Phinizy Swamp Nature Park marks the end of another prolific year on the trail for me. Though I didn't plan it this way, there has been a swamp theme to my hiking trips this year. I started back in January in the Louisiana swamps, then went to Dismal Swamp in southeast Virginia, later did Cedar Bog in Ohio (not quite a swamp, but close), then went to the swamps of eastern North Carolina, and finished with Phinizy Swamp near Augusta, GA. Counting swamps and everything else, I hiked 57 new trails this year for 165 miles in 17 different states, including 2 new states: Missouri and Nebraska. Overall, I have had a fantastic time observing God's creation in its natural state on the trail this year.
Looking forward to 2017, I should get off to a fast start: I have a trip planned to southern Alabama in January. I also hope to get to Arkansas (new state!), Kentucky, Michigan, and western Pennsylvania this coming year. (Aside: I have under-hiked Pennsylvania, considering it is not that far from where I live. There are a lot of fine state parks up there, and I have only done 9 Pennsylvania hikes, which ranks 16th out of the 39 states I have hiked in.)
Thank you for reading, and see you on the trail in 2017!
David, aka the Mathprofhiker
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Phinizy Swamp Nature Park (Blog Hike #612)
Trails: Rain Garden ,
Constructed Wetland, River Scar, and Blue Trails
Hike Location: Phinizy
Swamp Nature Park
Geographic Location: south side of Augusta ,
GA (33.38490, -81.96646)
Length: 5.3 miles
Difficulty: 3/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Date Hiked: December 2016
Overview: A very flat hike featuring good birding and many
wetlands.
Park Information: http://phinizycenter.org/
Directions to the trailhead: On the south side of Augusta ,
take I-520 to Doug Bernard Parkway
(exit 10). Exit and go south on Doug
Bernard Pkwy.
Drive Doug Bernard Pkwy.
1.2 miles to Lock and Dam Road . Turn left on Lock and Dam
Rd. ; there is a sign for Phinizy
Swamp Nature Park
at this intersection. Drive Lock and Dam
Rd. 0.6 miles to the signed park entrance on the
left. Turn left to enter the park, then
park in the visitor’s parking lot, which is the first gravel parking lot on the
left. 6 old silos stand at this parking
lot’s rear.
The hike: The history of Phinizy
Swamp Nature Park
is a story of urban environmental reclamation.
From the 1880’s through the 1960’s the City of Augusta
dumped untreated wastewater and stormwater directly into Butler Creek, which
runs along the west boundary of today’s park.
Many years of this dumping caused Butler Creek and adjacent parts of the
Savannah River to become a dead zone incapable of
supporting life.
The passage
of the Clean Water Act in 1968 forced the City to construct a wastewater
treatment plant, which you drove past on your way in. When the plant became insufficient to treat Augusta ’s
wastewater, the City chose to construct a system of man-made wetland cells to
function as a tertiary (third-order) treatment step. These man-made wetlands comprise the majority
of Phinizy Swamp
Nature Park
today.
The park
gets its name from Ferdinand Victor Francois Phinizy, an Italian entrepreneur
who in 1778 became the first businessman to set up shop in this area. In the 1950’s the State of Georgia
operated a beef farm here that was staffed by mental health patients, hence the
silos at the rear of the parking area. The
City of Augusta bought the land in
1973, but it remained undeveloped until the wetland cells were constructed in
1993. The non-profit Phinizy
Center for Water Sciences, which
runs the nature park, was founded a few years later.
The Center
today offers several education classrooms, some research labs, and a Swamp Shop
and Visitor Center
that is open only on weekends. The dikes
that separate the wetland cells offer many miles of hiking, and the park
contains some boardwalks and nature trails that offer a more traditional hiking
experience. The route described here explores
both the wooded nature trails and the sunny wetland cell area. Because the majority of this hike is exposed
to the sun, this is not a hike for a hot summer afternoon. However, my winter visit here was very
pleasant, and I saw a lot of waterfowl in the wetlands.
Trailhead at front of parking area |
The trail
that starts behind the silos at the rear of the parking area will be our return
route. This hike starts at the front of
the parking area where a trail marked “Visitor
Center ” heads east. An information board with trail maps also
stands here. Another short trail that
starts across the entrance road leads to the Cason
Family Cemetery ,
a pioneer family that lived here in the 1800’s.
The Visitor
Center Trail heads east and quickly reaches a boardwalk over the wetlands of
Butler Creek. This point sits just
downstream from where the untreated wastewater entered Butler Creek before
1968, and therefore it was one of the most polluted streams in Georgia
back then. 50 years later, this wetland
teams with Spanish moss-draped trees and waterfowl, so much so that the park
has been named an Important Bird Area. My
bird sightings included egrets, ibis’s, herons, and cranes, in addition to
common songbirds such as sparrows, cardinals, and robins.
