Where Can
I Take My Dog To The Beach?
It is hard to imagine many places a dog
is happier than at a beach. Whether running around on the sand,
jumping in the water , digging a hole or just lying in the sun,
every dog deserves a day at the beach. But all too often dog
owners stopping at a sandy stretch of beach are met with signs
designed to make hearts - human and canine alike - droop: NO
DOGS ON BEACH. Below is a quick traveling tour of America's beaches
with each state ranked from the most dog-friendly (****) to the
worst (*).
DOGS ON ATLANTIC OCEAN BEACHES (traveling
North to South)
The rocky coast of Maine (***) is mesmerizing to look at but
doesn't leave much room for sandy beaches. Dogs are generally
banned from the beaches at the many small state parks along the
Maine coast, but dog owners will find more friendly sands on
the town beaches. Around Portland, the state's biggest city,
and the tourist towns of the Southern Coast dogs are often allowed
on the beach anytime Labor Day to Memorial Day and in the mornings
and evenings during the summer. The spectacular Acadia National
Park is one of America's most dog-friendly national parks but
does not allow dogs on its beaches.
It is lucky for dog lovers that New Hampshire
(*) has only 18 miles of coastline. State beaches and parks don't
allow dogs on the sand at all. If you must stop in New Hampshire,
try the Grand Island Common in New Castle or Foss Beach in Rye
during the off-season from October to late May.
Around Boston, the beaches of the North
Shore are off-limits to dogs during the summer but other towns
in Massachusetts (****) are more generous - dogs are usually
allowed year-round with restrictive hours in the summer. Cape
Cod, however, is the best destination for beach-loving dogs in
New England. Cape Cod National Seashore, America's first national
seashore, allows dogs on the beach anytime outside the swimming
areas (and not on the trails). The curviture of the Cape limits
sightlines down the beach and gives the park the impression of
being comprised of a series of dune-backed private coves. The
two tourist islands off southern Cape Cod, Nantucket and Martha's
Vineyard, are both extremely dog-friendly - on Nantucket, dogs
can even take the shuttle to the beach.
The beaches of Rhode Island (**) are
kept dog-free during the summer but if you take the ferry to
Block Island, dogs can enjoy the black sand beaches throughout
the year. In Newport, you can take your dog on the fabled Cliff
Walk (poop bags are provided at the trailhead) through the backyards
of America's rich and famous. The hike begins at Bailey's Beach,
which welcomes dogs from Labor Day to Memorial Day.
The sandy beaches of Connecticut (*)
are not known for being dog-friendly. But many aren't that friendly
to people either, with restricted access being common. If your
dog is hankering to try the benign waves of the Long Island Sound,
stop in Groton. Dogs are not allowed to experience America's
most famous beach at Coney Island in Brooklyn.
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The further east you go out on Long Island
the more dog-friendly New York (**) becomes but whether on the
north shore or south shore you can find a place to get your dog
to the sea. Dog owners must pass on the prime destinations at
Jones Beach and Fire Island National Seashore until reaching
the Hamptons, where the tails of surf-loving dogs will start
wagging. Many towns in the Hamptons offer dog-friendly sand and
at Montauk, on the very tip of Long Island, several beaches allow
dogs year-round, including Gin Beach on the Block Island Sound.
The wide, white-sand beaches of the Jersey shore are some of
America's most popular and there isn't much space for a dog to
squeeze into in the summertime.
Most of the beaches in New Jersey (***),
including the Sandy Hook Unit of the Gateway National Recreation
Area, open to dogs in the off-season. Summertime visitors should
take their dogs to Island Beach State Park, one of the last undeveloped
stretches at the Jersey Shore. Pets are allowed on the non-recreational
beaches in this ten-mile oasis. Dogs will never get to trot down
the historic wooden planks of the Atlantic City boardwalk, however
- no dogs are permitted on the beach or boardwalk of the Grande
Dame of America's seaside resorts. Dogs are also not allowed
anywhere in the Victorian village of Cape May but dog lovers
can travel south of town to Sunset Beach, a sand strip at the
southernmost point of the Jersey shore that is actually on the
Delaware Bay. In the water offshore of "Dog Beach"
are the remains of the Atlantis, a unique concrete ship built
to transport soldiers in World War I.
