
Updated Fall 2025
IMPORTANT: Severe weather, construction, and health-related conditions may create destination hazards and closures. It is recommended that visitors check destination websites or contact the facility to determine if the site is open, scheduled programs are available, or if there are any other circumstances that might alter birding opportunities. If the destination site is managed by the Sarasota County Government, please check for closures on their “PARK STATUS REPORT”.
Birders and birding photographers are reminded to always follow ethical birding practices, such as those recommended HERE.
Click the binoculars to expand and collapse information within the
Overview & Acknowledgment section and each Online Guide Favorite Hotspot.
The Sarasota Audubon Society is pleased to provide this interactive website component—updated for 2025-2026—and called the Online Guide: Our Favorite Local Birding Hotspots, or simply, the Sarasota Audubon Online Guide. These favorite birding places are all located within Sarasota County, and each favorite was selected, first, because of the high number of bird species recorded at that location (based on “eBird All Years Species Counts” at least greater than 140, including exotics1). These locations entice repeated visits by many local and out-of-area birders, both national and international. Second, the selected Sarasota County favorites are located within a driving time of approximately 45 minutes or less—and often considerably less—from a central, downtown Sarasota City location (using Google Maps driving time data). Third, all locations must be accessible to the public, although several destinations are privately owned and may require admission fees. Lastly, these places should provide opportunities for enjoyable outdoor birding adventures while offering iconic southwest Florida scenic landscapes and/or other wide-ranging family activities.
Sarasota County visitors and residents, especially those in the northern part of the County, may also appreciate several excellent Manatee County birding locations. Please see the Manatee Audubon Society web page (https://manateeaudubon.org/hotspots/) for information about birding hotspots in that County.
The information offered for each of our favorites was based initially on the Sarasota Audubon Society pamphlet Birding Hot Spots in Sarasota and Manatee Counties, Editors: Naomi Deutsch, Mark Leggett, Stuart Hills, Jeanne Dubi, 2014, Reprinted 2019. The pamphlet version of Birding Hot Spots in Sarasota and Manatee Counties continues to be available. It provides information on more than 70 hotspots and is a “must-have” for birders seeking a portable guide that describes great birding locations further afield or not currently included among our local favorites. The Online Guide, however, provides updates to pamphlet information, adds new favorite Hotspots, and offers new features, such as GPS coordinates and “Insider’s Tips.” We have also included internet links to numerous websites and documents, anticipating that these links will provide visitors with additional, current data about, for example, recent bird sightings as recorded on eBird, trail maps, fees, site hours of operation, and amenities, as well as Google Maps driving directions from any starting point. Occasionally, links are provided to locally created bird checklists, but these lists are becoming less relevant since birders are able to create their own, up-to-the minute “Printable Checklist” (or “Illustrated Checklist”) for any eBird Hotspot.2
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Karen and Don Schneider for drafting and coordinating the development of the Online Guide, and to Karen Willey (and, previously, Barb Males and Betty Neupert) for their website management expertise which makes this web-based version possible. Numerous other members and friends of the Sarasota, Venice, and Manatee Audubon Societies contributed their expert, local birding knowledge to this project, especially Barbara Moffet and Jeanne Dubi for their editing acumen, and Peter Brown, Alena Capek, Kathy Doddridge, Thomas & Gayle Duch, Rick Greenspun, John Groskopf, Nancy Edmondson, Sue Guarasci, Margi Haas, Claire Herzog, Helen King, Robert Kraft, Gloria Markiewicz, Cindy & Daniel Olson, Jean Pichler, Evan Powers, Valentina Roumi, Aaron Virgin, John Whitehead, Sharon Wilcox, Kylie Wilson, Stu Wilson, James Yeskett, and Kathryn Young.
______________
1. eBird species counts may change frequently as additional birds are identified by birders completing eBird Checklists, as well as during annual eBird Taxonomy Updates, which may “split” or “lump” species. The 2025 Taxonomy Update began in October 2024.
2. To create a Printable Checklist using this Online Guide, click on any button labeled “eBird Recent Sightings,” located at the end of each Favorite Hotspot narrative (or occasionally within the narrative). The button or link will take you directly to that specific eBird Hotspot, with a link to the “Printable Checklist” found on the left side of the eBird page.
Sarasota Audubon Society Guided Bird Walks
From October through April, guided walks led by experienced Sarasota Audubon Society birders are scheduled at many of the Sarasota birding Hotspots included in this Online Guide, as well as at other great birding locations in Sarasota and nearby counties. You can find out about these walks by clicking on our Activities Calendar.
Sarasota County Birding Hotspots
BAY STREET PARK is an 18.5-acre neighborhood park in the town of Osprey. This prime location, just a quarter-mile inland from Little Sarasota Bay and two miles north of another Online Guide favorite Hotspot, Oscar Scherer State Park, is positioned to attract a great variety of species. In 2018, Sarasota County, which owns and operates the site, carved wide paths through the once impenetrable north end of the park. Since then, eBirders have reported sighting more than 190 bird species. The park is roughly rectangular in shape, with Bay Street as its southern border, residential housing on the fenced west side, and a golf course community bordering most of the remaining sides. A swale and stream (the “canal”) splits the park roughly in half, creating northern and southern sections. The park entrance is off Bay Street, in the southern section, with an expanded parking lot, picnic area, playground, restrooms, and an enclosed, one-acre dog park. (Dogs must be leashed elsewhere in the park.) A paved sidewalk east of the parking lot leads to a pond in the southeast corner. Beyond this area, the park is mostly undeveloped and wooded. To access the northern part of the park, use the trail on the west side of the parking lot, go past the playground, across the canal viaduct, and then head further north onto other perimeter trails. Just before the viaduct, you can take trails east along either side of the canal to reach the far eastern areas of the park. Along these two trails, you will encounter a possibly dangerous, stepping-stone shortcut across the canal; crossing here is not recommended. Trails are unmarked and cross each other at multiple points, helping to create an impression of a larger, isolated wilderness area. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: Numerous species breed in and around Bay Street Park, including Barred Owl, Bald Eagle, Red-shouldered Hawk, Cooper’s Hawk, Swallow-tailed Kite, Sandhill Crane, Green Heron, and three species of woodpeckers, to name just a few. Broad-winged and Short-tailed Hawk also have been seen. Wood warblers may be present during migration, with more than 30 species sighted to date. The park received statewide attention with documented sightings of a Townsend’s Warbler during the 2020 and 2021 spring migrations. In all seasons, the southeast corner pond often attracts Osprey, Anhinga, Black-bellied Whistling Duck and numerous waders and shorebirds. Swallows and Chimney Swifts are frequently seen visiting the pond to drink.
Insider’s Tip: Each section of the park offers something different, so be sure to wander. The northeast quadrant is an overflow flood area that is often unmowed (and difficult to access), with bushes and grasses that provide cover for sparrows and buntings in winter and nesting habitat for Red-winged Blackbird in summer. The numerous stands of exotic grasses throughout the park attract Indigo Bunting, with Painted Bunting and Blue Grosbeak also regular winter visitors. A neighboring small family farm with a blueberry grove attracts large flocks of Cedar Waxwing in winter. Beehives draw Scarlet and Summer Tanager.
Address: 300 Bay St., Osprey, FL 34229
GPS Coordinates: 27.196499, -82.485202
In the town of Osprey, on Blackburn Point Road as it crosses the Intracoastal Waterway, sits BLACKBURN POINT PARK, a 15-acre facility purchased by Sarasota County in 2006 and expanded in 2015. The park was designed to provide water access to the township’s residents that was previously lacking due to private ownership of Casey Key beaches. The park consists of three individual sections, each with separate amenities and character. Approaching from the mainland (from the east), visitors will encounter (on the left) the first (“eastern”) park section with its large parking lot. The lot is mostly dedicated to boat-trailer parking but has adequate car spots. Tall pines shade picnic tables, and there’s a short plantings-lined nature trail, a paved sidewalk for walkers (some with leashed dogs), and a wheelchair-accessible,1,500-square-foot restroom and vending facility. At the west end of this section near a boat launch, a short boardwalk connects walkers to a mangrove-and-bay-bordered, second (“middle”) park section. The middle section has a parking lot (left turn off Blackburn Point Road) and offers some views of Dryman Bay. The third (western) park section is nearby, on the Casey Key side (right side) of the road; it’s accessed by crossing a vintage, manually controlled, one-lane swinging bridge that rotates to allow boats to pass. This section is mostly a sandy parking lot that may fill completely during dining hours at the restaurant across the road. It’s also home to the Sarasota Scullers, the Sarasota County Rowing Club, and contains other buildings, including a library. At the rear of the lot, mangroves surround a floating dock and kayak launch overlooking Little Sarasota Bay. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: The park’s location adjacent to Gulf and Bay waters, as well as the woodland and mangrove habitats within the park, offer the potential to view a diverse array of avian species—about 150 species have been recorded by eBirders. Check open water and overhead views for gulls, terns, pelicans, cormorants, anhingas and shorebirds, and look in the mangroves for egrets, herons, and both night-herons. In wooded areas, Pileated, Red-bellied and Downy Woodpeckers, several dove species, Northern Cardinal, and Bald Eagle are seen commonly. More than 20 warbler species have been identified during migrations, and, in April 2025, an exceedingly rare (for Florida) American Tree Sparrow stopped by for several days.
Insider’s Tips: Birders may want to explore the three park sections in the order that they are approached from the mainland, as noted above. Park in the first section, check out the tall trees and search the sky for avian species, then walk the short nature trail from east to west, crossing by foot over to the second park section, and return to the parking lot and your car. Cross the swinging bridge by car, heading the short distance to the third park section, and, if the lot is not crowded, repark there and bird the mangroves and other trees. A small public restroom is located to the left of the kayak launch. Another Online Guide favorite Hotspot, Oscar Scherer State Park, is a short 10-minute drive away.
Address: 800 and 421 Blackburn Point Rd, Osprey, FL 34229
GPS Coordinates: 27.179263, -82.490729
THIS SITE HAS SUSTAINED STORM DAMAGE. SEE “SCGOV PARK STATUS REPORT” BEFORE VISITING! The park is open to the public, with parking and beach access available, but, for the next two to three years, it is anticipated that automobile access will be only from the south through Charlotte County and the Tom Adams Bridge (off FL776). Restrooms are closed, but portalets are in place. Park amenity repairs are expected to be completed by spring 2026.
BLIND PASS BEACH PARK is located on Manasota Key in Englewood (not to be confused with a similarly named park on Sanibel Island in Lee County). The park is owned and operated by Sarasota County. The park’s 66 acres have gulf-to-bay access, with the beach fronting the Gulf of Mexico. This peaceful, picturesque, rustic beach is known locally as Middle Beach and is the southernmost beach in Sarasota County. Across Manasota Key Road, on the park’s bayside, is a large unpaved parking lot along with showers, a small picnic area, boat dock/fishing piers, and a kayak launch. The parking area and roadways are adjacent to mangroves, with views of the bay and intercoastal waterway. More than 150 bird species have been recorded here by eBirders. No dogs permitted. No admission fee. Birders at the park may also want to visit another close-by Online Guide favorite, the Lemon Bay Park and Environmental Center.
