The Countryman Press & Backcountry GuidesSearch
Google
Download Our CatalogHomeAbout UsOur BlogJob OpportunitiesSubmission GuidelinesContact Us
Fishing
Food and Cooking
Hiking
Walking
Biking
Paddling
General Travel
Regional Interests
Country Living
Nature
Photography and Gift Books
Photography and Gift Books
Mysteries
History
Culture and Lifestyle
Home and Garden
Crafts and Hobbies
The Shakers
Northeast US
Mid Atlantic US
Southeast US
Midwest US
Rocky Mountains US
Southwest US
Pacific US
International
Explorers Guides
Great Destinations
Trout Streams
Good Fishing
50 Hikes
25 Bicycle Tours
Great Escapes
Backroad Bicycling
Backroads and Byways
From the Editors of Outside Magazine
Walks and Rambles
Weekend Walks
Alphabetical Title List
W.W. Norton Website

50 Hikes in North Florida

Walks, Hikes, and Backpacking Trips in the Northern Florida Peninsula

Sandra Friend

A guide to 50 hikes in the Northern Florida peninsula, ranging from State Road 40 to the Georgia border and east of the panhandle.

With numerous state parks and expansive state and national forests, North Florida provides the hiker with an extensive array of natural communities to explore. Forests of longleaf and slash pine flatwoods, coastal hammocks, desert scrub, and floodplain forests create welcoming habitats for vanishing species. The region's geology offers physical challenges for the hiker as well--deep ravines, rough riverside trails along steep bluffs, and giant sinkholes. Hiking in North Florida means the opportunity to camp along the state's broadest rivers, to clamber in and out of ravines and up and over relict dunes, to walk to the edge of sweeping vistas across prairies and salt marshes, to hike along vast lakes and bubbling springs.

The hikes described in this all-new guide range in length from 1 to 22 miles. Each hike description includes a topographic map, mile-by-mile directions, and information on distance, difficulty, terrain, and hiking time. An overview chart makes it easy to pick a hike for every ability.

“Sandra Friend's attention to the details important to hikers is invaluable, and her descriptions give credit to the beauty and wonder of the places she finds for us to take a hike.”
—Deborah R. Stewart-Kent, President, Florida Trail Association