Passport Q

Traverse City, Michigan—a small lakeside town best known for cherries and craft beer—has quietly become an emerging haven for LGBTQ+ travelers seeking outdoor adventure, quirky art, and a warm welcome beyond the big city.

The first thing you notice as you step onto Front Street in Traverse City isn’t just the sweet scent of ripe cherries or the crisp breeze rolling off Lake Michigan—it’s the subtle but unmistakable sense of welcome. Rainbow stickers gleam on bakery doors, a pride flag sways in the window of an indie bookstore, and the sound of laughter drifts from a sidewalk café run by a local couple who swapped city life for the lakeshore. For LGBTQ+ travelers, Traverse City offers an unexpected blend of rural charm and queer visibility, where you can kayak at sunrise and dance under disco balls by night .

It’s not Provincetown, and it’s certainly not West Hollywood; instead, Traverse City is carving out a fresh identity—one where queer folks can feel seen, safe, and gloriously outdoorsy.

Traverse City’s reputation as the “Cherry Capital of the World” is well earned, and the annual National Cherry Festival is a riot of color, flavor, and friendly faces. But in recent years, the festival circuit has grown to include a vibrant Pride celebration each September. What started as a small gathering in a local park now draws hundreds of residents and visitors alike for a parade, drag brunches, and open mic nights that spill out into local breweries .

You’ll find the Traverse City Pride Picnic at the heart of it all: picnic tables groaning with homemade pies, children darting between rainbow balloons, and a local drag queen leading a “Cherry Pit Spit” contest with impeccable comedic timing. “We want every visitor to know this is their town, too,” says Jamie, a transgender artist whose mural graces the city’s community center wall .

Unlike traditional gay hotspots, Traverse City’s LGBTQ+ scene is woven into its outdoor culture. The Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, just a short drive away, offers endless hiking, sandboarding, and stargazing opportunities—and local queer hiking groups lead regular outings for all skill levels. The city’s annual “Rainbow Paddle” sees dozens of kayaks festooned with pride flags gliding across Grand Traverse Bay, blending adventure with activism .

At dusk, couples gather around campfires at family-run resorts, sharing stories and s’mores. “I used to worry about holding hands here,” says Alex, a nonbinary visitor from Chicago. “Now, it feels like Traverse City is rooting for us—especially when the local barista writes ‘You’re valid’ on my latte foam” .

While Traverse City is still a small town, its local businesses have taken tangible steps to ensure safety and inclusion. The downtown Traverse City LGBTQ+ Welcome Initiative, launched in 2024, provides training for hospitality staff, resources for travelers, and visible markers of allyship throughout shops and restaurants. According to the Michigan LGBTQ+ Travel Index, Traverse City ranks among the top rural destinations for queer traveler safety, with zero reported hate crimes against LGBTQ+ people in the past two years .

You’ll find LGBTQ+-owned shops specializing in upcycled clothing, vegan treats, and handmade jewelry, all with cheerful staff ready to recommend not just the best hiking trail, but the safest queer-friendly hangout. “Traverse City is proof that you don’t need a big city to feel big love,” says Sam, owner of a local queer-run café .

There’s something quietly hilarious about watching a group of drag queens attempt sandboarding on the dunes , or seeing a pride parade led by a cherry mascot with rainbow suspenders. Traverse City’s blend of earnest hospitality and playful irreverence means that queer travelers are not just tolerated—they’re celebrated.

For those wary of rural travel, Traverse City offers a reassuring reminder: here, you can hike in a binder, swim in glitter, and find your chosen family under a canopy of stars. As the sun sets over Lake Michigan, the sky painted lavender and gold, a local musician strums a guitar on the pier, singing an anthem of belonging. The applause is loud, proud, and unmistakably queer .

Planning Your Visit: Practical Tips for LGBTQ+ Travelers



- Traverse City Tourism’s LGBTQ+ guide offers up-to-date listings for queer-friendly lodgings, events, and outdoor excursions .

- Local organizations such as Up North Pride help connect visitors to community events and advocacy resources.

- Public transportation, bike rentals, and walking tours are accessible and safe, even for solo travelers .

- Emergency services and health care providers in the area are trained in LGBTQ+ affirming care, with visible resources for transgender people and nonbinary folks .

Traverse City may never rival New York’s nightlife or Palm Springs’ pool parties, but for LGBTQ+ travelers seeking a blend of nature, art, and authentic community, this Michigan town is making its mark—one cherry pie and pride flag at a time.
Jerry Harmer  Nov 16
2 MIN READ

A restaurant in central Thailand has become an internet sensation after a nearby river flooded it with water and fish

A restaurant in central Thailand was bursting with a stream of customers coming for a unique dining experience: Enjoying a meal while sitting in flood waters, surrounded by live fish they bring into the establishment.

by Jerry Harmer

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


After years of pandemic-induced hibernation, LGBTQ+ winter travel is roaring back with a flurry of color, camaraderie, and culture.