Featured Birds: Along the beach, look for a wide range of shorebirds, such as Willet, Black-bellied and Semipalmated Plover, Ruddy Turnstone, Sanderling and sandpipers. Royal and Sandwich Tern are present most of the year, as are Laughing Gull, with Ring-billed and Herring Gull, and Forster’s Tern and other terns and gulls arriving in the winter months. Brown Pelican and Osprey can be seen regularly on the Gulf and bay sides. Check out the mangroves and trees alongside the parking lot’s roads, and search open views of the intracoastal waterway and bay for Yellow-crowned and Black-crowned Night-Heron, as well as ibis, egrets, and herons. During migration, an array of songbirds joins the usually present Red-bellied Woodpecker, Northern Cardinal, and Northern Mockingbird.
Insider’s Tip: There generally is ample parking, but on some days the parking lot and beach can be crowded, so try to arrive no later than 9:00 a.m. or after 3:00 p.m. The unpaved lot and roads can flood during rainy periods. At the beach, don’t expect the powdery white sand of Siesta Beach; rather, the sand is coarse and mixed with broken shells. The beach is reported to be good for shelling and finding sharks’ teeth. To see an aerial view of the park, click on the Map & Directions link below, change the “view” to “Satellite,” and enlarge the map.
Address: 6725 Manasota Key Rd, Englewood, FL 34223
GPS Coordinates: 26.963455, -82.384582
CARLTON RESERVE (officially known as the T. MABRY CARLTON, JR. MEMORIAL RESERVE) is a very large Sarasota County park encompassing more than 24,500 acres. The natural, undisturbed habitats in the reserve include wet prairies (marshes), oak hammocks, pine flatwoods, and forested wetlands (swamps). The reserve has more than 100 miles of interconnecting trails, including the 12-mile Myakka Wilderness Trail that continues to Myakka River State Park on the reserve’s northern border. The reserve may be closed during periods of flooding. Check the reserve’s website or call Sarasota County offices at 941-861-5000; you may be transferred to the reserve’s Land Manager or other staff. Dogs are not permitted. No admission fee. A short drive from the reserve’s entrance is another Online Guide favorite with similar habitats, Deer Prairie Creek Preserve.
Featured Birds: Sightings of more than 165 bird species have been reported by eBirders. American and Least Bittern may be seen in winter, as well as more common long-legged waders. Winter is also the time to look for American Kestrel and ducks. During migration, numerous passerine species visit and mingle with resident species. Year-round, look for Wood Duck, Barred Owl, Wild Turkey, Red-headed Woodpecker, and other woodpecker species. Nesting birds include Swallow-tailed Kite, Eastern Bluebird, and Bachman’s Sparrow.
Insider’s Tip: Near the parking lot, two interconnecting trails loop around depression marshes. The 1.9-mile hike is described as easy-to-moderate in difficulty, wheelchair accessible for a short distance, and provides an introduction to the many habitats and flora and fauna of the reserve: see Carlton Reserve Hikes. If planning a back-country hike, check reserve websites, as trail conditions can change quickly. Also, please note, the reserve is a wilderness park, not an urban or suburban park. Trails can be rugged and are often without shade; it is recommended that visitors wear sturdy shoes and a sun-protective hat and bring sunscreen, insect repellent, and drinking water. Even if you are only planning on a short hike, you may wish to check in at the Visitors Cabin located near the parking lot to advise volunteer staff of your hiking plans. A great way to see the reserve is to join a guided birding tour. Tours may be available through the Sarasota Audubon Society (see their Activity Schedule), the Venice Audubon Society (see their Upcoming Events) or Sarasota County, which may be offering “beginning birding and photography” hikes.
Address: 1800 Mabry Carlton Parkway, Venice, FL 34292
GPS Coordinates: 27.126763, -82.339479
The CELERY FIELDS comprise Sarasota County’s regional stormwater retention area for the Phillippi Creek Drainage Basin—the largest such basin in the County. Prior to its purchase in 1995, this 440-acre tract was used for agriculture, with celery as the primary crop. Today the site is acknowledged as a unique bird and wildlife habitat, enticing visits by local, national, and international birders. Since 2001, 252 bird species have been tallied by Sarasota Audubon’s expert survey team; eBirders have reported a few more species, but it is unlikely that all eBird sightings can be fully substantiated. The County completed most construction and renovation work at the Celery Fields in 2011. In 2019, the County began working with the Sarasota Audubon Society and the Big Waters Land Trust to develop an additional 27-acre area (“the Quads”) adjoining the Celery Fields and established a conservation easement for that parcel. In January 2025, these three organizations broke ground as a first step in “re-wilding” the Quads to support and attract migratory birds that depend on woodland habitat.
Currently, at the Celery Fields more than 10 miles of trails run alongside ponds and wetlands, and two boardwalks extend into the marsh. Trails also climb to the top of an observation hill boasting one of the highest elevations in the County. The privately operated Sarasota Audubon Society Nature Center lies at the southern base of the hill. A “microforest” has been planted nearby. If you are on Apex Road (on the Celery Fields’ western border) and passing by ACKERMAN PARK—an eBird Hotspot with about 165 eBirder-reported species—check for ducks on the lake in winter and look for wading birds, including Black-crowned Night Heron along the shoreline. (A scope may be useful.) No admission fee for the Celery Fields, Nature Center, Ackerman Park, or boardwalks.To park at the Celery Fields, enter the County’s lot off Palmer Boulevard. Restrooms are in a separate building west of the County lot. Only dogs on a 6-foot leash permitted.
Featured Birds: Near ponds and at the boardwalks, look for herons, egrets, gulls, terns, Anhinga, Roseate Spoonbill, Glossy Ibis, Pied-billed Grebe, Wood Stork, Sandhill Crane, and occasionally, American White Pelican. Wetlands breeding species include Wood Duck, Limpkin, Black-necked Stilt, Purple and Common Gallinule, Sandhill Crane, and Least Bittern. Additionally, in winter, the wetlands provide a haven for Ring-necked Duck, Blue-winged and Green-winged Teal, Lesser Scaup, Northern Shoveler, Hooded Merganser, Belted Kingfisher, Wilson’s Snipe, Sora, Virginia Rail, and American Bittern. Also watch for Indigo Bunting, White-winged and Common Ground Dove, and Marsh, Northern House, and Sedge Wren. In bushy or wooded areas, look for woodpeckers and warblers. Keep an eye-to-the-sky for American Kestrel, Northern Harrier, Swallow-tailed Kite, Crested Caracara, Short-tailed Hawk and Red-shouldered Hawk (which patrol the fields), as well as Osprey and Bald Eagle (which nest near the Celery Fields, November through March). From April to mid-May, Bobolink may visit the slopes of the observation hill where tall grass is left unmowed. At the Nature Center’s feeders, Nanday Parakeet, Bronzed Cowbird, and Painted and Indigo Bunting now make annual appearances. Eastern Bluebird and Purple Martin regularly raise their young at nearby nesting boxes and houses. At Ackerman Park, look for gulls, terns, herons, egrets, gallinules, coots, Osprey and Bald Eagle and, in winter, Ring-necked Duck, Ruddy Duck, Lesser Scaup and both night-herons.
Insider’s Tip: Providing a starting point for visitors, the Sarasota Audubon Society Nature Center docents offer maps and information about current sightings, including sightings at the Center’s bird feeders and in the native plant and butterfly gardens. Stop by the Nature Center or check out the Activity Schedule and Event Calendar on the Sarasota Audubon Society website (below) for information about Celery Fields guided walks and other activities. Click on the following link for information about the Nature Center’s hours of operation.
Early each morning, from November through April, Sarasota Audubon Society Bird Naturalist volunteers may be found at the Nature Center and at both Celery Fields boardwalks—one at Palmer Boulevard and the other at Raymond Road—to help visitors spot and identify birds and other wildlife. Bird Naturalists are officially scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. but many arrive early and stay later. For Bird Naturalist Information Click Here.
Celery Fields Address: 6893 Palmer Boulevard, Sarasota, FL 34240
Sarasota Audubon Society Nature Center Address: 999 Center Road, Sarasota, FL 34240
Nature Center GPS Coordinates: 27.325492, -82.432337
Ackerman Park Address: 400 Apex Road, Sarasota, FL 34240
Ackerman Park GPS Coordinates: 27.334256, -82.441422
A single eBird Hotspot provides recent sightings for the Celery Fields. An additional Hotspot is available for Ackerman Park.
The Celery Fields
Ackerman Park
CROWLEY MUSEUM AND NATURE CENTER is a 191-acre, privately owned preserve located on ecologically sensitive land northwest of Myakka River State Park. The preserve is dedicated to discovery of “Old Florida” pioneer history and conservation of native habitat. In September 2022, with collaboration among the property’s leadership, Sarasota County, and the Big Waters Land Trust, the property was placed under a conservation easement providing for its permanent protection. A wide, two-mile long, self-guided nature trail winds through five Florida habitats. The trail includes a half-mile boardwalk leading through a mixed hardwood swamp to an observation tower overlooking Tatum Sawgrass Marsh and the Myakka River. Trails are suitable for all ages and abilities but may be slippery after rain. The preserve is currently open to the public on Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., in fair weather. Phone the Nature Center (941-322-1000) or visit Crowley’s Facebook page to be sure the park is open. A guided “early morning bird walk” is also available seasonally (see Insider’s Tip). Carrying water, insect repellent, and sunscreen is recommended. An admission fee is required. Leashed dogs are permitted. Parking and restrooms are available.
Featured Birds: More than 200 species have been counted here by eBirders. The Swallow-tailed Kite is part of the Crowley logo and has been seen on the property since the early pioneer days. Barred Owl, Red-shouldered Hawk, Bald Eagle and Red-headed Woodpecker nest here. Northern Harrier and Sandhill Crane are often seen from the tower. The tower offers good views of the marsh, but a scope is helpful. During migration, warblers may be spotted almost anywhere.
Insider’s Tip: Seasonally, usually October through April, a guided, “early morning bird walk” is offered specially for birders every Friday. Gates open at 7:30 a.m. and promptly close 5-10 minutes later, so cars line up at the gate to be sure of entry. The early- morning walk takes birders to multiple Crowley locations, or, depending on birding opportunities and ongoing construction, the walk might begin outside of the preserve proper but overlooking it—usually at the OLD MYAKKA ROAD BRIDGE—an eBird Hotspot with more than 155 avian species reported. For the guided walk, contact the Nature Center or email swilcox@fastmail.fm for all details before visiting. If you happen to be birding at Myakka River State Park on a weekend or state holiday, you can reach Crowley via the north Myakka Park entrance (and vice versa).
