Cape May Greenways

Cape May County Trails and Byways

The Cape May area has miles of scenic trails and byways that run through forests, farmland, state and county parks, wildlife management areas, historic towns, and dunes of preserved beaches. Birds and other wildlife abound. In fact, the Cape May peninsula is one of the top birding spots in North America!

Cape May Point State Park

Speaking of top birding spots, Cape May Point State Park is a major migratory route, especially in the spring, when many sea and shorebirds come through. At the end of the summer, dragonflies and monarch butterflies can be seen as they make their way across the Delaware Bay.

Three blazed trails will lead you through a variety of habitats in the park. On the wheelchair- accessible Red Trail, viewing platforms overlook ponds where wading birds, ducks, swans and sometimes even osprey come to feed and breed. The Yellow Trail is 1.5 miles long with views of wetland marsh and coastal dunes. The Blue Trail is the longest of the three.

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Image of the entrance to a beach in Cape May, NJ

In Cape May Point State Park, you’ll also find a historic 157-foot lighthouse. Built-in 1859, with 199 steps you can climb to the top to take in a view of the Delaware Bay and surround area. As a reminder of its days as a military base, the park also has a bunker. It now stands as a monument to the strategic defensive role the area played during World War II, and at low tide, you can still see the gun turrets.

Cape May County Park & Zoo

At the more than 200 acre Cape May County Park, you’ll discover a zoo that’s home to more than 500 animals representing 250 different species, and admission is free! There are miles of walking trails and a park with playgrounds for children.

Cape May National Wildlife Refuge

At the Cape May National Wildlife Refuge, broken out into three different units throughout Cape May County, a wide variety of habitats and species can be seen. At the Two Mile Beach Unit in Wildwood Crest, free family nature walks are available on Saturdays throughout the summer.

Higbee Beach Wildlife Management Area

Birding is always excellent at Higbee Beach Wildlife Management Area, especially from spring through early fall. In spring, when they are heading north, birds will rest and feed there after crossing the Delaware Bay. In summer, a number of species come to breed.  Because of this, pets are not permitted on the beach from April until September. This is also a great place to see dragonflies and butterflies, including monarchs. Higbee has more than two miles of nature trails with viewing platforms.

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Ferry Osprey

For fishing enthusiasts, Cape May State Park waters are home to weakfish, bluefish, flounder, tautog, and striped bass.

For more information and an interactive map of Cape May Trails and Greenways, visit the Cape May, New Jersey page on TrailLink.

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Man On A Mission Takes the Ferry

Riding For a Reason

One rainy spring day, a very different looking truck pulled through the tolls at the Cape May terminal. The cab was a 1947 restored antique truck, but the back was something different. Inside, Mark McBride admitted he wasn’t from John Edwards & Sons as the cab label indicated, but rather a dedicated mechanic from Lexington, IL who restores and custom rebuilds old trucks for people around the country.

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Mark McBride sits on his truck

This truck, however, was special.  It was his, and was in its third year of service raising funds for St. Jude Children’s research hospital. Once a year, McBride sets out across the country and challenges his supporters to donate a penny for every mile he covers. His first year, he covered 3,500 miles. In 2016, he put on 6,650 miles in fourteen days traveling from California to Vegas. This year, he’s doing the Northeast corridor from Bangor, Maine to Key West, FL with the goal of close to 8,700 miles. Next year, he has his sights set on Alaska, and he’s sure his truck can do it.

His truck states he’s a man on a mission, but he’s part of a larger Convoy for Kid’s truck show held on Father’s Day in Mason City, Illinois to raise funds for the same St. Jude’s cause. McBride’s cross country trek is his way of raising funds plus awareness on a broader playing field. He tries to stay on older roads that match the age of his truck, but he loves ferries so took the relatively modern Cape May-Lewes Ferry, circa 1964, to give both himself and the truck a bit of a break on the rainy afternoon he cruised through South Jersey.

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Man on a Mission Truck

The truck does additional service throughout the year hauling various payloads McBride books, but during his annual treks for St. Jude’s, his own custom-built wooden camper goes on the back to house a small bed, kitchenette, and water stores inside. The entire camper dome comes off when the truck is in regular working mode.

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