on location: midwest ❖ dyllic Main Street communities filled with craft and gift shops....heaping helpings of fried chicken and freshbaked bread....Clip-clopping horse buggies clattering down country roads where Amish farm families have lived the simple life for generations. Northern Indiana’s Amish Country seems to be custom-made for group tours, offering hearty meals, fun shopping and loads of nostalgia. But since 2008 the patchwork of small towns has been stitching together another crowdpleaser—the Quilt Gardens Tour. Designated an American Bus Association Top 100 Event for the third year in a row, the driving tour is one of a kind. Though the Quilt Gardens Tour spotlights a wide variety of gardens, it’s hardly your garden variety tour. There’s nothing like it anywhere else. From Memorial Day to Oct. 1, seven communities will be showing off 18 all new gardens patterned after Amish and contemporary quilt designs. The patchwork quilt, perhaps more than anything else, symbolizes Amish craftsmanship. In addition to large gardens featuring a total of 100,000-plus blooms, the tour features 18 super-sized quilt murals at 12 locations, many at garden sites. It follows Elkhart County’s 90-mile, selfguided Heritage Trail Driving Tour. “The Quilt Gardens along the Heritage Trail is a boon for tour operators looking to reach new audiences—people who may never have considered taking a group tour, people who share a common interest,” said Sonya Nash, CTP, travel trade manager of the Elkhart County Convention & Visitors Bureau. “It’s not the cookie cutter group experience. It’s a
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ONLINE EXCLUSIVE See Randy Mink’s article on four of Indiana Amish Country’s best heritage attractions. Log on to http://leisuregrouptravel.com/?p=22875.
42 April 2011
Color-splashed displays of floral artistry blanket Northern Indiana’s Amish Country The quilt garden is a special treat for shoppers at the Old Bag Factory in Goshen (above), a former factory filled with antique, art and craft shops.
platform for like-minded people to come together and have a terrific time pursuing their passion for hobbies such as gardening, quilting or photography. And just as the gardens are all different, the Quilt Gardens experience allows each tour to be different from the rest, tailored to meet special wants.” The Quilt Gardens Tour has sparked tourism in this part of Indiana, a rural area only two hours east of Chicago and not far from the Michigan border. Karleen Richter, of Elkhart-based Down the Road Tours, says the flower displays have brought buses into communities like Wakarusa, where groups not only see the quilt garden and mural but also visit the old-fashioned dime and hardware stores. Now in its fourth year, the Quilt Gardens Tour continues to blossom as communities recognize its pulling power.
Hand-painted outdoor murals are part of the Quilt Gardens Tour.
Richter said, “More people are getting on the bandwagon—they know it’s bringing people in the door.” Richter’s Down the Road Tours is a receptive operator that offers tours and step-on service. Tour members get out LeisureGroupTravel.com