Address: 16405 Myakka Rd, Sarasota, FL 34240
GPS Coordinates: 27.306007, -82.260402
Old Myakka Road Bridge Address: 8P2W+J93 Old Myakka, Florida
GPS Coordinates: 27.301508, -82.254078
Crowley Museum and Nature Center
Old Myakka Road Bridge
DEER PRAIRIE CREEK PRESERVE is a 7,335-acre property jointly owned and managed by Sarasota County and the Southwest Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD). The preserve is named for a tributary of the Myakka River—the Deer Prairie Creek—which runs northeast to southwest through the eastern half of the property. In conjunction with other lands to the north, the preserve completely protects the creek within Sarasota County. The preserve also provides protection for six miles of the eastern bank of the Myakka River, with the river establishing most of the preserve’s western boundary. Along the northern boundary of the preserve, visitors may explore part of SWFWMD’s Schewe Ranch. Within the preserve, more than 60 miles of natural, primitive trails allow visitors to experience an array of diverse habitats, including pine flatwood, prairie hammock, dry prairie, depression marshes, and seasonal wetlands. There are two preserve entrances (up to a 30-mile drive apart, depending upon local road construction), with each represented by a separate eBird Hotspot: the north entrance is at 7001 Forbes Trail, Venice; the south entrance is at 10201 South Tamiami Trail, Venice. Both entrances have parking areas, shelter(s) with picnic tables and trail heads. All trails are available for hikers and bikers, with some trails starting at the north entrance designated for equestrian use. Portable restroom facilities are located at each entrance. Dogs must be leashed. No admission fee. A six-minute drive from the north entrance is another Online Guide favorite, Carlton Reserve.
Featured Birds: More than 145 eBird sightings have been recorded on and around the trails originating at the south entrance, while birders entering at the north entrance (Forbes Trail) have recorded about 100 avian species. Although sightings of the threatened Florida Scrub-Jay have been reported on trails beginning at both entrances, most recent sightings (2025) have been on a trail originating at the south entrance. Other birds that might be seen in the south include Eastern Meadowlark, Bachman’s Sparrow, Brown-headed Nuthatch, Red-headed Woodpecker, Sedge Wren, and Hairy Woodpecker. If beginning from the north entrance, look for a variety of warblers, Red-bellied Woodpecker, and Red-shouldered Hawk.
Insider’s Tip: A kiosk with a map is located at each entrance. From the south entrance parking lot, a short bridge across the creek leads to the “alphabet” trail with its “letter” trail markers; look for waders and shorebirds here. Alphabet trail markers intersect with additional trails, generally running east and west. At the north entrance, a trailhead leads to the South Powerline Trail. Please note that Deer Prairie Creek Park is not an urban or suburban park but rather a “pack-in, pack out” wilderness park.Trail surfaces may be compressed sand or mowed grasses; some can be rough going in spots and they are often without shade, and no drinking water is available! It is recommended that visitors wear sturdy shoes and a sun-protective hat and carry: rain gear (in case of inclement weather); sunscreen; insect repellent, and, of course, drinking water.
Address: 7001 Forbes Trail, Venice, FL 34292 (North Entrance)
GPS Coordinates: 27.106882, -82.318746
Address: 10201 South Tamiami Trail, Venice (South Entrance)
GPS Coordinates: 27.04804, -82.28831
Deer Prairie Creek South Tamiami Trail – South Entrance
Deer Prairie Creek Forbes Trail – North Entrance
REMOVAL OF INVASIVE PLANTS AND PLANTING OF NATIVE SPECIES IS UNDERWAY ALONG THE SOUTHERN BORDER OF THE PARK AND IS ANTICIPATED TO CONTINUE FOR SEVERAL MONTHS, POSSIBLY RESULTING IN NOISE AND PARKING ISSUES. CHECK FOR PROJECT UPDATES IN SARASOTA COUNTY’S PARK STATUS REPORT (AT THE BEGINNING OF THIS ONLINE GUIDE).
GLEBE PARK on Siesta Key—a small, 10-acre neighborhood park, owned and operated by Sarasota County—is only a five-minute drive from the Siesta Key Beach Pavilion and the Gulf of Mexico. Obtained in a land swap in 1984, the park has baseball and soccer fields, basketball and tennis courts, and a picnic area and playground. It also boasts an impressive count of more than 175 eBirder-observed species. The part of the park of primary interest to birders is a narrow, wooded area that, along with a chain-link fence, forms the perimeter of the rectangular park and separates the athletic fields from the surrounding residential community. The Glebe Park Aerial View (see below) offers a perspective of the athletic fields and bordering woodlands. At the west edge of the looping parking lot (with spots for about 26 cars), is the start of a mostly unpaved, but easily walked trail. The trail follows the perimeter of the park and is canopied by vegetation growing in the buffer area outside the fence and a mixture of Oaks, Sabal Palms, Southern Red Cedar, and fruiting fig species on the park side of the trail. The trail ends in the northeast corner of the park but allows access to the playing fields. The soccer fields’ east border is lined with a mixture of mostly Oaks and Sea Grapes; birders can continue their search by crossing the field (when not in use) toward the parking lot. Dogs must be leashed. Restrooms are available. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: During migrations, the park welcomes many woodland birds, including cuckoos, thrushes, vireos, warblers, orioles, and other songbirds. Due to its coastal nature, this park may be the recipient of multiple “fallouts,” hosting scores of migrants during periods of inclement weather. Spring migration, especially, has yielded excellent birding; key species of interest have been Swainson’s Warbler, Black-whiskered Vireo, Dickcissel, and Nashville and Bay-breasted Warbler. The park’s location and plantings have attracted rare vagrant species, even during off-season, e.g., in January 2020, a Bell’s Vireo was found. In summer, the park is often home to breeding families of Downy, Pileated, and Red-bellied Woodpecker, Carolina Wren, Brown Thrasher, Northern Cardinal and Blue Jay, as well as Eastern Screech-Owl. In any season, with the Gulf so near and good sky views provided by the open fields, a fly-over of raptors, shorebirds or waders is a frequent possibility, as is the chance—during the spring and even through summer lulls—of finding special rarities, such as Caribbean vagrants!
Insider’s Tip: Visiting birders should pay attention to the park’s vegetation and the habits of target species. In the spring, Swainson’s and Kentucky Warbler have been easily viewed in the understory along much of the edging of the park; look for these birds in the NW corner and along the north-central perimeter fence line. Although recent hurricanes have thinned some of the park’s vegetation, there are still good plantings of fruiting fig trees (large trees are in the SW and north-central zones, with smaller ones scattered about); privet bushes, Southern Red Cedar; blooming firebush at several spots along the Northern perimeter, and invasive carrotwood trees (scattered through the park, with a large planting behind the fence, just before the NW corner). These plants attract migrants and provide an area of focus for birders. Given the park’s emphasis on local athletics, and, being the home of the Suncoast Sports Club, it will not be surprising for birders to learn that parking availability and noise level may be subject to scheduled and unscheduled sporting events. The sports fields are most active on the weekends, and parking at an adjacent church may occasionally overflow during church events.
Address: 1000 Glebe Lane, Sarasota, FL 34242
GPS Coordinates: 27.273704, -82.549248
KEN THOMPSON PARK—named after Sarasota’s City Manager (1950-1988)—is a 22-acre, mixed-use park located on the 58-acre City Island, with City Island connected by a causeway to Lido Key. The park is adjacent to the current site of Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium, with the Aquarium in the process of relocating. (Although not a birding site per se, Mote Marine’s Sea Life Encounter Eco Boat Tours offer a seasonal opportunity to view birds, including pelicans, herons and egrets, in their nesting habitat). The park is owned and operated by the City of Sarasota. Almost 170 avian species have been reported by eBirders in and around the park and City Island. The park offers many views of Sarasota Bay and boasts walking/biking trails (leashed dogs are permitted), fishing, kayaking, and picnic areas, as well as a playground, ample parking and restrooms. City Island is also home to Save Our Seabirds, an organization committed to the rescue and rehabilitation of sick and injured birds while maintaining the goal of releasing them back to their natural habitats. There are no admission fees at City Island, Ken Thompson Park, or Save Our Seabirds. Another favorite hotspot, Quick Point Nature Preserve, is a 5-minute drive from Ken Thompson Park on City Island.
Featured Birds: Depending upon the season and tides, scan the mudflats and mini-beaches that surround City Island for shore birds and waterbirds, including Common Loon, Reddish Egret, Osprey, Black-crowned Night-Heron, and Royal, Least, and Sandwich Tern. Search the sky for Magnificent Frigatebird. Along paths and boardwalks, look for Belted Kingfisher. Gray Kingbird and Loggerhead Shrike (year-round) breed here and are seen regularly. At Save Our Seabirds, a waterfall, pool, and nearby trees attract egrets and herons and, during migration, songbirds. During nesting season, the small island just offshore (follow the parkway to the boat launching area) is a rookery that may provide good views of colonial nesting species, such as Brown Pelican, Great Blue Heron, Green Heron, and White Ibis. Be on the lookout for raptors hunting the open areas of the park; Cooper’s Hawk, Merlin and Red-tailed Hawk are frequent visitors.
Insider’s Tip: If storm damage has been repaired, birders should not miss the Mangrove Boardwalk, whose trail leads through a rich bird habitat composed of mangrove forest, tidal lagoons and wetlands (located adjacent to the large field and NNE of the public boat ramp). The area attracts Yellow-crowned Night-Heron—often seen stalking crabs—and a variety of migrating warblers, vireos, and thrushes. (Another trail with a short boardwalk, known as the Sarasota Bay Walk, is located just to the west of Mote Marine at 1500 Ken Thompson Parkway.) To see an aerial view of the park and City Island, click on the Map & Directions link below, change the “view” to “Satellite” and enlarge the map.
Another “don’t miss” opportunity awaits at Save our Seabirds. While the facility tries to rehabilitate injured and sick birds so they may be returned to their natural habitats, release sometimes is not possible. The organization, therefore, operates a sanctuary offering specialized medical care for those birds that become lifelong residents. In addition to telling their stories to educate the public about avian conservation, this facility (across the parking lot from Mote) provides opportunities for visitors and experienced birders alike to view resident birds close-up.
