We are reaching the end of our second summer in Traverse City and we are learning about the local culture. I am enjoying the urban life here, the ability to leave our condo and walk downtown- to the bookstores, library, bars and restaurants, and the beach. We have loved spending time with our grandchildren who live here, and still be close enough to our newest grandchild to spend time with her. We have been assistant managers/managers of a venue in the film festival and we are meeting new friends. I have made some observations on this new culture that I would like to share.
1- Natives and Newcomers
Field notes- Heard on the street: “No…I am not a native. I have only lived here twenty years… I am a native, but only second generation—my parents immigrated from Detroit (Grand Rapids, Lansing, Chicago).”
Traverse City is a town where long term residents vie for space with tourists and the newly arriving retirees and young families seeking a quality of life opportunities they see here. I have had people tell me that the “natives” are not friendly to newcomers and that there is an invisible barrier in making friends here.
I don’t doubt that this occurs, but it is not limited to Traverse City. It is a common human “us/them” scenario that I have observed in Mexican villages, Pacific Islands, Detroit neighborhoods, and college towns. In my book, Chippewa Lake: A Community in Search of an Identity, I examined a similar situation in this small Mecosta County rural/resort area, though on a much smaller scale. Chippewa Lake was settled by Scotch-Irish and German families in the 1800’s during the same lumber boom that brought the Hannahs, the Boardmans, and the Lays to Traverse City.
As an area forested with white pine, Chippewa Lake was a small spur of lumber activity. It started as a lumbering community that bragged a hotel, a variety of stores, a church, and lumber camp and mill. Unlike Traverse City, when the white pine was logged out in Chippewa Township, the lumber business left town, rolling up the small railroad line behind it, leaving Chippewa Lake to revert to a small farming community.
The lake for which the community is named, has evolved from a working class vacation spot– surrounded by small one-room cottages and trailers– to a middle class retirement lake. Large homes have replaced many of the cottages and a rift has appeared between the perceptions of community espoused by the descendant of the rural community and the newcomers.
In Chippewa Lake, and I assume in Traverse City as well, people come and go, and people who reside in the community year round and have done so for many years are established in their family and friends and activities. They are not necessarily looking for new friends, and not welcoming of those who come and want to change things. Families who arrive with children become engaged in activities related to new jobs and schools. Those of us who are moving to communities to retire are looking for new relationships, a life beyond jobs, but hopefully incorporating our grown children and their families. We have expectations of open-arms and “come join us.” These types of relationships take time and patience, and a willingness of the newcomers to commit to the community through volunteering or community work.
This is our second year in Traverse City (confession: we escape the snow in the winter months), and we have found people here to be very friendly, and eager to engage in spontaneous conversations in bars and social events. We have been appreciated in our volunteering and have met many new people. It is difficult to be a newcomer, but even for that, there is the active Newcomers Club where, I understand, many have been active for years!
2- Tourism
Field notes-heard on the phone: “I’m running late-got stuck in the fudge”
I have learned that this phrase refers to the tourist crowds, particularly during Cherry Festival; It means:
- you can’t find parking in or around the downtown area during one of the many festivals
- you can’t get through the parade barricades that separate you from your house
- It takes several light cycles to make a left hand turn
Traverse City, because of its location, has survived the logging collapse and become a thriving business and resort community, and residents acknowledge that the tourist dollars help to underwrite the long sleepy winters. Chippewa Lake was not so lucky. Once a thriving lumber town, and, in the 1950’s a thriving resort town (complete with dance hall and skating rink and family restaurant-bar, two grocery stores), Chippewa Lake now has a small marina-grocery store, restaurant, community church, and post office. Even the bar closed down last year.
The many festivals define Traverse City for many Michiganders, and it is the diversity of festivals that interests me. In my desire to find patterns, it seems to me that people in Traverse City fall into two categories: Those who go away during Cherry Festival, and those who have a houseful of guests. We fall in the second category. We collect family members from several Michigan towns and from Wisconsin where my brother and his family live, and whose son competes in the band competition every year at Trilby Field and who marches in the Cherry Festival parades.
