Cape Cod Trails Conference Home Page
Long Walks on Cape Cod
Copyright 1996 Cape Cod Trails Conference
Pleasant Bay
USGS Maps: Orleans, Chatham
Trailhead:
Parking lot for Nauset Beach in Orleans, at the
end of Beach Road.
Guide:
Park at the far south
end of the parking lot. There is a charge
during the season. Walk to the southwest corner and pick
up the paved
road curving around to the south. Soon it becomes a sandy
track be-
tween the dunes and the marsh. Walk due south on the dune
road.
This walk will take you
about six miles down the dune road,
which is a linear distance of five miles on the map, then bring
you
back up north on the beach, a shorter and faster walk. The
end of
the spit opposite Chatham contains a colony of beach houses which
we
will not visit, out of respect for the homeowners.
The topographical map
for Chatham is seriously inaccurate in
that it does not show the effects of the 1978 storm which rearranged
the landscape. Besides ending Nauset Beach opposite Allen
Point, a
wide break was cut in the barrier beach which allows the ocean
to
sweep right in to the Chatham shore, causing erosion and damage.
Walk along the dune road,
following the tracks of four wheel
drive vehicles. On your right is a marsh, and on the bluffs,
particu-
larly nice houses in East Orleans. You will pass a boardwalk
from
Pochet Neck, then Pochet Island on your right. Little Pochet
Island is straight ahead.
Pochet Island can be
explored, but has to be approached at low
tide, when the causeway is dry. We have described the island
in the
guide for "Nauset Beach and Pochet Island." You will come
to a major
intersection with one track going off to the beach past marker
number
one, and the right hand road leading west to the bridge to Pochet
Island. In this walk, we are continuing south past Little
Pochet
Island on the dune road.
You will pass a number
of beach shacks as you walk south.
When you come up over a rise, you will see the vast expanse of
marsh
and Pleasant Bay. That's what this walk is all about, to
see Pleasant
Bay and its environs from the ocean side.
Past the end of Pochet
Island is Sampson Island, which also may
be visited, but it has to be by boat! Further south is Hog
Island.
On your left is a sign for beach access road number two.
To the south,
you will see Chatham Light blinking twice at you.
At this point, you begin
enjoying solitude, watching and listen-
ing to the birds, and spying wild animals in the marsh. The
next large
island to the west is Strong Island; then you see the shore of
North
Chatham curving east to Allen Point. You will pass access
roads three,
four, and five. The colony of beach houses rises up and you
can begin
to see the individual houses.
Walk past access road
number six until the dune road curves east
almost to the beach. Here we suggest turning around and walking
north
on the beach. The end of the spit, now visible beyond the
houses, is
another mile and one-half further south. Find a good spot
against the
dunes for a lunch stop.
As you walk north on
the beach, you will notice that the summer
residents use the beach as a faster route to their houses.
Vehicle
tracks make firm footing, as does the line between wet and dry
sand
when the tide is going out. You now have a little over five
miles
of beach walking ahead of you. Slow the pace down.
Enjoy the walk!
This far down the spit,
you are likely to see no one, until
you get within a mile or so of the parking lot. An occasional
four
wheel drive vehicle may drive by, and fishing boats may be spotted
out on the ocean. The ubiquitous gulls will be present, and
usually
sandpipers.
The enclosed area with
stern warning signs are for the protection
of piping plovers during their nesting season in late spring and
early
summer. Plovers nest right on the beach, and their chicks
run around
like crazy after hatching. By late summer, you can walk anywhere.
Walk up and visit the
driftwood sculpture in honor of Timmy
Eldridge, if it has survived. Past access road number three,
the
beach narrows and is more difficult to walk. Then it widens
at num-
ber two, offering a wet-dry line for firmer footing.
Along the way, if a storm
kicks up, or the wind blows hard, or
the beach otherwise becomes unpleasant to walk on, head in to the
dune
road via one of the access roads. Cross over the dunes only
in an
emergency.
The total walk is about
eleven miles, which will take a small
group about five hours, with a lunch stop. As you head in
from the
beach on the walkway, pause at the top of the rise, and take in
the
view from Nauset Light to the north, with its three flashes, to
Little Pochet Island to the south, and the 180 degree arc of the
sea!