Off-season, the sandy beaches in Delaware
(****) are a paradise for dogs. Two state parks, Cape Henlopen
and Delaware Seashore, both welcome dogs between October 1 and
May 1. During the summer season dogs can also share the beach
with their owners on select stretches of sand in Delaware state
parks. In Cape Henlopen, the 80-foot high Great Dune is the highest
sand pile on the Atlantic shore between Cape Cod and Cape Hatteras.
The concrete observation towers standing as silent sentinels
along Delaware beaches were built to bolster America's coastal
defenses during World War II. Summer vacationers can take dogs
on the Dewey Beach town beach in the mornings and evenings. Along
the Delaware Bay just north of Cape Henlopen you can find several
beaches that offer frisky wave action and wide swaths of sandy
beach - and best of all there are no restrictions against dogs
on the bay beaches.
The Assateague Island National Seashore
is the prime destination for dog owners heading for the beach
in Maryland (***). The undeveloped dunesland permits dogs year-round
on the beach and in the campgrounds (but not on the short nature
trails). Keep your dog alert for the wild ponies that live on
the island. Its neighbor to the north, Assateague State Park,
often celebrated as one of the best state parks in America, is
off-limits to dogs. If you are not roughing it on your trip to
the Maryland seashore, nearby Ocean City allows dogs on the beach
and boardwalk between October 1 and May 1. Traveling along the
Chesapeake Bay, dogs are banned from the thin beaches in Maryland
state parks. Exceptions are the small beach in the former amusement
park at North Point State Park and the beach north of the causeway
at Point Lookout State Park.
There is plenty to like for beach-loving
dogs in Virginia (***). Canine romps on the clean, wide sands
of Virginia Beach's "Strip," the commercial oceanfront
from 1st Street to 40th Street, can't begin until the day after
Labor Day but during the summer dogs are allowed on residential
beaches above 41st Street before 10 a.m and afer 6 p.m. Dogs
can jump in the ocean anytime at Cape Henry on Fort Story, where
the Atlantic Ocean meets the Chesapeake Bay. Fort Story is an
active military base, the only installation devoted to coastal
operations, but its uncrowded, pristine beaches are open to the
public and dogs. Just to the west is First Landing State Park,
where canine swimming is allowed on unguarded sandy beaches.
Check for seasonal restrictions against dogs in these places.
Just off-shore are views of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel,
one of the seven modern engineering marvels of the world. Each
span of the 17.6-mile crossing utilizes more than 2,500 concrete
piles to support the trestles.
Except for designated wildlife areas,
dogs are permitted on the beach year-round virtually everywhere
on the Outer Banks in North Carolina (****). Cape Hatteras Natonal
Seashore has only four swimming beaches (in season) on its entire
70 miles of protected coastline which leaves plenty of open sand
for the dog to roam. Seafaring dogs can reach Ocracoke Island
and Cape Lookout National Seashore by ferry or private boat for
many miles of more undeveloped, dog-friendly beaches. The northern
part of the barrier islands has been rapidly developing in the
past decade but where you can still find access to the beach,
unleashed dogs are sill allowed year-round in towns like Duck
and Corolla. Mainland North Carolina beaches on Cape Fear are
almost as dog-friendly; most swimming beaches restrict dogs only
during the day in the summer.
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AMERICA'S BEACHES: A TRAVELER'S GUIDE TO DOG-FRIENDLY BEACHES
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South Carolina (****) ranks
among the most dog-friendly beach states on the Atlantic seaboard.
Get away from the people and commercial beaches and there is
plenty of unrestricted sand for dogs in the Palmetto state. Most
of the smaller towns allow dogs on the beach under voice control
and only Myrtle Beach (from 21st Avenue North to 13th Avenue
South) bans dogs completely. One of the best places to take dogs
here is Hunting Island State Park. More than one million visitors
(human) come here each year, 85 miles south of Charleston, to
enjoy three miles of unspoiled beach.
Georgia (**) doesn't sport much coastline
and many of the beaches on Georgia's barrier islands and the
Golden Isles are under control of resorts and most welcome dogs
except during the middle of the day in summer. Cumberland Island
National Seashore permits dogs but is accessible only by private
boat. Savannah's beach at Tybee Island is closed to dogs.
Florida (*) ranks among the most dog-unfriendly
of states. Entire counties and regions ban dogs from the beach.