Address: 1700 Ken Thompson Pkwy, Sarasota, FL 34236
GPS: 27.334667, -82.576358
LAKE OSPREY is a privately owned, unusually shallow lake located just south of University Parkway within the Lakewood Ranch subdivision (and not to be confused with a similarly named lake at Oscar Scherer State Park). Access to the lake is most often gained via Lake Osprey Drive, off University Parkway. Note that Lake Osprey Drive begins a two-mile driving or hiking loop that goes all the way around the lake: University Parkway>Lake Osprey Drive>Professional Parkway W>Town Center Parkway>University Parkway (and vice versa). Lake Osprey is one of only a few places in northern Sarasota County where Purple Gallinule breed. At various points around the lake, it’s possible to see birds up close; however, a scope is often helpful in scanning for birds along more distant shorelines. No public restrooms. No admission fee. Birders may consider combining a visit to Lake Osprey with a trip to another Online Guide favorite, Nathan Benderson Park, only a few minutes’ drive to the west (across I-75).
Featured Birds: More than 145 species have been reported in the Lake Osprey area by eBirders. Open water and wetlands of reeds and Spatterdock (Nuphar advena) provide the most common view from the shoreline. At most times of the year, look for wading birds as well as Purple Gallinule and other local breeders, such as Least Bittern, Common Gallinule, and Wood Duck. From sidewalks that ring the lake, check bushes and trees for Brown Thrasher, Common Yellowthroat, and White-winged Dove. Migrating warblers may be spotted here in spring and fall. Northern Bobwhite sometimes may be seen along meadows at Professional Parkway and Lake Osprey Drive.
Insider’s Tip: Sidewalks and parking lots on the lake side of the roads can get you close to the lake at many points. Hiking around the lake is a good strategy, but lake views are sometimes obscured by buildings, especially on the west side of the lake. Another strategy might be to find an unrestricted parking spot, bird the nearby lake area, walk a bit on adjacent sidewalks, and then drive to another parking location. Please use caution around the lake—alligators may be lurking—and be careful to respect all parking restrictions. At the western edge of the lake, the best birding and parking are often found at the Keiser/Everglades University lot; however, a sign at the lot entrance at 6001 Lake Osprey Drive indicates that this area is available for parking by permit only and unauthorized vehicles may be towed. Nevertheless, visitors have successfully birded here when remaining close to their vehicles. Another favorite spot to park and view Purple Gallinule is the former Lakewood Ranch Visitor Information Center which, at this writing, does not appear to have parking restrictions. It is located at 6220 University Parkway (next to the Lawrence Building, at 6230 University Parkway); from Town Center Parkway, turn west on University Parkway and make the next left into the Lawrence Building (Visitor Center) driveway. The EVEN Hotel, at 6231 Lake Osprey Drive, and one of the two main entrances for Keiser University (the one closer to I-75), do not appear to have parking restrictions, nor do many office and retail parking lots along the lake. Also, at this time, a number of business buildings appear to be vacant, and their parking lots may be unrestricted. A favorite time to go birding at Lake Osprey is Sunday mornings, as business traffic is limited.
GPS Coordinates: 27.384610, -82.441621
LEMON BAY PARK is a multi-use, urban Englewood park operated by Sarasota County. Beginning in 1984 as a 48-acre parcel, the park has grown through additional land purchases to 210 acres. More than four miles of mainly unpaved nature trails (generally accessible to most visitors) cut through the roughly triangular-shaped park (see trail map below). The trails traverse black mangrove forest, mangrove fringe, and shoreline vegetation as well as pine and scrubby flatwoods. With the property’s western edge extending for 1.7 miles along the Lemon Bay Aquatic Preserve, the park provides opportunity for woodlands, wetlands, and bayside birding. The main entrance–with its Environmental Center, substantial parking, restrooms, and the half-mile (roundtrip) Bayshore Trail–occupies the southern corner of the property. Contact Sarasota County offices at 941-861-5000 for information on scheduled bird walks and other activities. Dogs must be leashed. No admission fee. Lemon Bay Park birders may also want to stop by another Online Guide favorite, the Blind Pass Beach Park, especially since other access to Blind Pass Beach from the north may be blocked for several years by ongoing road construction.
Featured Birds: About 190 avian species have been sighted in the park by eBirders. Bald Eagle, Pine Warbler, and Wood Duck are known to breed here, and both species of crowned night-herons hunt in the mangroves throughout the year. In winter, overlooks on the Bayshore Trail may provide views of the open water where Red-breasted Merganser and loons might be seen, while plovers, sandpipers, gulls, and terns patrol closer to the shoreline. Spring and fall migrations bring numerous warblers and vireos, and Northern Bobwhite may be seen into the summer months, along with resident species, such as herons, egrets, woodpeckers, and Osprey.
Insider’s Tip: From the Environmental Center, the wide, packed sand-shell Eagle Trail meanders for two miles (round-trip) through pine and scrubby flatwoods towards the park’s north boundary. As the park is adjacent to a residential area, expect to see walkers, joggers, and dog walkers. “You-Are-Here” signs and benches are located at intervals along the trail, and several mowed-grass trails diverge from the Eagle Trail and head towards the bay. The entrance to the half-mile, out-and-back Flatwoods Trail, located in the northwest corner of the park, can be accessed via a “walk-thru” fence at 1063 Bayshore Drive. A favorite birding spot is the small pond that lies adjacent to the park where Lord Street intersects with the park boundary to connect with park trails. The pond is a good place to view wading birds and, during migration, thrushes and other passerines. It is possible to make a loop around the pond on park trails and public streets. (There is a small, informal parking area at the end of Lord Street.)
Address: 570 Bay Park Blvd. Englewood, FL 34223
GPS Coordinates: 26.972241, -82.373972
The LIDO BEACHES run the entire Gulf-side length of Lido Key–a barrier island just northwest of St. Armands Circle. At the north end of the Key, especially during migration, birders visit NORTH LIDO BEACH PARK, where they have a chance to see both seashore and woodland birds in one outing, and where eBirders have reported more than 225 species. Additional shorebird activity can be accessed about a half-mile south, at LIDO KEY BEACH, with more than 155 species sighted and substantial beach parking available. At the south end of the Key, birders also seeking both woodland and shorebirds can combine a visit to SOUTH LIDO COUNTY (BEACH) PARK (more than 210 species) with the TED SPERLING NATURE PARK AT SOUTH LIDO (more than 155 species). Free parking is available at lots at Lido Key Beach and at South Lido County (Beach) Park. Parking at the small lot at North Lido Beach Park and along Ben Franklin Drive is free on Sundays and before 10:00 a.m. on all other days, but then is metered. No admission fees. No dogs allowed. Public restrooms are at Lido Key Beach and South Lido County (Beach) Park.
Featured Birds: Along the sandy beaches, look for plovers, gulls, terns, Willet, Ruddy Turnstone, and Marbled Godwit, as well as common shorebirds and occasional warblers. In the spring—in the wooded areas—watch for warblers, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, orioles, buntings, and thrushes. In fall/winter, American Kestrel might patrol the dunes, and warblers arrive, some staying for the season. At North Lido Beach Park, look for Bald Eagle and Yellow-crowned Night-Heron; this past summer (2025) a large colony of Black Skimmer and Least Tern nested here. Least Tern and Black Skimmer have also often nested on Lido Key or South Lido beaches. Nesting birds are especially sensitive to disturbances; birders/photographers are reminded to always use ethical birding practices.
Insider’s Tip: When visiting the north part of the Key, bear right and park in or close to the small lot at the end of John Ringling Boulevard (where Ben Franklin Drive veers to the left), a few blocks beyond St. Armands Circle. You can enter the wooded area of North Lido Beach Park from this parking lot by walking northeast a short distance down John Ringling Boulevard (towards St. Armands Circle), turning left onto N. Polk Drive, and then onto Emerson Drive, with its park entrance sign. A nice hike also starts near this parking area, where a short boardwalk heads towards the beach. At the end of the boardwalk, instead of walking towards the water, turn right and take the sandy path that parallels beach homes and heads towards the woods. Follow the path past beach homes and make a right into the woods and then turn left (north) on the wooded trail. Continue to walk north in the woods as far as you can along an overgrown and mostly hidden lagoon, taking time to explore trails that wander off towards the beach. You can then exit the woods and walk back along the beach. If you plan to make this hike in the early morning and want the sun at your back, it’s recommended that you walk to the water’s edge first, then head north for a while along the beach. You can enter the wood through any obvious sandy trail or continue north along the beach for about two-thirds of a mile until you reach a concrete seawall. Retrace a few steps and enter the woods; then, in the woods, follow sandy trails in a generally southward direction towards the park entrance at Emerson Drive. For an aerial view of the area and some trails, click on the Map & Directions link (below), change the “view” to “Satellite,” and enlarge the map.
To visit the southern end of Lido Key, park in the lot at South Lido County (Beach) Park, at the end of Benjamin Franklin Drive. Check out the beach for shorebirds and nesting colonies (in spring and summer), then walk back through the parking lot and towards the trailhead to the north, beyond the restroom pavilion. From the trailhead, unpaved trails diverge into the southern part of Ted Sperling Nature Park, looping through marsh and mangroves, while generally paralleling the bayside beach. Or, just walk north along the bayside beach, entering the woods at trail openings. To get from South Lido County (Beach) Park to the northern part of Ted Sperling Nature Park, with its kayak rental area, mangrove tunnels and trails, drive back north on Benjamin Franklin Drive and turn right on Taft Drive.
Address, North Lido Beach Park: 159 Emerson Dr. Sarasota, FL 34236
GPS Coordinates, North Lido Beach Park: 27.319574, -82.581975
Address, Lido Key Beach (Main Public Beach Access): 400 Benjamin Franklin Dr, Sarasota, FL 34236
GPS Coordinates: 27.311123, -82.577187
Address, South Lido County (Beach) Park (Beach and South Ted Sperling parking): 2198 Ben Franklin Drive
GPS Coordinates: 27.299417, -82.566468
Address, Ted Sperling Nature Park (and Mangrove Tunnels): 259 Taft Dr., Sarasota, FL 34236
GPS Coordinates: 27.309164, -82.569693
Lido Beaches eBird Hotspots
eBirders Please Note: To better separate the adjacent eBird Hotspots of North Lido Beach Park and Lido Key Beach, local birders draw an imaginary line from Emerson Drive (last beach house with a red roof) extending west to the beach; birds sighted north of this line are recorded in the North Lido Beach Hotspot, while sightings south of the line are counted for the Lido Key Beach Hotspot.
