Detroit Summer Events | Pure Michigan
Visit michigan.org for more information. The Detroit area has five distinct destination districts, perfect for tourism and travel — everything from a lively urban vibe to wide-open scenic spaces. Here, we work hard and play hard and there is a ton going on this summer for everyone from concerts on the riverfront to ball games in Comerica Park.
Quality of Life in Detroit, MI, United States , rank 152nd in the world in 2019
Quality of Life Index:133.09
Cost Of Living In Detroit, MI, United States In 2019, Rank 199th In The World .
5 Best Things To Do In Troy, New York | US Travel Guide
5 Best Things To Do In Troy, NY
During the Industrial Revolution, Troy was wealthy and on the move. The Erie Canal, Hudson River, and several major rail road lines all came together in this small town that once sparkled with the wealth and trappings of the Gilded Age. Troy, because of its geographic centrality to the technology at the heart of the changes that drove the Industrial Revolution, was a force to be reckoned with and a city to behold. Here five thing to do in Troy, New York
1. The Hart-Cluett Historic House Museum
2. The Kate Mullany National Historic Site
3. The Burden Iron Works Museum
4. Take a tour of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
5. Enjoy a walk around Washington Park
GET MORE INFORMATION - Subscribe ➜
SHARE this Video: ➜
Also check another playlists..
Tourist Attraction in United States ➜
Tourist Attraction in America ➜
Tourist Attractions in Asia ➜
Tourist Attractions in Europe ➜
Tourist Attraction in Australia ➜
Backsound:
Source:
IMPORTANT
If you have any issue with the content used in my channel or you find something that belongs to you, before you claim it to youtube, please SEND ME A MESSAGE and i will DELETE it right away. Thanks for understanding.
Hart, MI Commercial
A short commercial for the City of Hart, MI highlighting the wonderful things you can find in this beautiful place.
DETROIT SPRING 2018: RIVERWALK
A short stroll down Detroit's Riverwalk, including Hart Plaza.
Living Near a Changing Glacier
• Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve (National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map)
• Hiking in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
If you appreciate this video, please like, comment, and/or share. Also, make sure to subscribe for the latest updates.
This video was created by Wrangell-St. Elias National Park.
Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve is a United States national park and national preserve managed by the National Park Service in south central Alaska. The park and preserve was established in 1980 by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act.[3] This protected area is included in an International Biosphere Reserve and is part of the Kluane/Wrangell–St. Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini-Alsek UNESCO World Heritage Site. The park and preserve form the largest area managed by the National Park Service in the United States by area with a total of 13,175,799 acres (20,587.186 sq mi; 53,320.57 km2), an expanse that could encapsulate a total of six Yellowstone National Parks.[4] The park includes a large portion of the Saint Elias Mountains, which include most of the highest peaks in the United States and Canada, yet are within 10 miles (16 km) of tidewater, one of the highest reliefs in the world. Wrangell–St. Elias borders on Canada's Kluane National Park and Reserve to the east and approaches the U.S. Glacier Bay National Park to the south. The chief distinction between park and preserve lands is that sport hunting is prohibited in the park and permitted in the preserve. In addition, 9,078,675 acres (3,674,009 ha) of the park are designated as the largest single wilderness in the United States.
Wrangell–St. Elias National Monument was initially designated on December 1, 1978, by President Jimmy Carter using the Antiquities Act, pending final legislation to resolve the allotment of public lands in Alaska. Establishment as a national park and preserve followed the passage of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act in 1980. The park, which is bigger than the country Switzerland, has long, extremely cold winters and a short summer season. It supports a variety of large mammals in an environment defined by relative land elevation. Plate tectonics are responsible for the uplift of the mountain ranges that cross the park. The park's extreme high point is Mount St. Elias at 18,008 feet (5,489 m), the second tallest mountain in both the United States and Canada. The park has been shaped by the competing forces of volcanism and glaciation. Mount Wrangell is an active volcano, one of several volcanoes in the western Wrangell Mountains. In the St. Elias Range Mount Churchill has erupted explosively within the past 2,000 years. The park's glacial features include Malaspina Glacier, the largest piedmont glacier in North America, Hubbard Glacier, the longest tidewater glacier in Alaska, and Nabesna Glacier, the world's longest valley glacier. The Bagley Icefield covers much of the park's interior, which includes 60% of the permanently ice-covered terrain in Alaska. At the center of the park, the boomtown of Kennecott exploited one of the world's richest deposits of copper from 1903 to 1938, exposed by and in part incorporated into Kennicott Glacier. The mine buildings and mills, now abandoned, compose a National Historic Landmark district.
