Paddling Lake Michigan and Waterways at Indiana Dunes

Paddling Lake Michigan and Waterways at Indiana Dunes

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Est. Time

1–4 hours depending on route and paddler ability. Marquette Lagoons: 1–2 hours. Little Calumet River: 2–3 hours. Lake Michigan: 2–4 hours.

Route Type

Out-and-back (varies by location and launch site)

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

May–October (warmest water, most stable weather). Year-round access available; winter (Dec–Feb) requires advanced cold-water skills and carries extreme hypothermia risk.

Overview

About This Trail

Three distinct paddling zones cater to different grit levels: Lake Michigan demands expert sea kayakers equipped for unforgiving currents, cold water (down to 6°F), and commercial traffic. The Little Calumet River East Branch requires intermediate paddling and portage capability. Marquette Park Lagoons deliver beginner-accessible, shallow-water conditions ideal for skill-building. All routes demand PFD compliance, obsessive weather monitoring, and realistic cold-water survival knowledge—conditions flip fast.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Mixed: Novice (Marquette Lagoons), Intermediate (Little Calumet River East Branch), Expert (Lake Michigan)

Trail Highlights

Expert-tier open water on Lake Michigan with unforgiving currents and 6–70°F water demanding full respect. Intermediate river carries on Little Calumet East Branch through wetland habitat. Beginner-accessible shallow lagoons with mirror-calm water and dune reflections. Fully accessible launches available—the rare park that serves all skill tiers simultaneously.

Insider Tips

• Camp Goodfellow is the launch-point gold standard: fully accessible, reliable facilities, historic site, and safest entry point for new paddlers. Start here. • Marquette Park Lagoons offer the gentlest entry: slow-moving, shallow (great for novices), mirror-calm water at dawn/dusk (best reflection shots), and heron sightings are consistent. • Lake Michigan beyond the buoys is another world: currents rip, waves build, and barge traffic operates. Don't cross the buoys unless you're a veteran sea kayaker. • The Shirley Heinze Land Trust has launched Wykes Plampin Nature Preserve and Keith Ricard Walner Nature Preserve as new public paddling sites—less crowded than Camp Goodfellow. • Undeveloped launches at Waverly, Wagner, and Mineral Springs roads are backup options if main lots fill—they have minimal facilities but space. • Sunrise and early morning (before 10 AM) offer calmest conditions and best light. Afternoon wind picks up on Lake Michigan. • Rent a sea kayak locally if you lack one—Lake Michigan requires a true sea kayak, not a rec kayak. Transporting one requires roof rack expertise.

Best Season to Hike

May–October (warmest water, most stable weather). Year-round access available; winter (Dec–Feb) requires advanced cold-water skills and carries extreme hypothermia risk.

Hiking Tips

  • Wear a PFD every time—cold water incapacitates you faster than you can scream.
  • Lake Michigan is a Great Lake: currents rip, water stays lethal cold year-round, and ore barges don't swerve. Experienced sea kayakers only. Pack double water, communication device, and a buddy.
  • Dress for WATER temperature, not air temperature. Even August feels warm—the water is 70°F, which causes hypothermia in 1–2 hours if you capsize.
  • Marquette Park Lagoons: beginner-friendly, shallow, slow. Start here.
  • Little Calumet East Branch: bring portage pack and a map. Tight turns, carries, and reading the water demand intermediate skills.
  • Carry 3L water minimum (double for Lake Michigan). Dehydration is sneaky—wind evaporation + sun reflection = creeping thirst.
  • Never paddle Lake Michigan alone. Take a buddy always.
  • Check NPS website for launch site status before arrival.

Family Info

Marquette Park Lagoons: safe for families (slow, shallow, accessible, excellent for skill-building). Lake Michigan: NOT family-friendly unless kids are strong swimmers in wetsuits with mandatory PFDs and constant adult supervision—hypothermia kills children faster than adults. Little Calumet River East Branch: suitable for families with intermediate paddling ability and portage skills. Dress kids in rash guards or wetsuits for cold water (water temp is the real threat, not air temp).

What Hikers Say

Paddlers report Lake Michigan is thrilling but humbling—one miscalculation and you're in lethal water. Marquette Lagoons earn consistent rave reviews for accessibility and beginner-friendly conditions (slow water, scenic dunes, reliable wildlife). Little Calumet River East Branch is building reputation among intermediate paddlers for technical challenge and wetland scenery. Most reviewers emphasize: PFD non-negotiable, respect water temperature obsessively, check weather obsessively, and never paddle Lake Michigan alone.

ℹ️ Data Sources

Information is compiled from official sources, verified traveler reviews, and editorial research. Learn how YourNPGuide works →