Links to eBird Recent Sightings
In addition to these four Lido Beaches eBird hotspots, other Lido Key eBird Hotspots include:
Maps & Directions, Bird Checklists Lido Beaches
Lido Beaches County Websites
MANASOTA SCRUB PRESERVE (not to be confused with a similarly named preserve in Charlotte County) was purchased by Sarasota County under the Environmentally Sensitive Lands Protection Program. Located adjacent to the heavily developed, suburban neighborhoods of Venice and Englewood, the preserve is dedicated to protecting the existence of Old Florida habitats, upon which rare and threatened species are dependent. The preserve has now grown to 179 acres, with the assistance of the Big Waters Land Trust serving as the most recent acquisition agent for the County. Habitats in the preserve include pine flatwoods, scrubby flatwoods, a hardwood swamp and a depression marsh. Hiking trails are primitive and unpaved yet remain accessible to most visitors. From the main entrance on Bridge Street, a 330-foot boardwalk leads to several looping hiking trails—some with trail markers and benches—providing access to the often tree-shaded trails in the preserve east of Bridge Street. West of Bridge Street, additional “walk-in and walk-out” trails, with trailheads identified by marked fence-openings, extend deeper into the preserve. Leashed pets are permitted to the east, but not west of Bridge Street, which may influence birding experiences. It is recommended that visitors bring water, insect repellent, sunscreen, sturdy shoes, and a rain jacket, in case the weather changes. A compass or cell phone compass-app may prove helpful. The preserve has no restrooms. Dogs must be leashed. No admission fee. Manasota Scrub Preserve is only a short drive from another Online Guide favorite, the South Venice Lemon Bay Preserve.
Featured Birds: Preserve eBirders have reported sightings of almost 170 species, including woodpeckers, ducks, waders, raptors, and songbirds, with most warblers arriving during migration. Great-Horned Owl commonly breed in the preserve, and Red-tailed Hawk often may be seen soaring over the section west of Bridge Street. (Despite the seemingly appropriate preserve habitat, the endangered Florida Scrub-Jay has not been recorded here since 2007.)
Insider’s Tip: Dedicated parking is very limited. There are a few parking spots at the entrance immediately after turning onto Bridge Street, but visitors may park on roadside shoulders—please pull off the road as far as possible and avoid parking on private property. The most rewarding time to visit the preserve may be during bird migrations. When driving or walking on Bridge Street’s gravel roadway, seek out the oak-canopied areas, as these often shelter migratory songbirds. Fifth Street, as it jogs east off Bridge Street to form the southern perimeter of the east section, bisects a wetland where warblers and other species may be spotted in spring and fall. In the preserve’s interior, the picnic area (near the main entrance) and wetlands are good places to pause and scan for birds.
Address: 2695 Bridge St, Englewood, FL 34223
GPS Coordinates: 27.020668, -82.393930
The Downtown Sarasota Campus of MARIE SELBY BOTANICAL GARDENS (a second Selby location is the Historic Spanish Point Campus, Osprey, Florida), is best known for its collection of orchids, but its 15-acre bayfront grounds also contain a wide array of colorful tropical plants in outdoor gardens and greenhouses. If you are already planning a trip to enjoy the gardens, be sure to bring your binoculars, as the exotic vegetation and bayfront location attract a wide variety of birds. By the end of 2025, work is scheduled to begin on the second phase of a multi-year renovation of the Downtown Sarasota Campus. Check the Selby website for any construction-related updates. Parking and restrooms are available and paths are mostly paved. Only service dogs are permitted. Please note that the gardens do not open until 10:00 a.m., and a substantial admission fee is charged. Check the website for fees.
Featured Birds: Shorebirds, such as Dunlin and Willet, are drawn to the shallow mudflats at the southern point of the Gardens, especially at low tide. In the winter, Redhead and other waterfowl may be seen on the Bay. Selby displays several other habitats, including: a hardwood hammock that may prove inviting to smaller migrating species and woodpeckers; a mangrove ecosystem where both night-herons might be viewed from a boardwalk, and a tidal lagoon often attracting herons and egrets. Historically, eBirders have sighted about 160 species here.
Insider’s Tip: You can experience several Selby habitats by following paths paralleling the shoreline (see Trail Map, for landmarks). After exiting the Welcome Center, head towards Sarasota Bay to see the Hardwood Hammock (Trail Map marker #11) and the Tidal Lagoon (marker #12). Then, walk south on the path along Sarasota Bay towards the Mangrove Walkway (#15), which, in July 2025, was closed pending reconstruction. Continue counterclockwise along the trail, past the Wedding Pavilion (#16) and head for the Dock overlooking Hudson’s Bayou (#18). Finally, walk to the Rainforest Garden (#19) looking for night-herons in the mangroves behind the garden.
Selby Gardens is a good jumping-off place for a mini “Driving Tour of Sarasota Bay Birding Hotspots.” From Selby, go north on US 41, stopping at the Sarasota Bayfront Recreational Trail (eBird), sometimes known as the 10th Street boat ramp trail. The trail has paths winding through the mangroves and one leading out to the bay. Parking may be best behind the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, as parking at the boat ramp is mostly reserved for boat trailers. From Van Wezel, walk the sidewalk south until reaching the REC Trail, then backtrack and walk along the rocky shoreline all the way to the 10th Street boat ramp. Look for Spotted Sandpiper feeding on the rocks, as well as Yellow-crowned Night Heron. In the winter, the area is good for sighting mergansers, loons, and possibly Bonaparte’s Gull and Redhead feeding at high tide at the boat ramp. Next, stop at the Charles Hegener Memorial Nature Walk, located on Bay Shore Road and 40th Street (view a video of the nature walk by clicking here), and at the overlook at 2701 Bay Shore (just before Hegener). During low tide, it’s possible to walk out onto the flats and get closer to the birds. In the early morning, the sun is at your back for both birding and photography. Parking is permitted on side streets at these last two locations.
Marie Selby Downtown Sarasota Campus Address: 1534 Mound Street, Sarasota, FL 34236
GPS Coordinates: 27.327079, -82.540233
MYAKKA RIVER STATE PARK (MRSP) is the oldest and, at 37,000+ acres, or 58 square miles, the largest of Florida’s state parks. The Myakka River—a state-designated wild and scenic river—flows through the park for 12 miles. Paved roads wind for seven miles past oak and palm hammocks that open to views of grassy marshes, sloughs and the Upper Myakka Lake. Hikers may venture beyond the paved drive and hike on more than 39 miles of trails across large, open expanses of dry prairie, pine flatwoods and numerous small wetlands. The staffed, main (south) park entrance and Ranger Station is off SR-72 (Clark Road). Check the park website or the Ranger Station at 941-361-6511 for park closings during seasonal floods and all admission fees. Restrooms are available. Dogs must be leashed; see the park website for additional pet rules. The north entrance gate to SR-780 is only open to autos on weekends and state holidays and only from 8 a.m.-5 p.m; park fees are placed in an “honor box” when no park personnel are present.
Featured Birds: Over the years, eBirders have reported sighting more than 255 species in MRSP. Many shorebirds, waders, swallows, and ducks can be seen while driving the main road along the banks of the Upper Lake. In wooded spots, prairies, and open areas, a vast array of species is likely to be seen, including raptors, woodpeckers, Wild Turkey, vultures, and, mostly during migration, warblers and other smaller species. In all seasons, carefully scan kettles of vultures for Short-tail Hawk. The hawk breeds in the park in spring and frequently soars with the vultures. Both dark and light morphs have been recorded.
Insider’s Tip: With views along the main road of hiking and biking tourists, campgrounds, a concession and cafe building, bike/kayak rentals, and boat and tram wildlife tours, it’s sometimes easy to forget that MSRP is a vast wilderness park. Appropriate planning and gear are a necessity for exploring sometimes poorly marked and dangerous backcountry trails. Fortunately, the main road provides many good places to bird, and the following locations can be visited sequentially while driving the road north from the Clark Road (SR-72) park entrance:
Main Bridge (0.9 miles from entrance). Commonly seen are grebes, Common Gallinule, Wood Stork, ibis, egrets, Roseate Spoonbill, and…alligators. Park off the road, before or after the bridge. eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP Bridge.
Canopy Walkway, with its own parking area, is a family-friendly, hanging bridge and 76-foot high observation tower, with a nature trail branching out for longer hikes. eBird recent sightings, Myakka River SP – Canopy Walk.
Powerline Road: As you walk to the left towards the river, look for Red-shouldered Hawk, Northern Cardinal, Carolina Wren, vireos, and warblers. Osprey may be nesting atop the power line poles. Park on the road shoulders.
The Birdwalk: At the fork in the main road, bear right and drive 1.8 miles to the Birdwalk which sustained severe hurricane-related damage in 2022 and remains closed. During the dry season (winter), lake views may be accessed by an informal trail on the dry lake bed; a scope is often helpful for scanning the far shore. eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP Birdwalk.
Return to the fork in the road and turn right to the Concession and Boat Ramp area. Boat and tram tours are based here, and canoes and bicycles can be rented. A footpath leads from the parking lot to the area where the Upper Lake now flows into the river (formerly the “historic weir” area), and from there you may bird along the banks of the Upper Lake. eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP Boat Ramp Area.
There are three other notable MRSP eBird Hotspots. Two Hotspots are along the trail leading to the Lower Myakka Lake (permit required; limited to 30 visitors per day): Myakka River SP–Deep Hole Road, eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP Deep Hole, and Deep Hole–Myakka SP Wilderness Trail, eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP Wilderness Trail; AND “Myakka River SP–South Entrance Pond,” eBird recent sightings – Myakka River SP – South Entrance Pond.
Myakka River SP Main Entrance Address: 13208 State Road 72, Sarasota FL 34241
GPS Coordinates: 27.240270, -82.315427
NATHAN BENDERSON PARK, located near the mall at University Town Center, is a Sarasota County-owned park, managed by a not-for-profit organization primarily as a multi-use sports venue. A 400-acre lake, which attracts world-class rowing competition, is contained within the 600-acre community park. Handicapped-accessible paths include a 3.5-mile paved loop around the lake perimeter. The park can be a productive place to view birds, with more than 195 species reported by eBirders; however, new construction, including the 110,000-square-foot Mote Marine Aquarium at the northern end of the park, changes in habitat, such as a decrease in plantings around the lake, large mowed areas, and alterations in the shoreline to enhance sporting activities may adversely affect birding opportunities. Check the calendar on the park website for scheduled events. There is adequate parking at Nathan Benderson Park, especially when no events are scheduled. Dogs must be leashed. Restrooms are available, and there is no admission fee to enter the park grounds. Birders may want to visit another Online Guide favorite, Lake Osprey, only a few minutes’ drive to the east (across I-75).
Featured Birds: The park lake has been a good place to find wintering Ring-necked Duck, Lesser Scaup, American White Pelican, and American Coot. Other possibilities include Caspian, Royal, Forster’s, and Gull-billed Tern, and Bonaparte’s Gull in the winter. Other birds that have been recorded include Limpkin, Glossy Ibis, Least Bittern, Anhinga, Double-crested Cormorant, Carolina Wren, Pine Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, and Killdeer. Sandhill Crane and waders roost at the north end of the lake in the evening. Domestic Helmeted Guineafowl, Monk Parakeet, and American Kestrel (Southeastern) often nest here, and rarities such as Snow Goose have been found occasionally.