Video Credit: Wrangell-St. Elias NP (Federal government video productions are generally public domain, but any copyrighted content such as music that has been found in this recording has been registered with the appropriate rights holder. Ads may run on this video to support copyright holders at their request.)
Description credit : Wikipedia
Disclosure: This Youtube channel makes a small commission from Amazon when viewers shop through the links in this video description. If you are interested in the products posted here, click the link to support the site.
Disclosure: This Youtube channel makes a small commission from Amazon when viewers shop through the links in this video description. If you are interested in the products posted here, click the link to support the site.
South Haven, Michigan // Michigan Beachtowns
Find your escape in South Haven, where relaxation and reconnecting to your true self begin. Feel the area’s scenic beauty awaken your senses – on white-sand beaches, basking in the glow of a fiery sunset, or watching boats slip peacefully past the century-old lighthouse. Stroll along the HarborWalk to the historic Maritime District with its engaging museum complex and replica tall ship, Friends Good Will. Take a leisurely ride down the West Michigan Pike where you’ll discover antique shops and art galleries, and cozy bed-and-breakfasts and family resorts. Visit farm markets and art galleries along the Blue Star Highway; and explore the quaint villages, vineyards, wineries, and craft brew pubs on the outskirts of town. Whatever the season, relax and reconnect to your true self in picturesque Van Buren County.
Learn more about South Haven and the rest of the Michigan Beachtowns at beachtowns.org
Follow us!
Facebook:
Instagram:
Twitter:
Pinterest:
REVERSE CULTURE SHOCK | Going back to the USA after living in MEXICO
We're in TULUM sharing our unexpected reverse culture shocks in the United States after 1 year in Mexico.
►Rocket Languages is on sale!
For over a year, we've been living in Mexico. When we first started traveling in Mexico, each day was filled with new culture shocks: language, food, interactions, driving—you name it!
We had a feeling we might experience some REVERSE culture shocks in the United States when we went back, but we didn't think they'd be THESE! Join us in our Mexico travel vlog 2019 as we share all the cultural differences between living in Mexico and living in America (USA).
I think we'll need to do a Part 2 reverse culture shock travel vlog when we fly back to Phoenix, Arizona in a month. There's a lot about Vegas that is shocking on its own, whether you've been living in the USA or living abroad. What's a reverse culture shock you experienced after living in another country for a while?
BUSINESSES & BRANDS: Want to work with us?
ourtangerinetravels@gmail.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want MORE Tangerine Travels!?
►PATREON:
►PAYPAL: (ourtangerinetravels@gmail.com)
►FACEBOOK:
►INSTAGRAM:
►TWITTER:
►STEEMIT BLOG:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We ONLY include affiliate links for products we use, love, and trust. If you make a purchase after clicking on our links, we may earn a commission which helps us continue our travels and produce more videos.
#TangerineTravels #ReverseCultureShock #LivingInMexico
Ten Mile Lake Resort
Ten Mile Lake Resort and Steakhouse is a family owned business that has been in operation since 1906.
We, as its current owners, Mike and Linda and our families, are carrying on a longstanding tradition of providing service to the local and surrounding communities of Dalton, Minnesota, and invite you to embark on that exciting family vacation or unforgettable dining experience with us!
