Sleeping Bear Dunes visitation down for July and August 

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Visitors enjoy Pyramid Point overlook

National Park Service

Visitors enjoy Pyramid Point overlook

By MAX COPELAND
Capital News Service

LANSING – 2020 was a record year for visitors at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore.

Over a million people went to the park in July and August alone. 

But this year hasn’t kept up. Park visits fell from about 1,082,000 in 2020 to 890,000 during the same two months in 2021.

That’s the fewest visitors the park on West Michigan’s Lake Michigan coast has seen during those months since 2015. 

Deputy Superintendent Tom Ulrich says visitation numbers this year are pretty consistent with pre-COVID 19 pandemic numbers.

“I think it was not so much that attendance is down this year as it was attendance was through the roof in 2020,” Ulrich said.

Even though visitation numbers are down compared to last year, they’re up overall compared to past years. Ulrich says the park is on pace for its second-busiest year yet.

“I think it’s a continuation of last year,” Ulrich said. “People still might be hesitant to do some things like movie theaters and amusement parks and things of that nature, but you can always go for a hike and go to the beach or float a river.”

A scenic wetland view along Peterson Road.

National Park Service

A scenic wetland view along Peterson Road.

Despite fewer visitors this year, Sleeping Bear Dunes’ revenue is expected to be about $1 million higher than last year. That’s because the National Park Service waived entrance fees across the country during the beginning of the pandemic.

Max Copeland reports for Interlochen Public Radio in partnership with the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism

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