Insider’s Tip: The park is roughly rectangular in shape, stretching north and south, with the largest lake in the center. A quiet place to bird is along a partially tree-shaded, crushed shell path at the park’s western border that runs parallel to World Championship Drive (with several small parking lots spaced at intervals). Look for Common Yellowthroat, herons, and other waders in the wetlands under the power lines and songbirds in the trees. At the southeast end of the park, just before World Championship Drive begins to loop east toward Cattlemen Road, take Athlete’s Drive to the West Boat Ramp and West Lake Parking lot and look for birds around the adjoining lakes and on the power lines. Monk Parakeet and American Kestrel may be seen year-round in this area. To see an aerial view of major trails/roads, click on the Map & Directions link below, change the “view” to “Satellite,” and enlarge the map.
Address: 5851 Nathan Benderson Circle, Sarasota, FL 34235
GPS Coordinates: 27.374345, -82.450069
OSCAR SCHERER STATE PARK (OSSP) is located in Osprey, FL, along US-41, just south of Blackburn Point Road. Beginning in 1955, with a charitable contribution from Elsa Scherer Burrows of 462-acres (in honor of her father, Oscar Scherer) to be used as a wildlife sanctuary, the park has grown to its current 1400-acres size. Additions to the park included the purchase of 922-acres from Palmer Ranch by the Nature Conservancy (in conjunction with state preservation funds) to help protect habitat for the Florida Scrub-Jay, and a contribution by a local land developer of 17-acres as a buffer between the park and a newly constructed housing subdivision. (There is an eBird hotspot for the Oscar Scherer Buffer Preserve that is rarely used).
OSSP now offers birders one of the best chances in southwest Florida to see the Florida Scrub-Jay—a friendly, non-migratory species endemic to Florida—whose threatened population has steeply declined with loss of habitat. Periodic controlled burns are used to maintain the best habitat for the jays. The park has about 15 miles of well-marked, named and color-coded hiking trails, from .5 to 5.0 miles long, with surfaces that range from paved and handicapped- accessible, to hard-packed sand, to deeper soft sand that may be difficult to traverse in spots. Dogs on a six-foot leash are permitted. Restrooms and parking are available. Check the park website for admission fees. Another Online Guide favorite, Blackburn Point Park, is a 10-minute drive from OSSP’s main entrance.
In 2014, a 287-acre property with a habitat similar to OSSP, the SCHERER THAXTON PRESERVE, opened on the park’s eastern border. The main entrance to the preserve is on Honore Avenue. The preserve has a 20-acre lake with a looping, unpaved trail and additional trails veering off into the scrubby flatwoods and the taller trees of OSSP. Recent improvements added restrooms, a fishing pier, a picnic pavilion, additional accessible parking spaces, and accessible walks to connect these amenities. Dogs on a six-foot leash are permitted. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: About 230 species have been reported in OSSP by eBirders, with more than 135 species identified at Scherer Thaxton Preserve. In addition to the Florida Scrub-Jay—which might be seen on any OSSP trail—other birds that breed here include Bald Eagle, Great Horned Owl, and Red-headed Woodpecker. Five resident species of woodpeckers may be sighted, as well as Yellow-bellied Sapsucker in winter. Numerous stands of large oaks attract warblers, vireos, and gnatcatchers in winter as well as other birds during migration. Look for Eastern Meadowlark and Loggerhead Shrike in open prairies and Eastern Towhee in brushy shrubland. Raptors include American Kestrel, Cooper’s, Red-tailed and Red-shouldered Hawk, and, in winter, Sharp-shinned Hawk and Northern Harrier. Peregrine Falcon and Merlin are present in spring and Swallow-tailed Kite in spring and summer. From March to May, Bachman’s Sparrow breed and may be heard vocalizing in the park just west of the Scherer Thaxton Preserve on the Yellow Trail, walking north from Big Lake.
Insider’s Tip: The Green Trail at OSSP is a good place to see raptors and woodpeckers, including Red-headed Woodpecker, but it can be very hot where shade trees are lacking. Cooler hiking paths—and, in season, migrating songbirds—may be found among the trees along South Creek (Lester Finley Trail and South Creek Nature Trail) and Lake Osprey (not to be confused with another Lake Osprey in Lakewood Ranch). The .3-mile Orange Trail provides a shortcut to Big Lake. The Yellow Trail connects OSSP trails to the Scherer Thaxton Preserve trail system and to the Legacy Trail. In prior years, volunteers of the Sarasota Audubon Society and Venice Area Audubon Society have conducted guided birding walks through the scrubby flatwoods. Check the activity schedules on the websites of each Society for OSSP guided walks. Contact the OSSP Park Ranger office (941-483-5956) for park information.
Oscar Scherer State Park Address: 1843 South Tamiami Tr., Osprey FL 34229
GPS Coordinates: 27.169771, -82.476867
Scherer Thaxton Preserve Address: 13125 Honore Ave. Osprey, FL 34229
GPS Coordinates: 27.192709, -82.441439
Oscar Scherer State Park
Scherer Thaxton Preserve
BEGINNING IN NOVEMBER 2025, AND CONTINUING UNTIL COMPLETION, REMOVAL OF INVASIVE TREES AND SHRUBS AND CREATION OF FIREBRAKES WILL OCCUR IN AND AROUND THE PARK.
PINECRAFT PARK is a small, 15-acre Sarasota County neighborhood park, located in Sarasota’s Mennonite and Amish communities. The main entrance and an adequate parking lot are at the end of Gilbert Avenue (off Bahia Vista Street). From the parking area, you will see a paved walkway with many oak trees, picnic tables, a pavilion, playground, restrooms, and a boat ramp for launching canoes or kayaks into Phillippi Creek; the creek makes up the park’s entire western border. Private residences and a small stream establish the border for much of the park on its eastern and southern boundaries. The entrance to the heavily wooded—and, for birders, the most popular portion of the park—lies directly south of the parking area. A small bridge leads to numerous shady, interconnected dirt trails that wind between tall canopied trees. For an aerial view of the park’s boundaries and parking lot, click on the Map & Directions link below, change the “view” to “Satellite” and enlarge the map. (Interior trails are not visible.) No dogs allowed. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: The combination of a diverse wooded habitat and streams found in this urban oasis attracts an amazing variety of birds; more than 215 species have been recorded here by eBirders. The wooded area—a mesic hammock unique to southern Florida—is particularly good for passerines, especially warblers, during migration. In periods of inclement weather that interfere with migration, the park has proven to be a safe harbor for birds, with many “fallouts” recorded. In all seasons, check the creek banks for wrens, herons, Common Gallinule, ducks, ibis, Anhinga, and warblers. Species known to often breed here include Pileated Woodpecker, Barred Owl, Cooper’s Hawk, Ruby-throated Hummingbird, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Green Heron, Wood Duck, and Northern Parula. The park is also a good place for viewing dragonflies, with more than 40 species recorded, including some rarities. Native butterflies often flit through the sun-dappled understory.
Insider’s Tip: Taking a circular trail near the boundaries of the wooded area—close to the stream or Phillippi Creek—is usually the most popular birding route, but don’t forget to check out maintained paths through the central portion, and peer into innermost, off-trail sections, called the “pit,” where rare birds may often “hide out” during migration. Please note that debris from recent storms remains in off-the-trail areas, including the pit, and, while some maintained trails in the hammock are level and easily walked, many have protruding tree roots, encroaching vegetation, or can become slippery when wet. Short sections of the maintained trail, especially along the creek, may always prove difficult for those with mobility limitations. The heavily wooded part of the park is not wheelchair accessible.
Address: 1420 Gilbert Avenue, Sarasota, FL 34239
GPS Coordinates: 27.320952, -82.503629
THE MAIN TRAIL IS CLOSED FOR STORM DAMAGE REPAIR (estimated completion date is January 2026). CHECK WITH “TOWN OF LONGBOAT KEY” BEFORE VISITING!
QUICK POINT NATURE PRESERVE a 34-acre preserve, operated by the Town of Longboat Key—was established for the purpose of protecting and restoring a unique wetland and mangrove habitat. The preserve features uplands, tidal swamps, and manmade and natural lagoons. Trails and boardwalks overlook the mangroves and offer good views of the mudflats of New Pass and the sandbars of Sarasota Bay. The preserve is located at the south end of Longboat Key, on the east (Bay) side of Gulf of Mexico Drive. Adequate parking is available at Overlook Park, on the west side of Gulf of Mexico Drive (with an additional 4-6 spaces found at 280 Gulf of Mexico Drive). The main out-and-back trail into the preserve begins at the south end of the Overlook Park parking lot. Walk under the bridge into the preserve. No pets allowed. No admission fee. About a 5-minute drive away from the preserve, another favorite Online Guide Hotspot, Ken Thompson Park on City Island, located across the by has the closest public restrooms.
Featured Birds: More than 180 species have been reported in the preserve by eBirders. Birds that may be encountered include many waders and shorebirds, such as American Oystercatcher, terns, ibis, and both night-herons. Osprey are commonly seen, and Bald Eagle and Bonaparte’s Gull have been sighted. During migrations, warblers, thrushes and flycatchers may be found in the canopy and brush.
Insider’s Tip: After walking under the bridge into the preserve—often past fishermen testing their luck—and passing the preserve’s welcome sign, the main trail (accessible for most, but occasionally consisting of deeper sand) heads off along the New Pass shoreline for about a half-mile. During spring and fall migration, warblers and other songbirds can be spotted anywhere along the trail, often beginning just as you enter the park. The main trail ends at the Sarasota Bay Lookout Point, which is the usual turn-around spot for the trip back to the parking lot. Before heading back, look on the immediate right after leaving the Lookout boardwalk for a narrow, mostly single-file, sometimes rough and perhaps ultimately impassable path. This out-and-back path provides good birding opportunities as it parallels the shoreline and mangrove fringe for a substantial distance, opening at several places to mini-beaches with nice views. Look for Connecticut Warbler in late spring! Upon returning to the welcome sign, birders might want to explore the tree-lined, paved sidewalk that heads to the small parking area at 280 Gulf of Mexico Drive and the Water Tower Site (see Trail Map).
Address: 100 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key, FL 34228
GPS Coordinates: 27.334222, -82.582777
RED BUG SLOUGH PRESERVE is a small urban park, acquired by Sarasota County in 2000-2001, primarily under the County’s Environmentally Sensitive Lands Protection Program. The 72-acre site, restored in 2014, is divided into two roughly rectangular parcels—creating southern and northern sections—that appear to intersect at a single point. The habitat is mostly hardwood swamp and mesic hammock, bisected in the southern parcel by a lovely lake and water slough. The preserve is adapted for multiple uses and currently has a small playground, fishing dock, restrooms, and picnic shelters and benches that overlook the lake. Enhancements, completed in 2024, added an expanded (main) parking lot, a new playground, a revitalized butterfly garden, and a rubberized trail from the playground to the existing fishing pier. Several miles of mostly unpaved trails, identified by numerical trail markers (see Trail Map below), cut back-and-forth through the preserve, attracting hikers, bikers, and dog walkers—some with dogs illegally off leash. Trails may be seasonally flooded in summer and, while accessible to most visitors, some trails may prove difficult for wheelchair-bound birders. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: Since 2009—when eBirders began recording sightings in and around the preserve—more than 190 avian species have been counted. In wooded areas, look for Pileated Woodpecker, Northern Cardinal, and migrant vireos and warblers. Near water, you can view Belted Kingfisher, Anhinga, herons, egrets, ducks, and both night herons, to name only a few. Wood Duck are commonly seen in a small pond located between Trail Markers 8 and 9. These ducks, Red-shouldered Hawk, and many other species breed here.
