Skip to main content

Georgia State flag An official website of the State of Georgia.

State Organizations A-Z

Home
  • About
    • Welcome
    • Partners
    • Contact Us
  • Trails
    • Colonial Coast
    • Southern Rivers
  • Birding Basics
  • Resources
  • Donate
Wood Stork (Jimmy Cash/GNPA)

Explore the Georgia Coast

Wood Stork (Jimmy Cash/GNPA)
Colonial Coast Birding Trail
  • Download the App
  • Print Checklist
  • Print Map

Colonial Coast Birding Trail

Coastal Georgia is steeped in human and natural history. Since the first human inhabitants colonized the coast, man and the abundant natural resources found here have been inexorably linked. A visit to one or more sites along the Colonial Coast Birding Trail will provide you with the opportunity to see and enjoy the beauty of a kaleidoscope of birds and glimpse the fascinating history of this land and its residents.

More than 300 species of birds (75 percent of the total species of birds seen in Georgia) have been spotted at the 17 sites along the birding trail. Don't expect to see most of these birds on a single visit. The birds you see will depend greatly on when and where you visit. Some birds can be seen throughout the year. Others are migratory and travel long distances from their breeding grounds to wintering areas.

If you want to see migrants, you need look for them during those times of the year when they visit Georgia. You will also find a wide variety of habitats along the trail. Shorelines, salt marshes, old rice fields, woodlands, tidal rivers, freshwater wetlands and other habitats host their own fascinating bird communities.

Each site along the Colonial Coast Birding Trail is unique. Many sites offer visitors the opportunity to watch birds and visit 18th and 19th Century historic places. Other sites are located on lands and waters that were once part of early plantations dedicated to growing rice, indigo and cotton. So whether you want to see a bald eagle soaring over a coastal river, an endangered wood stork feeding its gawky young, sanderlings chasing the waves on a sandy beach, or a great egret standing motionless in a placid pond, the Colonial Coast Birding Trail has something for you.

The numbers of birds found along the trail change with the rising and falling of the tides and with the passage of the seasons. Consequently, each visit offers the chance to experience a new wildlife adventure. Spend some time along the Colonial Coast Birding Trail and learn why the Creek Indians called the Georgia coast The Enchanted Land.

 

Trail Sites

  • Fort Pulaski National Monument
  • Tybee Island: North Beach
  • Savannah-Ogeechee Canal Museum & Nature Center
  • Skidaway Island State Park
  • J.F. Gregory Park
  • Fort McAllister State Park
  • Fort Morris State Historic Site
  • Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge
  • Altamaha Waterfowl Management Area
  • Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation State Historic Site
  • St. Simons Island: Gould’s Inlet & East Beach
  • Jekyll Island: North End Beach
  • Jekyll Island: Causeway
  • Jekyll Island: South End Beach
  • Crooked River State Park
  • Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge
  • Cumberland Island National Seashore
  • Ansley Hodges M.A.R.S.H. Project  (Altamaha Wildlife Management Area)
  • Crooked River State Park
  • Cumberland Island National Seashore
  • Fort McAllister State Park
  • Fort Morris State Historic Site
  • Fort Pulaski National Monument
  • St. Simons Island: Gould's Inlet & East Beach
  • Harris Neck National Monument

 

 

Program GADNR WRD Logo

 

  • GEORGIA DNR
  • FACEBOOK
  • INSTAGRAM
  • ACCESSIBILITY
  • SITE MAP