We welcome visitors from all over. Along with our 12 cabins we have over 70 campsites available for seasonal rent, located under the trees and close to the beach.
We offer many amenities including an on site restaurant which features mouth-watering steaks and ribs.
Driving Woodward Ave - Detroit's Main Street - south to Downtown
Every city has a main street and no doubt about it – Woodward Ave. it that street to be Detroit’s main street. I am driving portion just south of Grand Boulevard starting at Canfield Street to Larned Street …almost down to the Detroit River. Woodward has developed into a very nice street over the last few years – great for driving and even walking. Whereas even five years ago walking this same stretch would be unthinkable, now it would be no different from most large cities. Walking around in downtown Detroit along Woodward and one block off on each side would be decidedly normal in Detroit now a days. But don’t venture off too far as it can get decidedly sketch very quickly.
The drive is made decidedly more interesting because it is a night drive and there are Christmas decorations.
M-1, commonly known as Woodward Avenue, is a north–south state trunkline highway in the Metro Detroit area of the US state of Michigan. The highway, called Detroit's Main Street, runs from Detroitnorth-northwesterly to Pontiac. It is one of the five principal avenues of Detroit, along with Michigan, Grand River, Gratiot, and Jefferson avenues. These streets were platted in 1805 by Judge Augustus B. Woodward, namesake to Woodward Avenue. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has listed the highway as the Automotive Heritage Trail, an All-American Road in the National Scenic Byways Program. It has also been designated a Pure Michigan Byway by the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT), and was also included in the MotorCities National Heritage Areadesignated by the US Congress in 1998.
The trunkline is the dividing line between Detroit's East and West sides, and connects to some of the city's major freeways like Interstate 94 (I-94, Edsel Ford Freeway) and M-8 (Davison Freeway). Woodward Avenue exits Detroit at M-102 (8 Mile Road) and runs through the city's northern suburbs in Oakland County on its way to Pontiac. In between, Woodward Avenue passes through several historic districts in Detroit and provides access to many businesses in the area. The name Woodward Avenue has become synonymous with Detroit, cruising culture and the automotive industry.
Woodward Avenue was created after the Detroit Fire of 1805. The thoroughfare followed the route of the Saginaw Trail, an Indian trail that linked Detroit with Pontiac, Flint, and Saginaw. The Saginaw Trail connected to the Mackinaw Trail, which ran north to the Straits of Mackinac at the tip of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. In the age of the auto trails, Woodward Avenue was part of the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway that connected Portland, Maine, with Portland, Oregon, through Ontario in Canada. It was also part of the Dixie Highway, which connected Michigan with Florida. Woodward Avenue was the location of the first mile (1.6 km) of concrete-paved roadway in the country. When Michigan created the State Trunkline Highway System in 1913, the roadway was included, numbered as part of M-10 in 1919. Later, it was part of US Highway 10 (US 10) following the creation of the United States Numbered Highway System. Since 1970, it has borne the M-1 designation. The roadway carried streetcar lines from the 1860s until the 1950s; a new streetcar line known as the QLine opened along part of M-1 in 2017.
Woodward Avenue starts at an intersection with Jefferson Avenue next to Hart Plaza about 750 feet (230 m) from the Detroit River.[8][10] The plaza is regarded as the birthplace of the Ford Motor Company,[11] and it is located near Cobo Center and the Renaissance Center, headquarters for General Motors (GM).[12] Woodward Avenue runs north-northwesterly away from the river through the heart of downtown Detroit and the Financial District. Along the way, it passes several important and historic sites, including notable buildings like One Woodward Avenue, the Guardian Building, and The Qube. Woodward also passes The Spirit of Detroit, a statue used to symbolize the city. Further north, Woodward Avenue runs around Campus Martius Park and enters the Lower Woodward Avenue Historic District, a retail, commercial, and residential district listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). After that historic district, the avenue travels through the middle of Grand Circus Park; the northern edge of the park is bounded by Adams Avenue, where state maintenance begins.[8][10]