Insider’s Tip: The main entrance and parking lot are located off Beneva Road, next to the playground. A second “back lot” entrance is located where S. Lockwood Ridge Road dead-ends at Gypsy Street, at the intersection of the two preserve parcels. This entrance has few official parking spots, but visitors have been known to park their cars on the Gypsy Street road shoulder. To access the north parcel, you simply exit the south parcel and cross Gypsy Street to reenter the park, and vice versa (see Park Information link below). A third parking area with spots for about eight cars is located at the end of Ashton Road (turn east off Lockwood Ridge Road); it provides access to the southwest corner of the southern parcel and the fishing bridge. In the northern parcel, a small area containing trail markers 30-32 is difficult to access; if the water level in the slough is low, it is possible to enter this area by crossing over a small concrete dam (about 130 yards north along the main trail, after the Gypsy Street/S. Lockwood Ridge Rd intersection). Two wooden bridges near marker 28 traverse swampy terrain that’s good for wading birds and migrating songbirds. Early morning and late afternoon visits are best for both parking and birding.
Address: Main Entrance: 5200 Beneva Rd, Sarasota, 34231
GPS Coordinates, Main Entrance: 7.277599, -82.497921
ROTHENBACH PARK is a Sarasota County-operated community park, located at the east end of Bee Ridge Road. The site was a landfill—now long-closed, capped, and landscaped—with woods and lakes that border “the hill.” The park includes restrooms, picnic tables, and grills. Two paved recreational trails separately circle near the main parking area: the “Solar Trail” which loops around a former solar array (a 1-mile trail) and the “Hammock Loop Trail,” which circles the hill (a 2.75-mile trail). These trails are suitable for all ages and abilities and are used for walking, running, cycling and, of course, birding. Although the trees next to the main parking lot also provide some birding opportunities, the Hammock Loop Trail is of primary interest for birders; it runs alongside ponds, through beautiful woodlands, and open grassland. No dogs allowed. No admission fee. Please stay on paved trails.
Featured Birds: eBirders have recorded more than 155 species here. The mixed habitat is home to numerous woodland birds and open grassland species, including Eastern Meadowlark and sparrows. In open areas, Red-shouldered Hawk may perch atop trees and poles. In spring and fall, Bobolink can be found on the grassy slopes of the hill. The shady woodland provides habitat for Northern Parula, Pileated Woodpecker, Barred Owl, and Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. Wintering and migrating birds include many species of warblers, thrushes, tanagers, and orioles. Ducks and other waterfowl can be found on and around the ponds.
Insider’s Tip: When the Hammock Loop Trail circling the center hill enters the woodland, it becomes cool and shady, with benches available to wait for birds to appear. However, long stretches of trail, both before and after the wooded area, are devoid of shade and can be extremely hot and sun-baked. A park road provides a shortcut to the woodlands (see Trail Map, below); after driving into the park, bear right at the fork towards the main parking area, but then make a left onto the paved, South Access Road, that runs along the base of the hill (parallel to the western part of the Hammock Loop Trail). It ends in a 45-car parking area and scenic overlook, which leaves only a .25-mile walk on the partly shaded and paved “Turkey Trail,” to reach the cooler woodlands.
Address: 8650 Bee Ridge Rd, Sarasota, FL 34241
GPS Coordinates: 27.295732, -82.397337
In South Venice, situated across the Intracoastal Waterway from Casperson Park, lies SHAMROCK PARK, a Sarasota County-operated public park on about 82 roughly triangular acres.The park has 2.3 miles of paved multi-use trails that support wildlife-viewing, hiking, and biking and that connect to the Venetian Waterways Trail and the Legacy Trail. Additional, mostly unpaved trails meander through the park’s dry sandy shrub habitat that is home to a population of threatened Florida Scrub-Jay, as well as frequently encountered Gopher Tortoise. A nature center contains restroom facilities, but the center itself has been undergoing renovation—check for closures before visiting. Adequate free parking is available within the park. Dogs on leash are permitted. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: In addition to the scrub-jay, more than 170 eBird species have been reported here. The park’s proximity to the Venetian Waterway and Gulf coast beaches draws wading and diving birds, such as Little Blue Heron, both night-herons, Anhinga, cormorants, ibis, and egrets. Brown Pelican, vultures, Bald Eagle, Osprey, and Red-shouldered Hawk are also frequently encountered. Other birds often spotted may include Common Ground-Dove, four woodpecker species, Carolina Wren, Gray Catbird, Northern Mockingbird, and Common Grackle. In 2024-2025, many birders visited the park to view a Groove-billed Ani that lingered here over the winter and was seen often in the company of scrub-jays.
Insider’s Tip: Many visitors to the park initially seek out scrub-jays, which may be encountered throughout the park but are generally found in the central area around the nature center and along the Intracoastal Waterway. Be sure to watch the sky for birds flying across the Intracoastal Waterway between Caspersen and Shamrock Parks. Especially when birding on paved trails, be alert for fast-moving cyclists.
Address: 3900 Shamrock Drive, Venice, FL 34293
GPS Coordinates: 27.295732, -82.397337
SIESTA KEY BEACH, with its white, cool-to-the-touch, 99% pure quartz sand, is often listed among the top beaches in the United States and the world. It attracts beach lovers and birders alike. More than 235 avian species have been recorded at Siesta Key Beach by eBirders. An important birding strategy, especially during the “tourist/snowbird” season, is to arrive in the early morning (before 8:00 a.m.) or late afternoon (after 4-5 p.m.), when crowds of beachgoers are less likely to be present and finding a parking spot may be considerably easier. Arriving at the main Public Beach parking lot, birders can walk about a mile north along a wide stretch of beach towards Beach Access 2. Or, head in a southerly direction for a similar distance towards Point of Rocks, where condominiums are located and the beach is known as Crescent Beach. Please respect private property markers. Restrooms and concessions are in the main pavilions at Siesta Key Beach. No dogs allowed. No admission fee. Local birders will often combine their visit to Siesta Beach with a stop at nearby Glebe Park, another Online Guide favorite birding location.
Featured Birds: Sanderling, sandpipers, gulls, terns, Brown Pelican, Osprey, Ruddy Turnstone, and Roseate Spoonbill are seen commonly. Egrets, sometimes including Reddish Egret, can be found along the shoreline and in marshy spots. In past years, in spring and summer, Least Tern and Snowy Plover and other shorebirds have congregated north of Beach Access 5 (between Beach Accesses 4-2), as shifting sands have widened the beach there. Migrating shorebirds, such as plovers, American Avocet, Pectoral Sandpiper, Wilson’s and Red-necked Phalarope, Marbled Godwit, and many others may stop by.
Insider’s Tip: In the early morning (and late afternoon), if you plan to bird mostly at the northern end of Siesta Key Beach, a modest number of conveniently located parking spaces may be available at Beach Access 5 (about 220 eBird species counted) and Beach Access 7 (more than 190 species), as well as at Beach Accesses 8 and 9. (Note: Parking at access points north of Beach Access 5 is very limited, restricted or nonexistent, but public parking is available at nearby Siesta Village.) Or, park at the far north end of the main public lot and walk north on the beach. In the early morning, the sun will be mostly at your back, providing good light for birding and photography. Don’t forget to check any tidal pools for waders and shorebirds. Scanning the Gulf of Mexico horizon for birds in flight, especially with a spotting scope, can be very productive.
Address: 948 Beach Rd., Siesta Key, FL 34242
GPS Coordinates: 27.266042, -82.550960
eBird Recent Sightings – Siesta Key Beach – 3 Sites
SOUTH VENICE LEMON BAY PRESERVE, an exciting, relatively new birding spot located in heavily populated South Venice, was conceived in 1999, primarily as a habitat refuge for the threatened Florida Scrub-Jay. The preserve, which mostly abuts Lemon Bay, is now viewed as integral to the protection of the Lemon Bay estuary, as well as providing habitat for Bald Eagle, scrub-jay families, wading birds, fish, Gopher Tortoise, bobcats, and other animal and plant species in need of protection. Sarasota County owns and operates the Preserve. With the aid of its land acquisition agents—the Nature Conservancy and the Big Waters Land Trust, plus state grants—the County has made incremental land purchases that expand the refuge to its current 222-acre size. About eight miles of unpaved hiking trails, which are accessible for most visitors, enable exploration of several coastal habitats, including open scrubby flatwoods, mesic pine flatwoods, tidal marshes, and tidal swamp. A restored wetlands slough can be accessed by boardwalks. There are no restrooms or shelters, but benches are scattered throughout. No dogs allowed. No entrance fee. Birders at the Preserve may want to also check out another nearby Online Guide favorite, Manasota Scrub Preserve.
Featured Birds: While scrub-jays may be the initial attraction, visitors may encounter any of the more than 155 bird species observed by eBirders. Bald Eagle nest here regularly, and there have been reports of encounters between the eagles and Great Horned Owl, which try to force the eagles from the nest. Eastern Screech-Owl also may be seen. Lured by its bayside location, wading birds may be viewed through “windows” in the often overgrown vegetation along the bay. Warblers and vireos make their way to the preserve during spring and fall migrations.
Insider’s Tip: The preserve is divided into three parcels (see the Trail Map), with three main public access points, but only two main parking areas. Access the southern parcel via the South Entrance at 6200 Osprey Road, which has designated parking for eight vehicles. Explore the central parcel using the entrance at the end of Ocelot Road; park at the South Entrance lot, then follow the trail to the center section of the preserve. Access the northern parcel at 5472 Kenisco Road, where parking is on the road shoulder, parallel to the preserve. Please watch for tortoises along Kenisco Road. Note that the northern parcel is bisected by tidal swamps, so there is no interior passage from the southern parking area to the northernmost part of the preserve. Most visitors drive the short distance between the South Entrance and the 5472 Kensico Road access points. Visiting birders might choose to walk along the perimeter of the preserve, which offers more live oak-shaded trails and better potential for spotting migrating passerines. The scrubby flatwoods—in an area closest to the parking lot and dominated by shorter trees, e.g., sand live oak, Chapman’s oak, and myrtle oak—support the Florida Scrub-Jay, Brown Thrasher, and transient buntings. Raptors are more easily seen in the “big sky” over the scrubby flatwoods. Several trails may be closed from October 1 to May 15 to provide some protection for nesting eagles. Trail markers help to orient visitors, but a compass or cell phone compass-app may assist in navigating around the preserve. Some trails have little shade, so use sun protection and carry water. Sturdy shoes are also recommended because sandspurs (burrs) are found commonly. To adequately explore the preserve’s extensive trails and the wide array of habitats, many birders opt to make multiple visits.
