Hiking Outdoors & Nature Ocala Pensacola Camping Apalachicola White Springs Suwannee Okeechobee Lake Okeechobee
A bridge at the Eglin Section of the The Florida Trail.
Photo Credit: Deb Blick / Florida Trail Association
Florida's hiking trails offer wildlife viewing, botanical diversity, and levels of difficulty from beginner to one of the toughest trails in America.
On my last backpacking trip, my socks melted. Honest.
It wasn't the trail's fault. Not directly. I was out with seven friends, surveying a brand-new 72-mile footpath under construction. And this was the day we hit The Wall - a natural barrier of cypress strands across Palm Beach County. Chilly, wet and exhausted from pushing a measuring wheel all day, I flopped into my tent that night and came up with a plan.
Take a palmetto stem. Add a sock. Dangle over flames. Watching, my buddies followed suit. Steam rose. And then I checked my new Ultimax socks and discovered they were crispy. Made from petroleum by-products. I held them up for inspection.
"Ah, guys... if your socks aren't cotton, you'd better get them away from the fire. Now."
While Florida isn't renowned as a backpacking destination, it should be. Where else in the continental United States can you shoulder your pack and hit the trail in the dead of winter with little concern for ice or snow? On the Florida Trail, one of only eight National Scenic Trails in the United States, you can leave those worries at home while soaking up the welcoming warmth of the Deep South. In its 1,400-mile journey from the Big Cypress National Preserve in South Florida to Fort Pickens on Pensacola Beach in northwest Florida, our state's premier hiking trail offers prime destinations for backpackers of all experience levels.
It started with a dream. In 1964, Miami resident Jim Kern returned from an Appalachian Trail backpacking trip with a burning desire for a long hike in his own backyard. Kern envisioned "at least 500 miles" of hiking, and founded the Florida Trail Association (FTA) to bring together like-minded volunteers to carry forth his plan.
Coming up on its 40th anniversary, the Florida Trail remains a work in progress. The intent is a protected wilderness corridor the length of Florida to protect "Florida's Footpath Forever." The reality is a thousand miles of completed trail tied together with orange blazes following back roads until the remainder of the 1,400-mile corridor can be acquired and protected.
OCALA SECTION
A handful of hardy backpackers take on the entire trail each year, but most are out for a week or a weekend. New to Florida hiking? Start your exploration on the Ocala Section, where the Florida Trail's first blaze was painted in the Ocala National Forest in 1966.
Described as the "jewel of the Trail," this well-worn 70-mile footpath meanders around picture-perfect ponds and prairies, vanishes into hammocks of moss-draped oaks, and rises over the brilliant white quartz dunes of the Big Scrub. White-tailed deer browse in the haze of wiregrass beneath longleaf pines, while Florida scrub-jays flit between the sand pines. In the Juniper Prairie Wilderness, shed your pack at Hidden Pond and take a swim, and then set up camp beneath the canopy of oaks to watch sunset on the prairie. Gentle to moderate and with plenty of well-marked trailheads, the Ocala section is ideal for beginning backpackers and families.
SUWANNEE SECTION
Okay, you say, you want a challenge - serious climbs on rugged terrain. Look no farther than the Suwannee Section between Big Shoals, Florida's only Class III whitewater, and Mill Creek near Dowling Park. This 72-mile traverse has you clambering in and out of gullies, walking scenic but oh-so-slender sand levees, and hopping over the tumbling froth of the Suwannee River's many tributaries.
Waterfalls and whirlpools, deep sinkholes and bubbling springs are all part of a hike where Florida's unique geological features are right there on the surface. Camp on sandy beaches or on high bluffs shaded by spreading live oaks and massive tupelo trees. Moderate to strenuous, this section remains dry at the whim of the river; flood stage (over 60 feet) swamps the footpath. In order to hike the entire riverside segment, you must be an FTA member, as the trail passes through some private backyards downstream from White Springs.
EGLIN SECTION
Rhododendron-lined creeks and fragrant titi swamps punctuate the rolling clay hills of the Eglin Section, where for 45 miles you climb up and down natural drainages, crossing dozens of watercourses on sturdy log bridges. Designated the Choctawhatchee National Forest in 1908, this 724-square-mile preserve protected one of the nation's largest stands of old growth longleaf pine, and with it, colonies of red-cockaded woodpeckers. The land changed hands in 1940, becoming Eglin Air Force Base.
The trail follows the northern and western borders of the base; numerous designated campsites have picnic tables, benches, fire rings and easy access to water. It's a pleasant, moderate hike that keeps you immersed in the forest for days on end. An inexpensive Eglin Recreational Permit is required to hike this section.
If you're from a mountainous state, don't assume "flat" Florida hiking is boring. Florida ranks third in the nation for botanical diversity, with more than 80 distinct plant communities.
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St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge
Florida Trail Association, Inc.
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