Dogs No Dogs
Features
Birding · River/Creek · Wildlife
Closed Christmas Day and the day after Thanksgiving.
Overview
This is a 4.3-mile loop run through a remote area of Pinellas County. The environments change throughout the run as it heads through swamps, pine flatwoods, oak hammocks, and forest wetlands.
Need to Know
Description
Pinellas County is the most densely populated county in Florida so having a 4.3-mile loop trail in a wilderness area is quite a treasure. The trail starts at the parking lot and takes you on a boardwalk where you can swing by the visitor center. There is also a gift shop run by volunteers to help support the preserve. The only restrooms are nearby as well.
Along the
Ed Center Trail, you'll see a lot of wildlife as the boardwalk elevates you over Brooker Creek. Woodpeckers, armadillos, and a few reptiles are a few examples. The trail has signs in front of various trees letting you know their names like the live oak and dogwood trees.
After the boardwalk, you'll leave the swamp behind and look for the orange-blazed
Wilderness Trail to your right. Here will be some pinewood flats and then forest wetlands with rabbits and deer that are common in this area. Stay on this orange-marked trail for two miles as you move through a cypress swamp area. The trail continues but the markings changes color to indicate the
Pine Needle Path, a short 0.4-mile pink-marked trail with lots of pine trees, and then the color will change again to purple as you are now on
Blackwater Cutoff Trail.
This is a very swampy area but still with a good dirt trail tread, at least in the dry season. Soon though, the environment will change as you hit the
Flatwoods Trail, a green-marked trail, and my favorite section as the pine flatwoods make for wide open spaces of the run where there is good bird viewing. Finally, you'll connect to another section of the
Ed Center Trail and more opportunities for swamp viewing on the boardwalk before ending back at the parking lot.
Flora & Fauna
Fauna: Bald eagle, deer, armadillo, rabbits, woodpeckers, gopher tortoise, red cardinals, spiders, frogs, turkey, dragonflies, owls
Flora: oak, palmetto, dogwood, ferns, cyprus, slash pine
Contacts
Shared By:
Kevin Roberts
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