Thursday, December 27, 2018

Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge: Chesser Island Trails (Blog Hike #726)

Trails: Chesser Island Boardwalk, Deerstand, Chesser Homestead, and Ridleys Island Trails
Hike Location: Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge
Geographic Location: southwest of Folkston, GA (30.71202, -82.16204)
Length: 3.3 miles
Difficulty: 3/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Dates Hiked: December 2018, February 2023
Overview: A double out-and-back with short loop featuring a bog observation tower and the historic Chesser Homestead.
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: 

Directions to the trailhead: From Folkston, take SR 23 south 7 miles to the signed entrance for Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge on the right.  Turn right and drive the refuge entrance road to the Visitor Center, where you will need to pay a small entrance fee.  Then drive the Swamp Island Drive to the blacktop parking lot for Chesser Island Boardwalk (stop #12 on the scenic drive).  Park here.

The hike: At first glance the 438,000 acre Okefenokee Swamp of southeast Georgia looks a lot like the Everglades swamp of south Florida, but first glances can be deceiving.  For one, the Okefenokee Swamp is technically not a swamp but a peat bog, or a wetland formed by the accumulation of peat over a long period of time, about 6500 years in this case.  Second, while the Everglades is heavily influenced by its waters mixing with the salt waters of the adjacent Gulf of Mexico, Okefenokee is entirely fresh water.  Indeed, two significant rivers originate in the Okefenokee: the Suwanee River flowing southwest through Florida into the Gulf of Mexico and the St. Mary’s River flowing east through Georgia into the Atlantic Ocean.  Third, Everglades National Park was established in 1947, while Okefenokee did not come under federal protection until Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1974.
            Technicalities aside, a visit to Okefenokee takes you into the largest blackwater “swamp” in North America.  Okefenokee’s center is protected as a wilderness area, and you will need to either rent a canoe or sign up for one of the park’s concession boat tours to access it.  Many people come to Okefenokee in the summer, but if I had any other options I would not come here then due to heat and bugs.  I came down here on my Christmas 2018 hiking trip and had a great visit.
Okefenokee can be accessed through three main portals, one on the east, one on the west, and one on the north.  The swamp’s north portal lies in the private non-profit Okefenokee Swamp Park, but that option’s high admission fee and lack of hiking trails make it undesirable except for tourists.  The swamp’s west portal lies in Stephen C. Foster State Park, and it is featured in the next hike.  The swamp’s east portal, which lies in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge’s Suwanee Recreation Area, contains the area’s best selection of hiking trails.  The refuge offers several short nature trails and the swamp’s longest hiking trail, the 4 mile one-way Longleaf Pine Trail that zig-zags back and forth across the refuge entrance road.  Yet the refuge’s best hiking options lie on Chesser Island, and the route described here combines the swamp’s best boardwalk with its best historic site, thus giving you the best hiking Okefenokee Swamp has to offer.
Trailhead for Chesser Island Boardwalk
From the boardwalk parking lot, head down the concrete path signed as leading to the Chesser Island Boardwalk.  In only a couple hundred feet, the mowed-grass trail leading to the Chesser Homestead exits right.  We will go that way after walking the boardwalk, but for now angle left and soon reach the boardwalk’s start.
At over 3000 feet in length, the Chesser Island Boardwalk is the longest boardwalk at Okefenokee.  This “boardwalk” is actually made of recycled plastic, and several covered pavilions allow you to sit and rest if needed.  Unfortunately, wildlife viewing is not the best until you get to the observation tower at the boardwalk’s end: the swamp’s dense grasses, bushes, and Spanish moss-covered trees ensure you hear more wildlife than you see.  Some pileated woodpeckers were the most noteworthy birds I saw until I got to the observation tower.  Large amounts of yellow butterwort were in bloom beside the boardwalk.
Pavilion on boardwalk
            At 0.7 miles, you reach the observation tower at the boardwalk’s end.  Climbing 48 steps will bring you to the observation platform.  The platform gives 360 degree views over the trees, but the open waters of Seagrove Lake to the west may be the direction of most interest: I saw an egret and an alligator in the pond.  A couple of view finders help magnify far-away birds and wildlife, so take some time to see what you can see.
View north from observation tower

Seagrove Lake, as seen from observation tower
            The boardwalk ends at the observation tower, so next you need to retrace your steps back to the beginning of the boardwalk.  Just before reaching the parking lot, turn left to begin the trail to the Chesser Homestead.  This trail is called the Deerstand Trail though no signs indicate such.  This area is only a foot or so higher in elevation than the boardwalk area, but that foot makes a big difference in this part of the world.  Tall loblolly pines now occupy the canopy, and the understory has a lot of saw palmetto and holly.
Hiking the Deerstand Trail
            At 1.7 miles, you cross a sandy dirt access road just before reaching a trail intersection.  Turning right would lead to the Chesser Homestead parking lot on Swamp Island Drive, so you want to turn left to quickly arrive at the homestead.  Built in 1927 by Tom and Iva Chesser, the homestead comes complete with a house (built from yellow pine and cypress in 21 days), grindstone, corn crib, chicken coop, and a few other buildings, but the first thing to grab your attention may be the white sand yard.  This type of yard was common in this area because it was once the ocean floor, but it also had a purpose: the open area would act as a firebreak in the case of a wildfire (lightning-spawned wildfires are common in Okefenokee), and all of the area’s venomous snakes are easily spotted on the white backdrop.  The Visitor Center offers a nice brochure describing the Chesser Homestead, so pick one up on your way in when you pay the entrance fee.
House at Chesser Homestead
            A 0.5 mile nature trail loop called the Chesser Homestead Trail starts at the southeast corner of the white sand yard.  A wooden sign that says “Homestead Loop” marks this point.  The trail leaves the homestead area and reenters the palmetto-filled forest.  Where the trail splits at an unsigned intersection, you need to turn left; the trail going right leads back out to Swamp Island Drive.
            The somewhat narrow trail heads north to reach a signed intersection with the Ridleys Boardwalk Trail, which exits right.  Turn right to hike the short boardwalk spur.  The real wood (as opposed to recycled plastic) boardwalk heads off the east end of Chesser Island into the wetter area before abruptly ending at a sign that describes some common birds.  Retrace your steps to the Homestead Loop, then continue straight to finish the loop.
End of Ridleys Island Trail
            At 2.6 miles, you return to the Chesser Homestead near the corn crib.  Walk around the house and retrace your steps to the boardwalk parking area to complete the hike.  While you are here, try some of the shorter trails such as the Canal Diggers Trail (a “tribute” to the timber companies that dug the Suwanee Canal located near the present-day Visitor Center) or the Upland Discovery Trail, or sign up for a swamp boat tour at the concession building adjacent to the Visitor Center.

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