There are so many prohibitions already against dogs on Florida
beaches that when they change, it is typically in favor of dog
owners. For the Atlantic beaches, the northeast part of the state
around Jacksonville (Amelia Island) offers some of the best beaches
for dogs in the state but heading south below Daytona, dogs are
almost universally banned from the sand. Jupiter, on the Treasure
Coast, is one place you can find a break from the ubiquitous
NO DOGS ON BEACH signs. Fort Lauderdale has thrown dog owners
a tiny bone - they have set up a 100-yard long Dog Beach (at
Sunrise and A1A) on Saturdays and Sundays only from 3:00 to 6:00
p.m.
DOGS ON GULF OF MEXICO BEACHES (traveling
East to West)
The Gulf Coast beaches in Florida (*) offer precious little for
dog owners. Dogs were once associated as closely with the Florida
Keys as conch shells but today you have to look hard for a beach
to take your dog. Anne's Beach in Lower Matecumbe and Sombrero
Beach in Marathon are two safe places. In Key West the "Dog
Beach" is at Waddell and Vernon avenues but there is really
just enough sand to accomodate one good beach blanket and the
little amount of swimming available is treacherous over coral
outcroppings. On the Suncoast, seek out Bonita Beach Dog Park
north of Naples, the excellent Fort DeSoto Dog Beach and Park
in St. Petersburg and the Dog Beach on Honeymoon Island in the
Dunedin area. Head for Franklin County, though, where dogs are
allowed on all the public beaches - and the only county in Florida
to allow dogs to run free. On the Florida Panhandle the Gulf
Islands National Seashore is the only national seashore that
bans dogs completely. It is the same story in town after town
on the Gulf of Mexico across Florida. Near Panama City, dogs
can reach the water on Carrabelle Beach and Bruce Beach. At Saint
Andrews State Beach, a past winner of "The Best Beach In
America," dogs can hike the sandy nature trails and run
on the beach of the Grand Lagoon. It isn't actually the Gulf
of Mexico or the Best Beach In America, but you can them from
here.
For dog owners, Alabama (*) may as well
not even have the few beaches it does on the Gulf of Mexico.
In Mississippi (**) dog owners need to
stay on the western coast in Hancock County; dogs aren't allowed
around the populated Biloxi beaches.
People don't seek out Louisiana (*) for
its sandy beaches; most of the coastline is made up of bayous.
Grand Isle State Park is the only state park with access to the
Gulf of Mexico and dogs are allowed in non-swimming areas here.
In Texas (***), Padre Island is America's
longest barrier island and there is plenty of room for dogs on
its 113 miles of sand. At Padre Island National Seashore dogs
are allowed anywhere except on the deck at Malaquite Beach and
in front of the Visitor Center at the Swimming Beach. Galveston
Island serves up another 32 miles of mostly dog-friendly beach.
DOGS ON PACIFIC OCEAN BEACHES (traveling
North to South)
Dogs on leash are allowed in all Washington (***) state parks,
often on the beach, but not in many swimming areas around Puget
Sound. No dogs are allowed on beaches in the city of Seattle.
The uncrowded Pacific Coast beaches are some of the dog-friendliest
in America - even Olympic National Park, which bans dogs from
almost all of its 632,324 acres, opens some of its remote coastal
beaches to dogs. Dogs are allowed on almost all beaches on the
Washington coast as long as they remain out of the active swimming
areas.
All of the beaches in Oregon (****) are
public. You can step on every grain of Oregon sand for 400 miles
and, in the rare exception of a ban due to nesting birds, your
dog can be with you all the way. One beach dog owners won't want
to miss is the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area with its
40 miles of sandy shore. These are the biggest dunes in the United
States - as tall as 500 feet and reaching two and one-half miles
inland at their widest point.
Northern California (****) would get
plenty of votes from beach-loving dogs for having the best beaches
in America. Only a beach here and there restricts dogs from its
sand on the North Coast. Even in the highly populated areas,
concessions are made for dog owners. In Marin County a "Dog
Beach" has been set aside on the north end of Stinson Beach
and many towns allow dogs on the beach under voice control. San
Francisco ranks among the dog-friendliest of beach cities. Take
your dog to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area and have
your pick of several designated dog-friendly beach areas. At
Baker Beach, dogs are allowed to romp off-leash. Further down
the coast, dog owners will want to visit the Monterey Peninsula.