Butler Creek wetland |
A bird-filled tree |
At the east
end of the boardwalk, you reach the Visitor
Center and the park’s research/education
buildings. Turn left and walk through
the grassy playground area to reach the William
Bartram Rain Garden ,
which is named after the famous explorer who came to this area in the late
1700’s. The small shallow pond at the
center of the Rain Garden
contained numerous ducks, coots, and cormorants on my visit. An observation deck gives a good view of the
pond.
Rain Garden pond |
After
seeing what you can see at the observation deck, turn right to hike the wooden
boardwalk that traces three sides of the pond.
When the boardwalk ends, turn right and then continue straight to begin
hiking north along the western boundary of the wetland cell area. A sewage treatment area may not seem like a
nice place to hike, but there are rewards for hiking here. I did not detect any sewage odor (except at
one point that I will note later), and the lack of trees make great sight lines
for bird viewing. The abundance of open
wetlands make this area feel more like a coastal wildlife refuge than somewhere
in east-central Georgia. Only an
occasional low-flying jet from nearby Augusta
Regional Airport
disturbs the ambiance.
Windshear Tower |
At 0.7
miles, you reach Windshear Tower . Although this tower looks like a cell phone
tower from a distance, closer observation reveals that it is actually a weather
monitoring station. Upon reaching the
tower, turn right to begin walking atop an earthen dike between two wetland
cells. The wetland cells are numbered 1
through 12, but it can be hard to identify which cell is which on the
ground. Cell #2 is on your left and cell
#3 is on your right during this segment.
At the
eastern end of cells #2 and #3, you reach the Distribution
Canal , so named because it
distributes partially treated wastewater to and from the cells. The reedy Distribution
Canal is surrounded by a chain link
fence, so it does not make the most scenic hiking. While this route minimizes the time near the Distribution
Canal , avoiding it entirely is hard
because it runs through the middle of the cell area. Turn right to begin hiking the gravel road
beside the chain link fence.
Wetland cell area |
At 1.5
miles, you reach a gazebo that offers a bench and a trash can. Turn left here to leave the Distribution
Canal and begin a northeastward
course with cell #11 on your left and a smaller canal on your right. Expansive views across the wetland cells
spread out to the left. Just shy of 2.5
miles, you reach the northeast corner of the cell area and a trail
intersection. Angle right to follow a
two-track dirt path into the woods.
Another
wetland area sits to the left, but this area features algae-covered water and
many Spanish moss draped bald cypress trees in contrast to the sunny cell
area. At 2.7 miles, you reach the
eastern end of cell #4, which sits apart from the other wetland cells, and another
trail intersection. Turn left to hike
west along the dike that is the southern edge of cell #4.
View from River Scar Deck |
The trail
curves gradually left as it passes the only part of the hike that smelled like
sewage on my visit. Just past 3 miles,
you reach the wooden River Scar Deck, which offers a nice view of the wooded
wetland to the left. The dike continues
to angle left to reach the end of cell #4.
Continue straight to return to the main wetland cell area, then turn
right to head around cell #1.
At 3.8
miles, you reach wooden 3 Ton Bridge, which gets its name from its weight
limit. Turn right to cross the bridge
and exit the wetland cell area for good.
At the west end of the bridge, you reach Equalization Pond. Turn right to begin heading counterclockwise
around the pond. A wooden fence between
the trail and the water circumnavigates the pond, which contained numerous
ducks, coots, and cormorants on my visit.
Ibis in Equalization Pond |
On the
north end of the pond, pass an outdoor classroom on the right and a gravel road
that exits right; it leads to the main wastewater treatment plant. At 4.5 miles, look for a wooden staircase
that descends to the right. Turn right
to leave the pond area and begin an unmarked single-track dirt trail the park
map calls the Blue Trail. A boardwalk
called the Green Trail used to head left through a wooded wetland, but it is
closed now.
The Blue
Trail passes through a loblolly pine forest to come along side Butler Creek at
the point where untreated wastewater used to enter the creek. Butler Creek here flows in a well-defined
channel that is lined with Spanish moss draped trees. After crossing the creek on a wood/iron
bridge, the trail curves left with the Mayor’s Fishing Hole, a large pond, on
the right. Ironically, fishing is not
allowed at Phinizy Swamp
Nature Park . The trail surface turns to gravel just before
you come out behind the silos at the parking lot, thus completing the hike.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)