Address: 6200 Osprey Rd, Venice, FL 34293
GPS Coordinates: 27.022405, -82.409299
TWIN LAKES PARK, originally designed for training minor and major league baseball teams, was acquired by Sarasota County in 1985. Since 2010, the Baltimore Orioles baseball team has used the park’s Buck O’Neil Baseball Complex as a training base for its teams (with its major league team using Ed Smith Stadium in the City of Sarasota for spring training games). In addition to professional baseball fields, the park offers multiple other athletic fields, lakes, and open spaces that are available to the public for a wide range of activities. An existing Sarasota County Fire Department station, a UF/IFAS Extension Sarasota office building, and other buildings also share the park. Despite all this activity, the park can appear quiet and empty at times. More than 140 bird species have been observed to date by eBirders! Trails are mostly accessible. Parking is available. Dogs on leash are permitted. No admission fees, other than for professional baseball or special events. On weekdays, public restrooms and water are available at the UF/IFAS Extension office building.
Featured Birds: A combination of woodlands with many Live Oaks, several lakes, gardens, and mowed fields creates opportunity to view species that utilize these varied habitats. Anhinga, egrets, herons, ibis, and Black-crowned Night Heron are often seen near the two larger lakes that occupy much of the northern part of the park. Red-bellied, Downy and (less frequently) Pileated Woodpecker may be found in all seasons in wooded areas. Red-shouldered Hawk, Osprey, and Bald Eagle soar over the park. Check out overhead wires and athletic field lighting for Loggerhead Shrike, Nanday Parakeet, and four dove species.
Insider’s Tip: Most birders will first head towards the large lake in the northwest corner of the park, parking in the lots near the UF/IFAS Extension Sarasota office building. Flowering trees and gardens, including butterfly gardens, are planted all around this building. Look for Ruby-throated Hummingbird if tubular plants such as fireweed are in bloom. In 2021-2022, this area was visited by a Rufous Hummingbird. At the rear of the building, walk across the berm to the attached “island” and explore the Live Oak and other trees; look for warblers during migrations. Nearby, in the northeast quarter of the park, check out a wooded, paved path that surrounds a second large lake. If the park is not busy, you may wish to explore areas near unused athletic fields by walking and/or driving, and stopping at available parking areas.
Address: 6700 Clark Road, Sarasota, FL 34241
GPS Coordinates: 27.264618, -82.438732
URFER FAMILY PARK is a family-oriented park with a variety of playground equipment designed for toddlers through teens. For birders, hikers, and runners, a multi-use fitness trail as well as a separate, one-mile nature trail circle through pine flatwoods, providing views of forests and a few ponds. Just off the parking lot loop, a short, secluded boardwalk with an observation deck crosses a forested wetland. West of the developed part of the park, unpaved trails weave through oak hammocks and upland scrub. Urfer was the first LEED Gold certified park in Sarasota County. Restrooms and substantial parking are available just inside the entrance off Honore Avenue. Dogs on leash are permitted. No admission fee.
Featured Birds: More than 155 species have been sighted in the park by eBirders. This park is quite good for migrating and wintering warblers and thrushes. Sandhill Crane, Northern Parula, Brown Thrasher, Prairie Warbler, White-eyed Vireo, and Great Horned Owl may nest here. Remember to keep your eyes on the sky; Urfer is a good flyby area for birds moving inland from the beaches.
Insider’s Tip: Most birders make a beeline for the west part of the park, with its two primitive Yellow and Red Trails and smaller paths cutting across the interior and around the park perimeter. Seasonal rains can flood these trails. (Please note: In prior years, a small, working cattle ranch has operated in the fenced off northwest segment of the park, and cattle eventually may be returned to this area.) Although the west part of the park is the most popular for birding, early mornings can also provide good birding opportunities along the paved multi-use trail in the eastern section. Check the ponds in this area for Wood Duck.
Address: 4012 Honore Ave., Sarasota, FL 3423
GPS Coordinates: 27.297614, -82.465315
SOME AREAS MAY BE CLOSED FOR STORM DAMAGE REPAIR. SEE “SCGOV PARK STATUS REPORT” BEFORE VISITING!
NOKOMIS BEACH, on the barrier island of Casey Key, and VENICE BEACH, on Venice Island, are both situated directly on the Gulf of Mexico. The beaches are maintained by Sarasota County, have white sand, blue water, and excellent birding, with more than 155 bird species recorded by eBirders at Nokomis Beach and more than 145 species spotted at Venice Beach. Nokomis Beach is Sarasota County’s oldest public beach, while Venice Beach is within the municipal limits of the City of Venice and is close to downtown Venice amenities. The two beaches are only about 1.75 miles apart—as the crow flies—but are physically separated by a channel, dredged in 1937, that provides boating access to the Gulf from the Intracoastal Waterway and Dona Bay. Despite the channel barrier, the drive from one beach to the other takes only about 15 minutes. The channel is fortified by two parallel, artificial stone jetties, named the NORTH JETTY and SOUTH JETTY. Each jetty has its own beach and park (known as Humphris Park at South Jetty) and each area has become a popular birding and fishing spot, with North Jetty Park boasting more than 160 eBird recorded species. Please note that South Jetty and Humphris Park sustained 2024 hurricane damage and may be closed during reconstruction. The distance walking on the sandy beach from Nokomis Beach to the North Jetty, or Venice Beach to the South Jetty, respectively, is under a mile, and, if you’re driving, the time is less than five minutes. At all four public beaches and parks, restrooms and parking are available, but parking can be difficult during “snowbird” season. No dogs allowed. No admission fees (at all locations noted).
Featured Birds: Along the beaches, a wide variety of shorebirds may be encountered, such as Willet, Black-bellied and Semipalmated Plover, and Sanderling. Depending upon the season, terns often seen include Sandwich, Forster’s, Common, Least, Royal, and, less frequently, Caspian. Gulls include Ring-billed, Herring, Lesser Black-backed (winter), and the resident Laughing Gull. Watch for Black Skimmer over the shoreline, look overhead for Magnificent Frigatebird, and scan the Gulf horizon for Northern Gannet. Indeed, spending some time sea-watching from the jetties can be especially rewarding, as flyby rarities are spotted periodically. Although many birds may be seen anywhere along the beach, the jetties attract Double-crested Cormorant, Brown Pelican, Osprey, Bald Eagle, Great Blue Heron, and Snowy and Great Egret looking to steal a fish from an angler’s catch. Ruddy Turnstone scramble over the jetty stones and, in winter, Red-breasted Merganser hunt in the surf.
Insider’s Tip: While the beaches may offer the most interest for birders, don’t forget to check out wooded areas, and scan trees near parking lots and picnic tables where woodpeckers, Northern Cardinal, and Blue Jay are seen commonly; Anhinga, Double-crested Cormorant, and Osprey may rest in taller trees. During migrations, the trees and shrubs may attract warblers and other songbirds. Also, along the roads, look up at utility wires for doves, grackles, and corvids. At Nokomis, also check out the Intracoastal Waterway, located just across the street from the main parking lot. Venice Beach provides a good jumping off point for an automobile tour of additional birding Hotspots that extend south along the coast, including Service Club Park, Venice Fishing Pier (with more than 150 eBird species), and South Brohard Park. Further south, Caspersen Beach (with more than 145 eBird species) sustained 2024 hurricane damage resulting in its partial closure; check status before visiting. As a final stop on the auto tour, visit Shamrock Park, another of our Online Guide favorite locations. Stop and bird at a location, then drive to the next!
Nokomis Public Beach Address: 100 Casey Key Road, Nokomis, FL 34275
GPS Coordinates: 27.124835, -82.470593
North Jetty Park Address: 1000 S Casey Key Rd, Nokomis, FL 34275
GPS Coordinates: 27.114169, -82.466867
South Jetty Park Address: 2000 Tarpon Center Drive, Venice, FL 34285
GPS Coordinates: 27.112352, -82.466624
Venice Beach Address: 101 The Esplanade, Venice, FL 34285
GPS Coordinates: 27.099990, -82.459989
eBird Recent Sightings in Venice and Nokomis Beaches
Maps and Directions to Venice and Nokomis Beaches
Venice and Nokomis Beaches Websites
The VENICE AREA AUDUBON ROOKERY is an internationally known photography and birding hotspot, providing a rare opportunity to view and photograph wading birds at very close range. The bird rookery is located on a tiny island situated in a small lake that was once a borrow pit. The combination of deep water and patrolling alligators offers birds a safe place to roost overnight throughout the year. Especially during the nesting season, starting as early as November and extending through early summer, the island can become crowded with birds in breeding plumage competing for prime nesting spots where they will raise and fledge their young. Sarasota County maintains the rookery in conjunction with the Venice Area Audubon Society (VAAS). The VAAS Center, with its butterfly gardens and Purple Martin houses, is nearby. Dogs are not permitted. No admission fee, but a donation box is available. Parking is located on site, with additional parking available at the County’s Anderson Administration Center.
Featured Birds: Although about 160 species have been reported to eBird, the main birds that frequent the rookery area are Black-crowned Night-Heron, Great Egret, Great Blue Heron and Anhinga. Other commonly seen birds include ducks, Common Gallinule, Little Blue Heron, Green Heron, Snowy Egret, Double-crested Cormorant, and, during winter, Pied-billed Grebe.
Insider’s Tip: In the soft light of early morning, the east side of the lake may offer the best views of the island, while at sunset, the best sightings are from the west side of the lake (opposite the covered, shady pavilion). Alternately, good views of wading birds and birds flying to and from the island may be had from an unpaved trail that goes all the way around the lake. Along the trail, check out the Purple Martin houses and, in the evening, the bat houses. On occasion, VAAS volunteers are available at the Rookery to assist visitors in learning about the birds, and are equipped with spotting scope, field guides and extra binoculars for visitors’ use. Contact VAAS at 941-496-8984, for more information. The nearness of the birds, and especially of nests, chicks and soon-to-be fledglings during breeding season, makes the Rookery an exciting place for families to see and learn about bird life.
Address: 4006 Annex Rd, Venice, FL 34293
GPS Coordinates: 27.046636, -82.400096
Manatee County Birding Hotspots
Please see the Manatee Audubon Society web page for information about birding hotspots in that County. From November through April, the Manatee County Audubon Society hosts guided field trips to several birding Hotspots that are highlighted in this Online Guide, as well as to other birding locations. Their trip schedule, with information for participation, is located on their webpage.