It’s official: the snow queens are out, the slopes are sparkling, and LGBTQ+ ski weeks are back with the kind of fabulous energy not seen since pre-pandemic days. After years of longing for the thrill of a powdery run followed by a dancefloor avalanche, queer travelers are once again flocking to winter havens like Stowe, Vermont for Winter Rendezvous, and the legendary Aspen and Telluride Gay Ski Weeks, proving—once and for all—that queer joy refuses to stay in the lodge.

Battambang, Cambodia, often overshadowed by its more famous neighbors, is emerging as a vibrant and inclusive destination for LGBTQ+ travelers.

Travelers often flock to Phnom Penh or Siem Reap when visiting Cambodia, drawn by the capital’s energy or the ancient allure of Angkor Wat. But a growing number of LGBTQ+ visitors are beginning to chart a different path—one that leads west to the tranquil, art-filled streets of Battambang. Known for its colonial architecture, riverside cafes, and thriving arts scene, Battambang is quietly positioning itself as one of Asia’s most welcoming destinations for queer travelers, thanks to its open-minded attitude, visible LGBTQ+ community, and unique blend of cultural experiences .

Nestled in the Chattahoochee National Forest, Blue Ridge, Georgia, is emerging as a vibrant LGBTQ+ destination with a growing number of queer-owned businesses, inclusive events, and a welcoming community spirit.

Tucked away in the northern reaches of Georgia, Blue Ridge is a picturesque mountain town that has quietly become a beacon of LGBTQ+ inclusivity in the South. With a population under 250,000, Blue Ridge offers a blend of natural beauty, small-town charm, and a growing queer community that is reshaping the town’s identity. The city’s transformation is evident in its expanding roster of LGBTQ+-owned businesses, inclusive events, and a local culture that celebrates diversity.

Halifax, the port city perched on Canada’s rugged Atlantic coast, is quietly emerging as one of North America’s most inclusive and vibrant LGBTQ+ destinations.

If you arrive in Halifax on a foggy summer morning, as I did, the city feels like a secret waiting to be shared. The air tastes of brine and possibility, with the tang of saltwater mixing with the aroma of fresh espresso from the harborfront cafes. Along the boardwalk, rainbow flags flutter from windows above indie bookstores and microbreweries, sending quiet signals of solidarity to those who know how to look for them. Halifax isn’t a place that shouts its queerness; it wears it with the easy confidence of a favorite hoodie—well-loved, well-worn, and ready to withstand the weather.

Rio Yamat and Josh Funk  Nov 15
3 MIN READ

The Federal Aviation Administration is rolling back some of its restrictions on commercial flights at 40 major U.S. airports that have been in place since Nov. 7

The Federal Aviation Administration on Friday halved the number of flights that U.S. airlines must cut from their schedules at 40 airports as the country’s aviation system recovers from a shortage of air traffic controllers during the record government shutdown.

by Rio Yamat and Josh Funk

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Barcelona is more than a destination—it’s a living, breathing queer playground where Catalan flair meets rainbow resilience.

Barcelona is the kind of city that winks at you from across the plaza, then grabs your hand and spins you into a fiesta before you’ve finished your cortado. It’s a city where Picasso once painted, but drag queens now reign; where old-world Gothic meets new-world queer, and where every cobblestone in the Eixample seems to hum with possibility. For LGBTQ+ travelers, Barcelona isn’t just tolerant—it’s exuberantly, unapologetically, joyfully queer, from the sun-drenched shores of Mar Bella beach to the neon nights of Gaixample (yes, that’s “gay” + “Eixample,” and yes, it’s as fabulous as it sounds) .

A transgender TSA officer at Dulles International Airport is suing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem after being blocked from performing essential job duties under a Trump-era executive order.

The security line at Washington Dulles International Airport is supposed to be about safety, not shame. Yet for Danielle Mittereder, a transgender TSA officer, the checkpoint became a battleground—not just for national security, but for basic dignity and the right to work. Danielle has filed a federal lawsuit after being barred from performing a core function of her job, alleging discrimination rooted in her gender identity and enforced by one of the country’s most vocal anti-LGBTQ+ officials: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem .

Valparaíso, Chile’s colorful port city, is quietly emerging as one of South America’s most inclusive, creative, and culturally rich destinations for LGBTQ+ travelers.

Tucked along Chile’s Pacific coast, Valparaíso shimmers with a kaleidoscope of colors: from the undulating cerros covered in street art to the blue expanse of the ocean. While Santiago and Buenos Aires often steal the limelight as queer-friendly destinations in South America, Valparaíso has quietly cultivated a reputation as an inclusive refuge for LGBTQ+ travelers and locals alike. Here, the city’s layered history and creative spirit intersect with a subtle but growing queer visibility, making it a compelling destination for those seeking authenticity and connection beyond the usual rainbow hotspots .