README before using our guides to Long Walks on Cape Cod

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Long Walks on Cape Cod

Copyright 1996 Cape Cod Trails Conference

Coast Guard Beach

USGS Map:           Orleans

Sketch Map of Route

Trailheads:              1. Parking lot at Salt Pond Visitors Center,
                              Cape Cod National Seashore, east off Route
                              6 in Eastham.

                              2. Parking lot at Coast Guard Beach, following 
                              signs past Visitors Center, off season only.

                              3. Nauset Light Beach parking lot at the end
                              of Cable Road, off season only.  North on
                              Ocean View Drive from Coast Guard Beach
                              or east on Brackett Road from Route 6.

NOTE:    Each of the three legs of this long walk are listed in
Eastham Short Walks on Cape Cod under the headings of
Nauset Marsh, Coast Guard Beach, Nauset Light Beach,
Little Creek.   The Nauset Light Beach walk begins at
Trailhead 3 above.

Guide:

     You may begin at any of the trailheads. You may also walk in
the opposite direction.  The guide begins at the Salt Pond
Visitors Center.

     Park close to the building.  Walk through the ampitheatre to
the right of the stage, then follow the signs to the Nauset Marsh
Trail.  As you walk past the inlet, consider that the area was
once a private golf course, and that golfers ferried from one
side to the other by pulling a boat!

     You will come up to a bench at a lookout in about one mile.
Pause for viewing and pictures.  About 100 yards from the bench,
watch for a small, low sign directing you to a hiking trail to
the right.  This trail was laid out by volunteers from the local
hiking clubs, and has just recently been marked.

     Continue on the trail, following the signs, for another mile
until you come to the paved bicycle path.  Turn right and cross
the wood bridge.  At the end of the bridge, exit right to the
edge of the marsh.

     Low tide offers the best conditions for walking the marsh
side of Coast Guard Beach.  Continue along the west side of the
spit, staying away from roped-off areas.  Walk out to the end of
the spit, about 1.5 miles.  Each season offers different sights,
as described by Henry Beston in "Outermost House."

     The house is gone, and even the plaque that commemorated it;
both swept away in the storm that also took the buildings and
parking lot at sea level on Coast Guard Beach.

     Walk up the seashore past the Coast Guard Station, now used
as an environmental education center.  In another mile, you will
reach the staircase to Nauset Light Beach.  If the staircase is
gone, as has happened after major storms, backtrack 200 yards to
a low point in the the dunes.  Walk west briefly, then north to
the parking lot on the dune path.

     Walk up to the parking lot and read the signboards.  The
distinctive red and white lighthouse is visible above the trees
just across the road to the northwest.  Follow the signs to visit
Nauset Light, which was moved to its present location in 1996,
to prevent its tumbling into the ocean.

     Walk west on Cable Road about 300 yards to the Three Sisters
lighthouses, which you now know about.  During the summer, guided
tours are occasionally offered by the National Park Service.  Get
a schedule from the Visitors Center, if you are interested.

     For this hike, go back east on the south side of the road,
watching out for cars, until you come to a No Parking sign in
about 100 yards.  No kidding; this is important!  Look for a
well-worn path leading into the woods.  You are now on the next
leg of the hike, and you have carefully avoided private property.

     Follow the path south.  You should have a compass, or head
for the sun.  If not, good luck, because there are many, many
paths crossing the area, going in every direction.  You want to
take the most direct route approximately 3/4 of a mile to a
distinctive woods road crossing the area from east to west.

     When you have found it, head west until you reach Nauset
Road--two lane, paved, with houses.  Immediately circle around to
the east, looking for a dirt barrier to a former paved road,
"Little Creek Road."  It still has some vestiges of pavement.

     Follow this road to its end, passing the huge National Sea-
shore parking lot.  Walk west for a bit until you see the sign
for Doane Rock picnic area.  Visit the rock, if you wish.  The
entrance road continues to the bicycle path and to the hiking
trail you started on.

     Retrace the trail west until it intersects the Nauset Marsh
Trail.  Turn right to continue on the trail to the parking lot at
the Visitors Center.  Tour the museum inside, if you have not
done so before.

     You have covered eleven miles on this hike, and seen a won-
drous variety of Cape Cod scenes.