Book State Park, ride on a hand-cranked raft across Kitch-iti-kipi, the state's largest freshwater spring, gushing more than 10,000 gallons per minute. You'll be mesmerized by swirling clouds of sand and ancient tree trunks.

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Minnesota: Go for a Gondola Ride

Ways to water in the Midwest
Gondola Romantica, Stillwater. Ackerman + Gruber

Stillwater: Former Boundary Waters guide John Kerschbaum traded canoe paddling for cruising on Gondola Romantica in 2000 (after shipping an authentic vessel from Venice to Minnesota). He's been crooning to lovers on the St. Croix ever since, one of the many charms of Stillwater.

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Wisconsin: Get a Million-Dollar View

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Kevin J. Miyazaki/Redux

Lake Geneva: The famously clear Geneva Lake is ringed by resorts, vacation homes and 19th-century mansions. Excursions on Lake Geneva Cruise Line offer close-up views of the Victorian mansions around the spring-fed lake, while more than 25 miles of lakeshore walking paths run through the manicured grounds of estates, most still privately owned.

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Minnesota: Watch History Rise

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Aerial Lift Bridge, Duluth.

Duluth: Gawk at the 135-foot-tallAerial Lift Bridge as it rises more than 20 times each day for sailboats and skyscraper-length ships traveling between Lake Superior and Duluth Harbor. The first version of the unusual bridge was completed in 1905, and a remodeled bridge opened in 1930.

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Kansas: See Fire and Water

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Keeper of the Plains, Wichita. C2 Photography

Wichita: At the confluence of the Big and Little Arkansas rivers, Keeper of the Plains honors local Native American tribes. At 9 p.m. in the summer, flames from the fire drums illuminate the river. Another way to experience the statue: sunset or sunrise views from a kayak.

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Wisconsin: Cheer for water-skiers

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Min-Aqua Bats Waterski Show.

Minocqua: The Min-Aqua Bats Water Ski Show lures visitors three nights a week throughout the summer to the lakeside vacation hub of Minocqua. Started in 1950, the show bills itself as the oldest continual amateur waterski show in the U.S.

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Michigan: Explore an Island Park

Belle Isle Park
Belle Isle. Brad Ziegler

Detroit: The 900-acre Belle Isle Park in the Detroit River delivers a lineup of next-to-nature moments. Its free aquarium features more than 1,000 fish; also see a marble lighthouse, beach, conservatory (slated to reopen in 2024 after renovations) and maritime museum.

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Nebraska: Play on the Prairie

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Lake McConaughy, Nebraska. Ryan Donnell

Lake McConaughy: Sailing, parasailing, fishing and kiteboarding are all popular on Lake McConaughy, Nebraska's largest lake (near the Colorado border). The 100-mile shoreline is perfect for camping—spots fill quickly.

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Michigan: Do the Docks

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Leland's Fishtown. Ryan Donnell

Leland: A walk down the docks in Fishtown—one of the few unmodernized fishing villages on the Great Lakes— reveals weathered shanties that house both a working waterfront as well as cafes and boutiques. See it on a day trip from Traverse City.

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Illinois: Discover a Mule's Pace

Ways to water in the MIdwest
Illinois and Michigan Canal boat ride.

LaSalle: It's slow going on a replica 19th-century mule-pulled canal boat, but that's the point of a journey on the Illinois & Michigan Canal. Period guides will even give you a lesson in mule-tending.

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Indiana: Float Underground

Indiana Caverns Family Adventure Park
Kevin J. Miyazaki/Redux

Corydon: Descend 110 feet into a drippy cavern and board a boat to explore Indiana's longest cave, with a 35-foot waterfall, blind cave crayfish and rimstone dams. Also at Indiana Caverns Family Adventure Park: the Deep Darkness tour, four hours of splashing, kayaking, climbing and crawling.

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Splash in a Creek

Ways to water in the MIdwest

You probably don't need to go much beyond your neighborhood to find a creek. Get your trusty Tevas wet as you step from stone to stone and see where the journey leads. Look for minnows, dragonflies and tadpoles, and take a few deep breaths while you listen to the calming sound of water tumbling over rocks.

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