There is a disparity between the crowds at the Cherry Festival and those of the Film Festival during July. This, of course , is obvious to those who live here, but to the anthropologist’s eye, they reflect intersecting visions of small town life. The crowds in Traverse City during the Cherry Festival are dominated by families, enjoying the beaches, the music and the midway, a non-animal complement to the Northern Michigan Fair that takes place later in the summer. Most counties in Michigan celebrate their rural past and/or present with agricultural fairs, including Mecosta County, where our children “showed” horses and rabbits (not the chickens).
The Cherry Festival is a celebration of Grand Traverse/Leelanau Counties agricultural past and present, with a county fair atmosphere, complete with Gibby Fries and the midway. But the focus of the festival is “Cherries!” even though most of them, at that time of the year, come from elsewhere. The food fare for the midway in Mecosta County and Traverse City does not differ significantly—hotdogs, cotton candy, ice cream, and popcorn– though I know that the Mecosta County fair doesn’t have a Thai food booth!
The Film Festival draws an entirely different crowd, that seeks out the foodie restaurants, artisan foods, wineries and craft breweries. I have been told that waiters and waitresses hate to work the Cherry Festival restaurants, but love the Film Festival– fewer messes and better tips in the latter. The yachts in the harbor are bigger and more prevalent, and the crowds more “mature” in age, if not behavior.
I know—and now understand—some of the anxiety felt by locals regarding the festivals (parking, crowds, messes to be picked by locals), because we live in the downtown area… but what these anecdotes mean to me is a community with a strong identity, despite its diversity
3- Quality of Life
Field notes–Observation: To be a true Traverse City resident, need: a dog, a bicycle (with all the accoutrements and appropriate clothing), running shoes (ditto on the accoutrements), and a yoga mat (ditto). To prove your true membership, the dog must be included in at least two of these activities. If children replace (or accompany) the dog, they too are transported in the appropriate accoutrements- bicycle wagons or jogging buggies.
One of my assumptions when I first came to Traverse City as a visitor was that Traverse City would be an affluent and politically progressive city, and it is, compared to rural Mecosta County where my husband joked that I was the only democrat. This is not technically true, but not too far off. There are democrats in Big Rapids, the county seat where Ferris State University is located.) While not a democratic stronghold, Traverse City has a diversity of political philosophies that I find refreshing.
There is also economic diversity. As a visitor to Traverse City, I was struck by the shiny boats in the marina, the beautiful homes and mansions on the peninsulas, the wineries, beautiful beaches, and the thriving downtown area. As a resident, I have become aware of the income disparities and I wonder about the discrepancy between the affluence of those of those who visit Traverse City on yachts and sailboats worth more than houses, and those of us who can afford to live in Traverse City or on the peninsulas, in contrast to those who live on the streets and trailer parks on the fringes of town.
Last summer, our first year in Traverse City, we read and heard about the debate on the homeless shelter considered in the neighborhood near our residence. Signs immediately erupted on lawns in the area promoting an alternative use of the structure under consideration. The homeless in Traverse City are visible, and from my reading of the Zine (a magazine written and sold by the homeless), they come from a cross-section of American life—they were children in families—in polka bands—who fell off the ledge somehow; they sleep on the beach and sometimes in the protected corners of our building.
Yet, Traverse City is a town where the homeless walk among us; sometimes, while jogging early in the morning, we see them on the beach or in the parks; they sell the Zine and engage us in conversation. They want to tell their story. And on any day, within a few feet of a Zine vendor, a young girl or boy is playing a violin, requesting donations for study at Interlochen Music Camp. On Saturday mornings, the Occupiers stand in the open area across from Horizon books to protest the pipeline, economic inequality, and other political issues; and during certain films at the film festival, or running events (why, I don’t know), the group of religious zealots tell everyone where they are heading if their behavior continues. This is America, in microcosm.
Before we moved here, my husband and I came up for the film festival and to visit our daughter’s family who live here. We stood in line at Lars Auditorium waiting to “load” (as I now know it is called), when we struck up a conversation with several women in line with us. At that time we were thinking of moving here and took every opportunity to ask people about the city. One woman told us that she moved here because “I wanted to live in a community where people come on vacation.” We liked that idea. We are fortunate to have two residences both in places where people go on vacation- Traverse City and Tampa Bay, FL. These locations differ in many ways, but in some they are similar. In both, we experience the ebb and flow of tourists in the winter months (which includes us), and during spring break (avoid the beaches in March).
