Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts

Museums With Wild Animals in Detroit, Michigan


You might not expect to find alligators or rattlesnakes in Detroit, and -- thankfully -- you'll only find them safely enclosed in some of the city's museums. Wild animals -- whether live or mounted -- aren't difficult to find in the city's nature museums, which have indoor and outdoor exhibits, educational programs and live demonstrations.

Snakes Alive

  • The Detroit Zoo's Holden Museum of Living Reptiles lets visitors get a close-up look at 85 different threatened or endangered species. The animals' habitats closely resemble their native habitats in the wild, giving visitors to the museum a realistic look at their natural surroundings. Species include a Siamese crocodile, reticulated python, Chinese alligator and Aruba Island rattlesnake, and include habitats found from the Arctic to Australia. The museum is open during regular zoo operating hours, and is closed on New Year's Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.

A Watery World

  • The Lake Erie Metropark Marshlands Museum and Nature Center provides an indoor and outdoor nature experience 20 miles southwest of downtown Detroit. Inside, the museum has an extensive diorama of historic area marshlands and their wildlife, as well as a 1,300-gallon aquarium and interactive exhibits. Outdoors, boardwalks and trails wind across the 200-acre natural displays where you can explore hawthorn thickets, marshes and old canals. Encounter the park's resident bald eagles and view migratory birds, including a large wintering population of tundra swans.

Going Batty

  • The Bat Zone at the Cranbrook Institute of Science houses more than 150 bats that are not releasable into the wild. Bats at the facility include vampire bats, fruit bats, flying foxes and endangered species. The museum also houses owls, a sloth, sugar gliders and other nocturnal species. Tour the Bat Zone during limited midday hours seven days a week June through August, and on weekends during the rest of the year. The Cranbrook Institute is a museum of natural history featuring a planetarium, science garden and special exhibits.

Mounted and Stuffed

  • The University of Michigan Museum of Natural History lies 40 miles west of Detroit in Ann Arbor. The museum features the largest dinosaur display in the state, including a replica of a fossilized prehistoric snake poised to eat a hatching baby dinosaur. The museum features a wildlife gallery on the third floor where you'll see taxidermy-mounted wildlife in native habitat scenes. The museum's butterfly and pollinator garden blooms with 55 species that produce butterfly-luring nectar. The museum is open year-round except for several holidays.

Famous Places Within 400 Miles of Detroit, Michigan


From interpreting the psychedelic scene painted on Janis Joplin's 1965 Porsche at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to sampling the most celebrated bourbon in the country at Jim Beam Distillery, the Midwest has a long list of famous places. Visit one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World in Toronto, or take a trip to Churchill Downs, home of the world-renowned Kentucky Derby -- all within 400 miles of Detroit, Michigan.

Notable Landmarks

  • Approximately 180 miles west of Detroit, beautiful Lake Michigan draws legions of boaters, skiers and water-sports enthusiasts. Chicago's Navy Pier, 285 miles from the Motor City on Lake Michigan's southwestern shore, takes the entertainment from the water to the wharf with amusement park rides including a giant Ferris wheel. Canada's sky-high CN Tower in Toronto, located across the border around 230 miles northeast of Detroit, is classified as one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World.

Music Attractions

  • One hundred and seventy miles southeast of Detroit in Cleveland, Ohio, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum houses decades of memorabilia from rock 'n' roll's most famous musicians. See the Gibson guitar Chuck Berry played, the wild paint job on the 1965 Porsche Janis Joplin drove, and the signature glove Michael Jackson wore during his Dangerous tour. In Chicago, visit guitar-playing icon Buddy Guy's blues bar, Legends, where musicians keep the blues tradition alive nightly.

Sports Attractions

  • For one day each May, in Louisville, Kentucky, women wearing opulent hats clutch a Champagne flute in one hand, and their wager receipts in the other while cheering on their best bets at the Kentucky Derby. While Churchill Downs, 360 miles southwest of Detroit, hosts the most renowned horse-racing competition in the country on just one day, the racetrack also runs horse races throughout the fall, winter and spring. Since 1911, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, 285 southwest of Detroit, has been home to the most celebrated auto race: the Indianapolis 500.

Culinary Attractions

  • While New York pizza is famous for its thin crust, Chicago pizza is renowned for its deep-dish variation. No pizzeria is more famous for its Chicago-style deep dish than Uno's, where staff invented the variety more than 70 years ago. There are three restaurants in Chicago, all off N. Shore Drive, about 285 miles west of Detroit. In Kentucky, where bourbon has a rich tradition, Jim Beam Distillery offers behind-the-scenes tours and a state-of-the-art tasting room at its facility in Clermont, 380 miles southwest of Detroit.