There are a lot of ways to approach this in Michigan... I am just outside of Grand Rapids... south of you.
1. You can go the solar and battery route... but as we know, if there is a snow load on top of your panels, you don't produce. I wouldn't recommend it if you have roof panels as they are difficult to keep clean of snow. However, if you have a ground mount, I would tip the panels at an angle that matches the lower angle of the winter sun... then the snow slides off. It would require a generous battery... no less than 30... closer to 50kWh or more. Reliable... no moving parts, but expensive $$$.
2. You can go the hybrid solar-battery and generator system. Using an auto-start propane/NG generator that is electronically controlled by the state-of-charge of the battery. When the battery gets down to say, 20%, then the generator automatically switches on to recharge the battery to say 90%, then shuts off. So, during a long cloudy, snowy season the generator is cycling on/off, but as soon as the sun gets shining and the batteries can charge from the sun, then no need for the generator. A little less expensive $$... but still pricey.
3. An auto-start, whole house propane/NG generator like what
@Gerald Wilgus has. Not cheap, but another reliable system.
4. A smaller auto-start propane/NG generator tied into an emergency subpanel. Less expensive. High priority circuits only.
You can use the smaller, portable, gasoline-powered generators... they do work, but again, it's not enough to power the entire home, but rather a handful of high-priority circuits. They can be unreliable at times, mainly because they don't get used frequently and because old gasoline left in the engine can go bad... you need to keep these maintained well. If you are out in a rural area where power outages can last several days... you're going to go through a lot of fuel.
As far as brand names... you might consider who you have for local service. Which brands do they sell and service... you don't want to get yourself into a cheaper "off-brand" and then later run into problems where you are struggling to get parts and service.
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