Make this the BEST Halloween ever at Glenlore Trails’ immersive forest

 Make this the BEST Halloween ever at Glenlore Trails’ immersive forest

The Glenlore Trails’ Conjuring Cauldron exhibit.

Celebrate the most magical and spookiest weekend of the year by visiting  Glenlore Trails, Michigan’s largest immersive and illuminated walk-thru forest experience.

Glenlore Trail’s fall themed event, “The Witching Hour”, allows guests of all ages to step into an immersive nighttime adventure that promises to be the most enchanting Halloween experience of the year.

Guests will enjoy a one-mile long walking journey along an illuminated wooded path, where they will discover mysterious sounds and a glowing whimsical experience under the stars.

The experience is available through Sunday, Nov. 2.

Glenlore Trails is located at 3860 Newton Road in Commerce Township.

Something fun to do after trick-or-treating

Your Halloween fun doesn’t have to end after trick-or-treating. Guests are invited to head over to Glenlore Trails on Friday for free face-painting and balloon twisting characters from 7 p.m.  to 8:30 p.m.

The Glenlore Trails CarnEVIL attraction

You’re encouraged to arrive in costume and keep the Halloween excitement going during the spookiest night of the year.

Glenlore Trails will have delicious eats and sweets from The Little Donut Factory and D&Ws Street Eatery for sale in addition to a wide array of seasonal drinks and adult beverages for guests to enjoy all weekend long.

Ticket information

Tickets are available online at GlenloreTrails.com for the final weekend of “The Witching Hour”.

Tours start around dusk. Start times vary by day but typically begin around 7 p.m. with the final entry around 10:00 p.m.

Each night, starting at dusk, the one-mile forest trail will come to life with a dazzling display of lights, sounds, and wonder.

Glenlore Trails is an outdoor experience, that takes approximately one hour to complete and is set up along a wooded, manicured (not paved) trail. It can accommodate strollers, wagons, and wheelchairs with larger wheels, though visitors should be aware that the surface may be more challenging for smaller wheels.

Ed Wright

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