Doggin’ The Outer Banks - Where To Hike With Your Dog On Cape Hatteras

Author by : Doug Gelbert

Aviation enthusiasts from around the world make the pilgrimage to Kitty
Hawk, North Carolina on Cape Hatteras to celebrate the birth of powered manned flight. If you go, make sure to take the dog.

Your dog is welcome at the Wright Brothers National Memorial and she can
walk along the rubber mats that mark the paths of the first four flights by Orville
and Wilbur Wright on December 17, 1903. there is more canine hiking back behind
the flight path on Big Kill Devil Hill where the two Dayton, ohio bicycle
mechanics tested their experimental fliers on the high dunes with the promise of
soft, sandy landings.

While famous for flight, the skies over Kitty Hawk are quiet now. Not so just
south of the Wright Brothers Memorial at Jockey Ridge State Park. Flamboyant kites,
model planes and hang gliders frequently fill the skies here. On the ground, Jockey’s
Ridge is one giant sandbox for a playful dog.

The deep sands, steep dunes and brisk breezes can make for invigorating
canine hiking at Jockey’s Ridge. Your dog can play anywhere on these dunes - some
of the highest on the Atlantic Ocean - or for those who like their walking on the
structured side there are two interpretive nature trails marked by posts across the
dunes.

While you are in Kitty Hawk remembering famous firsts, travel a bit further
south to Roanoke Island and the Fort Raleigh National Historic Site. Here an
expeditionary force in the 1580s established the first English settlement in America.
The group was well represented by scientists, merchants and other gentlemen of
prominent social standing but conspicuously missing, however, were farmers and
craftsmen whose skills might have made the colony work.

When a supply ship returned to the settlement on Roanoke Island there was no
trace of the “Lost colony.” Your dog can explore the mystery with you, including the
recreated earthworks of Fort Raleigh and the birth site of Virginia Dare, the first
English-speaking baby born in the New World.

The Thomas Hariot Nature Trail, named for a scientist on that first voyage, is a
rollicking ramble through a maritime forest that emphasizes the natural riches on
the island that the doomed English settlers hoped to exploit for riches rather than
adapt for survival. The sandy trail pops out onto peaceful Roanoke Sound for some
superb dog-paddling.

All this to do with your dog on the Outer Banks and you haven’t even traveled
the two blocks east to one of the great ocean beaches of the world yet - Cape
Hatteras National Seashore. Dogs are allowed year-round on the non-swimming
beaches. With only four such beaches in more than 70 miles there is plenty of ocean
sand for your dog to roam.

Cape Hatteras National Seashore, designated America’s first such beach in
1953, is actually comprised of three islands connected by a free bridge and a free
ferrry. Unlike many other national seashores, Cape Hatteras permits dogs on its
nature trails. There is a short 3/4-mile nature trail on each of the three islands.

These interpretive trails emphasize the harshness of the saltwater environment
and the struggle of the plants and animals that colonize the dunes. These rolling,
wooded walks on soft sand are a shady treat for dogs after a day of sun and surf.
Dogs are not allowed on the trails in the Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge on the
northern end of Hatteras Island.

For centuries storms, shifting sands and war have visited the turbulent waters
off the coast of the Outer Banks. More than 600 ships have wrecked in the seas
offshore that have earned Cape Hatteras recognition as “the Graveyard of the
Atlantic.”

Each of the three islands sports its own historic lighthouse to help steer ships
safely. The queen of the trio is the 208-foot Hatteras Light,the tallest brick
lighthouse in America. The Ocracoke Lighthouse, a squat 75-foot tower tucked into
a residential neighborhood, has been in service since 1823 and is the oldest
operating lighthouse in North Carolina.

The least known of the Hatteras lighthouses is the Bodie Island Lighthouse, the
northernmost. Located away from shore behind a freshwater marsh and partially
ringed by pine trees, the Bodie Light’s beam reaches 19 miles out to sea from its
156-foot crown. You can hike with your dog on the grounds of all three historic
lights.

Cape Hatteras looks much different today than in the days when pirates like
Blackbeard, who favored Ocracoke Island as a hideout, cruised these shores.
Hundreds of dunes have been built along the beach to protect the Cape. And with
so much for your dog to do here, you will want to return again and again to monitor
the future changes.

copyright 2006

I am the author of over 20 books, including 8 on hiking with your dog, including the
widely praised The Canine Hiker’s Bible. As publisher of Cruden Bay Books, we
produce the innovative A Bark In The Park series of canine hiking books found at
http://www.hikewithyourdog.com During the warm months I lead canine hikes as
tour leader for hikewithyourdog.com tours, leading packs of dogs and humans on
day and overnight trips. My lead dog is Katie, a German Shepherd-Border Collie mix,
who has hiked in all of the Lower 48 states and is on a quest to swim in all the great
waters of North America - http://web.mac.com/crudbay/iWeb/Katies%20Blog/Katies%20Quest.html I am currently building a hikewithyourdog.com tours trailer to use on our expeditions and its progress can be viewed at http://web.mac.com/crudbay/iWeb/Teardrop%20Trailer/Building%20A%20Tour%20Trailer.html

[tags]hike,walk,dog,trail,canine,nationalpark,hikewithyourdog,leash,Hatteras,beach,OuterBanks,KittyHawk[/tags]

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