Dogs are welcome to run on the Carmel City Beach and can slip
into the water near Monterey and Pacific Grove as well. At Big
Sur dogs can enjoy one of the prettiest secluded beaches on the
coast a Pfeiffer Beach. Skip Santa Cruz and there are plenty
of opportunites to get your dog on the sand in California's Central
Coast, especially on unnamed beaches.
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(AND THOSE THAT AREN'T)
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$12.95
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Heading south on the California coast
the water warms up and beach restrictions on dogs increase accordingly.
There is still sand time for dogs in Oxnard and Ventura but things
are getting bleak as dog owners reach Santa Barbara. In Los Angeles
County the beaches are for people. In Southern California (**),
San Diego is the place for sand-loving dogs. Several popular
beaches have set aside "dog beaches" that attract hundreds
of dogs. Every day is a beach day for dogs in San Diego.
DOGS ON GREAT LAKES BEACHES (traveling
West to East)
Possessing the largest surface area of any freshwater lake in
the world, there is enough water in Lake Superior (**) to easily
fill the other four Great Lakes to overflowing. Lake Superior
is known for its cold water and rugged shoreline but there are
some sandy beaches scattered across its 300 or so miles of southern
shores. Other beaches are more of the cobble variety. Most of
the shoreline is sparsely populated which bodes well for finding
a dog-friendly beach. In Michigan, the Pictured Rocks National
Lakeshore allows dogs on the beach from Twelvemile Beach Campground
to Au Sable Lighthouse and at Munising, dogs can dig in the sand
at Miners Beach. At Sand Point, dogs can play on the beach until
the trail begins to climb the cliffs. In Wisconsin, dogs are
allowed on the beach in Ashland and in Minnesota, dogs can swim
in Lake Superior at Duluth's Park Point Beach.
Dogs will have to admire the spectacular
dunes and sandy beaches of the eastern shore of Lake Michigan
(**) mostly from the car as dogs are not allowed on Michigan
state beaches and most county and town beaches. In-season, the
metropolises of Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin are even more
restrictive. Chicago has recently gotten its first official dog
beach at Montrose Avenue. Belmont Beach is not an official Chicago
beach so dogs are allowed on this small patch of sand in a fenced
area. In nearby Evanston licensed and vaccinated dogs are allowed
on Dog Beach but a beach token is required for non-residents
from May to October which costs $80 to $100. Your best bets to
dip into Lake Michigan, the only Great Lake totally within the
United States, are the national lakeshores and the state parks
of Wisconsin's Door County. At the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore
dogs are restricted to the easternmost beaches at Mt. Baldy and
Central Avenue until October when all beaches open to our four-legged
friends. In the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, dogs
can swim in the waves of Lake Michigan backed by some of America's
larges dunes on all beaches except Platte Point Beach, the D.H.
Day Campground Beach and the Manitou Islands. Dogs also cannot
make the Dune Climb up hundreds of feet of sand.
Lake Huron (*) features 3,827 miles of
shoreline, characterized by shallow water and many sandy beaches.
None of this will matter much to your dog, however, since the
Lake Huron beaches in Michigan are mostly closed to him. Alpena
is a rare exception. Dogs are allowed on the resort destination
of Macinac Island, however.
Although its shores are the most densely
populated of any of the Great Lakes, there is plenty of opportunity
for a dog to explore Lake Erie (***). The smallest of the five
lakes, Erie waters average only about 62 feet in depth and warm
rapidly in the summer for happy dog paddling. Ohio, especially
around Cleveland, is the most restrictive of the Lake Erie states.
Try some of the smaller town beaches in Ohio and New York, most
of which permit dogs outside of designated swimming areas. Some
of the best Lake Erie beachfront is in Presque Isle State Park,
the most-visited state park in Pennsylvania. Your dog can can
hike the sandytrails past the swimming beaches and enjoy the
waves on the long, unsupervised sretches on the northern end
of the peninsula.
Not many people have settled most of
the hundreds of miles of shoreline of the south side of Lake
Ontario (*) in New York. There aren't many beaches and not many
bans on dogs - as long as they don't try to swim with the humans.
WANT THE ENTIRE BOOK?
DOGGIN'
AMERICA'S BEACHES: A TRAVELER'S GUIDE TO DOG-FRIENDLY BEACHES
(AND THOSE THAT AREN'T)
124 pages; 97809797074-4-5;
$12.95
Back to DOGGIN' AMERICA'S BEACHES
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