Daily Southtown

With high tourism numbers, Indiana Dunes looks beyond beaches

- By Shelley Jones Shelley Jones is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.

Porter County tourism is in a good place in 2024. At its sixth State of Tourism event at Riley’s Railhouse in Chesterton on Thursday afternoon Indiana Dunes Tourism staff spoke of focusing its efforts beyond the beach.

Indiana Dunes Tourism’s Interim CEO/President Christine Livingston told the crowd that Indiana Dunes National Park had 4.6 million visitors last year, compared to 3.2 million in 2018. ]Those who stopped by the Visitors Center more than doubled in that same time frame to 226,000 last year.

Livingston told the crowd that when the Indiana Dunes went from national lakeshore designatio­n to a national park the visiting crowds “went from beachgoers to parkgoers.” And the positive thing about parkgoers is that they like to stay in the region a little longer and explore the surroundin­g offerings.

That’s good news for the county’s more than 500 businesses. “We take the responsibi­lity of supporting local businesses very seriously and it drives everything that we do,” Livingston said.

She told the story of the 160-acre Broken Wagon

Bison Farm at 563 W. 450 North in Hobart that blossomed from occasional­ly selling meat out of a meat locker in a garage to offering tours twice a week, and selling the meat from a new gift shop that has space for classes, all following guidance from the Indiana Dunes Tourism staff.

Such relationsh­ips, both with privately-held businesses, and Porter County’s other sister venues the Memorial Opera House, the Porter County Museum, Porter County Parks, and the Porter County Expo Center, are a focus.

Livingston gave another example of the special attention her staff gives to small businesses.

She said the owner of the Schoolhous­e Shop in Chesterton is vocal in his appreciati­on. “He really credits the staff at the Visitors Center for taking time to explain how to get to his shop,” she said.

Partnershi­ps with other natural destinatio­ns such as Shirley Heinze Land Trust, Gabis Arboretum and Kankakee Sands, and other tourism entities like the South Shore Convention & Visitors Bureau and the South Shore Line are also being nurtured, Livingston pointed out.

After 20 years in its building the Visitors Center is also planning for a refresh.

An update on the Indigenous Cultural Trail, a joint effort between the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma, the Pakagon Band of Potawatomi, the National Park Service, and Indiana Dunes Tourism, showed the new bridge over Dunes Creek.

Trail signs that include Potawatomi and Miami translatio­ns are beginning to be installed and a 6-to-8foot diameter limestone turtle by Chicago sculptor Roman Villareal is expected to be ready this year.

“We’re trying to get the biggest rock possible. I won’t know (the final size) until I get started,” said the artist, who has works at The Art Institute in Chicago.

“We were warned it was going to be so hard to do, no one was going to get along,” Livingston said of the Indigenous Trail partnershi­p. “It’s been the complete opposite of that.”

And for those who loved Ranger Matt in his Dunes 101 Series several years ago educating hundreds of thousands of viewers on such topics as “What are the Indiana Dunes?” and “Where are the Dunes Beaches?,” the series will continue in 2024.

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