The Economic Contributions of Agricultural Tourism in Michigan

Family farms have long generated income from agricultural tourism including U-picks, wagon rides, corn mazes and petting zoos, but contemporary agricultural tourism reflects much greater sophistication in terms of product variety, services, activities, and marketing. In Michigan, farm operators have...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inGeographical review Vol. 106; no. 3; pp. 421 - 440
Main Authors Veeck, Gregory, Hallett, Lucius, Che, Deborah, Veeck, Ann
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Taylor & Francis 01.07.2016
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
American Geographical Society
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Family farms have long generated income from agricultural tourism including U-picks, wagon rides, corn mazes and petting zoos, but contemporary agricultural tourism reflects much greater sophistication in terms of product variety, services, activities, and marketing. In Michigan, farm operators have moved beyond classic products and activities and the traditional consumer base. New sources of revenue derive from classes on beer, cider, mead and wine making, yarn spinning, perfume/soap-making, farm markets, fishing, educational classes, school tours and hospitality including weddings and on-farm restaurants. This case study of Michigan agricultural tourism reports results from a systematic survey of 154 agritourism operations conducted throughout the state during summer and fall of 2013 with a focus on the economic benefits of the fast-changing sector. This study summarizes tax revenues, sales and employment trends for the farm operations participating in the survey but also quantitatively assesses the contribution of agricultural tourism to Michigan's economy through an extrapolation of the sample to estimate state-wide totals. Results from multivariate regression analysis intended to identify relationships between employment, advertising and scale to gross sales per day are also reported. These analyses show the importance of agricultural tourism to rural and peri-urban places in Michigan and throughout the nation, while raising concerns about a growing division between large and small operators and what this growing gap may mean for the future of the sector.
Bibliography:ArticleID:GERE12161
Western Michigan University's Department of Geography Lucia Harrison Endowment Fund
ark:/67375/WNG-4V168KHP-8
istex:D190BF9EBB4858D24D44543527917BD1E2C4ECE2
USDA/Agricultural Marketing Service
Research was supported through a generous MDARD Specialty Crop Block Grant-Farm Bill 2012 (Grant #791N3200132) with funds originating in the USDA/Agricultural Marketing Service, and additional funding via Western Michigan University's Department of Geography Lucia Harrison Endowment Fund. We are grateful for this support, and also for the considerable efforts of Mr. Karl Schrantz, Ariana Toth, and especially Cameron Tarnas for building and checking the agritourism mailing list. Jason Glatz and Johnathan F. Kennedy provided cartographic contributions to this article and the project.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0016-7428
1931-0846
DOI:10.1111/j.1931-0846.2016.12161.x