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St. Simons Island Beaches
St. Simons Island's beaches are limited to
the southern end of the island in a band stretching 4 miles from Gould's
Inlet on the eastern side to King Creek on the southwestern side. The
beaches have experienced tremendous changes since the beginning of the
island's recorded history, and continue to erode and accrete as a response
to the effects of wind, waves, tides, and storms. Not many sea turtles nest
on St. Simons Island for reasons not entirely understood but probably due to
the island's mix of currents, sand quality, width of beach, rock seawalls,
beach orientation, and development. From 1994–1998, an average of only one
sea turtle has nested on St. Simons a year, compared with 74 on Sea Island,
which has roughly the same length of beach.
St. Simons Beach
St. Simons Beach, the area between the King
and Prince Beach Resort and fishing pier, through the years has been
assaulted by currents, tides, and storms and has eroded significantly. It is
believed that, if not for the placement of the Johnson Rocks in 1964, the
beach would have retreated all the way to the brick county buildings behind
Neptune Park. In the 1920s, the beach extended out to the wings of the
present pier, and the old pier extended the length of the new pier from that
spot. In the 1920s, people could drive their cars on the beach from the pier
to the King and Prince, something that would be unthinkable today. At low
tide, beachcombers can walk to the King and Prince, but at high tide, much
of the beach is submerged as waves crash on the seawall known as the Johnson
Rocks.
Destroying a large portion of St. Simons
Beach was Hurricane Dora in 1964. South of the King and Prince, the
hurricane snatched beachfront homes into the Atlantic, tore out the middle
section of Beachview Drive, and obliterated Postell Avenue, which ran
parallel to Beachview one block closer to the ocean. Two small fragments of
Postell at 12th Street at the southern end and between Myrtle and
Cedar streets at the northern end are evidence of the power of tropical
storms. A small gurgling artesian well on the beach south of 9th
Street once was found in the backyard of a beachfront home. Today, it is
used by thirsty shorebirds or children playing in the gurgling spring.
This part of the island's beach is most
vulnerable to erosion for a variety of reasons. Perhaps the main reason is
that in front of Neptune Park in the sound is a 70–80 feet deep trench with
fast-moving currents.
Massengale Park
Massengale is a popular and busy public
park, where the smells of grilled hamburgers and hot-dogs mix with the happy
shouts of playing children. Because of its extensive use, it has the worn
look of a public park. Nevertheless, it provides access to the southern end
of East Beach, and visitors who head north from here will experience the
best beach the island has to offer. The sand is hard-packed and suitable for
biking.
The park came about due to philanthropy by
the Sea Island Company, which was in the process of limiting public access
to its beaches and wanted to provide a public beach area for St. Simons
residents, but not on Sea Island. The Sea Island Company bought the property
in 1945 in an attempt to get the state to build a state park, but it was
deemed too small, and the state instead purchased Jekyll Island. In 1955,
the Sea Island Company donated the property to Glynn County for the park.
The woodlands of the park and East Beach,
supporting live oaks and pines, are remnants of the maritime forest on the
Holocene fragment of St. Simons. Because of the younger, poorer soil, this
forest is much less diverse, compared with the mid-island forests that are
growing on richer, Pleistocene soils found west of Bloody Marsh.
- Directions: From Brunswick, cross
F.J. Torras Causeway. Go left on Demere Road to East Beach Causeway. After
crossing the causeway, go right on Ocean Boulevard. Massengale Park is on
the left.
- Activities: Beachcombing,
picnicking, biking, bird-watching, nature study.
- Dates: Open daily 7 a.m.–10 p.m.
- Facilities: Park, picnic tables,
restrooms, showers.
- Fees: None.
- Closest town: St. Simons Island.
- For more information: St. Simons
Island Chamber of Commerce, Neptune Park, St. Simons Island, GA 31522.
Phone (912) 638-9014.
East Beach and Coast Guard Station
(Coastal Encounters Nature Center)
The historic Coast Guard Station is home to
the St. Simons division of Coastal Encounters Nature Center. This excellent
nonprofit organization is dedicated to adult and child education about
Georgia's precious coast. Programs include barrier island ecology walks,
kayak excursions in the marsh, boating with naturalists, summer science
camps, and other field trips. Inside the station are touch tanks and
aquariums featuring local marine species. A group is working on a plan to
open a maritime museum in the historic station as well.
The beach here has accreted considerably
since the 1950s. Wood Avenue runs behind the old shoreline, showing how much
the area has grown. The area north of the Coast Guard Station has grown the
most on the island and has extensive dune meadow and shrub communities that
are interesting to study for plant succession relative to beach and dune
formation. Extensive shoals display the effects of longshore currents
carrying sand south from Little St. Simons Island and Sea Island meeting
cross currents from Gould's Inlet and northern currents of the sound.
Worries about recent erosion at the area known as East End, however, where
condos have been built near "new" beach, has led to an application for a
seawall to protect this recent development.
- Directions: From Brunswick, cross
F.J. Torras Causeway. Go left on Demere Road to East Beach Causeway. After
crossing causeway, Coast Guard Station is on right.
- Activities: Beachcombing,
picnicking, biking, bird-watching, nature study, special programs.
- Dates: Closed temporarily to
walk-in visitors. Reservations for groups only.
- Facilities: restrooms, showers at
beach.
- Fees: Beach access is free;
Coastal Encounters programs charge various fees.
- Closest town: St. Simons Island.
- For more information: Coastal
Encounters Nature Center, 100 S. Riverview Dr., Jekyll Island, GA 31527.
Email:
coastalencounter@mindspring.com Phone (912) 635-9102.
Gould's Inlet Park
A small park located at 15th
Street and Bruce Drive provides a great view of the best birding spot on the
island, recognized by its selection to the Colonial Coast Birding Trail.
This inlet separates East Beach, a Holocene fragment of St. Simons south of
the inlet, from Sea Island to the north. The inlet and sand bars are
constantly moving, changing shape, preventing vegetation from becoming
established, and creating a resting place for many species of birds, as well
as a feeding site for certain species. Resident birds seen here include
laughing and herring gulls, willets, American oystercatchers, black
skimmers, brown pelicans, black skimmers, and royal terns. During warm
weather, including fall and spring migration periods, bird watchers may
identify black, sandwich, gull-billed, common, and Caspian terns;
black-bellied, semi-palmated, and Wilson's plovers; reddish egrets, marbled
godwits, whimbrels, ruddy turnstones, sanderlings, red knots, and western
sandpipers. Cold-weather birds include black-bellied and piping plovers;
black-backed, and ring-billed gulls; Caspian and Forster's terns; red-backed
dunlins; and red-breasted mergansers.
As the southern part of Sea Island has
grown, the northern end of East Beach has lost 1,640 feet of land since the
Civil War. As you walk or bike south on East Beach toward Coast Guard beach,
the homes fall away from the shore, due to the growth of the beach since
1930. These homes used to be beachfront property. They still are, but they
are located much farther from the water.
Fishermen sometimes try their luck on
Gould's Inlet Dock, where tidal pulses attract many species of fish and
other marine animals.
- Directions: From Brunswick, cross
F.J. Torras Causeway. Go left on Demere Road to East Beach Causeway. After
crossing causeway, go left on Ocean Boulevard. Turn right at 15th
Street and Gould's Inlet Park is straight ahead.
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