21 Great
Beaches To Take
Your Dog To On Long Island
It is hard to imagine any place a dog is happier than at a beach.
Whether running around on the sand, jumping in the water or just
lying in the sun, every dog deserves a day at the beach. But
all too often dog owners stopping at a sandy stretch of beach
are met with signs designed to make hearts - human and canine
alike - droop: NO DOGS ON BEACH.
This sign is certainly widespread on Long Island. If you were
the stretch the Long Island coastline in a single line it would
cover 1,180 miles - think about a coastline from New York to
Chicago. Surely, there must be a place on the beach for your
dog, right? Dogs are generally not allowed on Long Island Sound
beaches on the North Shore but you can get your dog into the
Atlantic Ocean on the South Shore. Here are some good choices,
roughly heading from west to east:
Nassau Beach Park
Lido
Nassau Beach Park was welded together from three swanky private
beach clubs in the 1960s. If you have seen Matt Dillon in the
Flamingo Kid (1984) you have seen what the beach and cabanas
were like. Over the years the beach became run down and "dilapidated"
often equals "relaxed restrictions against dogs." Today
there is a dog park off Lido Avenue at Nickerson Beach Park and
Nassau Beach Park is open to dogs when the birds aren't nesting
from September 15 to March 1.
Gardiner County Park
West Islip
The Beach Road in this ultra dog-friendly park leads to a sandy
beach where your dog can romp in the Great South Bay. Almost
any time of year she will find someone to play with in these
waters.
Fire Island
Western entrance via Robert Moses Causeway
In 1857 Congress appropriated $40,000 for the construction of
a 168-foot brick tower lighthouse on Fire Island, The tower stands
atop a Connecticut bluestone base salvaged from the island's
first tower that was built too short. The Fire Island Light was
changed from a creamy yellow to its present day-mark of alternating
black and white bands in August 1891. In the1980s the lighthouse
was restored to its 1939 condition (when electricity was first
insalled) and is still an official aid to navigation. The lighthouse
beach east to the village of Kismet is open to dogs between Labor
Day and mid-March.
Fire Island
Eastern entrance via William Floyd Parkway
Dogs are permitted anywhere on the wide, dune-backed sands between
Labor Day and mid-March when driving is also allowed here. If
you have a private boat or take a dog-friendly ferry to the interior
of 32-mile Fire Island during the summer, dogs are allowed on
any non-ocean, non-lifeguarded patch of sand. Dogs are never
permitted on the lifeguarded beaches at Watch Hill and Sailors
Haven. Additional area closures can occur at any time due to
actively nesting piping plovers. If the pounding Atlantic surf
is too intimidating for your dog, you can also find some sandy
access along the Great South Bay. Dogs are not allowed on the
beaches in the attached Robert Moses State Park on the western
tip of Fire Island.
Smith Point County Park
Shirley
The park extends from the east end of the Fire Island Wilderness
portion of the National Seashore to the tip of the island at
Moriches Inlet. The Smith of Smith Point was William "Tangier"
Smith who owned 50 miles of Long Island oceanfront in the 1600s.
Most beachgoers walk to the beach through a tunnel under the
dunes but dog owners need to walk past the campground entrance
to the east. Wooden staircases lead over the dunes and you can
take your dog all the way to Moriches Inlet. On July 17, 1996,
TWA Flight 800 exploded in mid-air 14 miles offshore here, killing
all 230 aboard. A granite memorial featuring the flags from the
14 countries of the victims en route from New York to Paris was
dedicated in the park in 2004.
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Shinnecok East County Park
Southampton
Shinnecock Inlet did not exist before September 24, 1938 when
the "Great New England Hurricane" unleashed its full
force on Westhamption. Still the most devastating hurricane to
strike the Northeast coast, its lasting imprint here is the inlet
cut through the barrier island. There is plenty of off-road activity
on this beach and that means dogs can play as well.
Cooper's Beach
Southampton
This is the main beach in the village that was established in
1640 as the first English settlement in New York. Access can
be problematic - and pricey - for non-residents in the summer
but the sands spread far and wide in the off-season. Come in
December and your dog can join in the annual Polar Bear plunge.
East Hampton Beaches
East Hampton
There are five beaches in East Hampton (only three are life-guarded)
and Main Beach on Ocean Avenue is perennially ranked among the
best beaches in America. Dogs and permitted on the beach before
9:00 am and and after 6:00 pm daily from the second Sunday in
May through September 30. After that your dog is welcome any
time.
Bridgehampton Beaches
Bridgehampton
Dogs are not allowed at any of the five town-owned beaches during
the summer. If you find yourself in town between April 1 and
October 1 your dog can experience the big-breaking Atlantic Ocean
waves at Peter's Pond and Gibson Beach, located east of Sagg
Main Street - only before 9:00 am and after 6:00 pm and only
if she stays within 150 feet of the access roads.
Amagansett Beach
Amagansett
The beach at the end of Atlantic Avenue is open for dogs all
year but only before 10:00 am and after 6:00 pm between May 15
and September 15. Behind this beach is a rare double dune system
that has been destroyed almost everywhere else of Long Island.
If you explore the dunes with your dog be on the lookout for
Fowler's Toad, America's only marine edge amphibian.
Napeague Harbor
Hither Hills State Park
Your dog is not allowed on the ocean beach at Hither Hills when
the park is open but there is a sliver of sandy beach along the
east shore of Napeague Harbor that is accessible from the end
of Napeague Harbor Road north of Montauk Highway (Route 27).
You can hike the dark brown sands north to Goff Point and Napeague
Bay and the swimming is easy for your dog in the gentle waves
that lap onto shore.
Napeague State Park
Promised Land
The state park stretches from the Atlantic Ocean across the neck
of the South Fork to Gardiners Bay. It is totally undeveloped
and looks pretty much as it did when the wetlands here were washed
over by the 1938 hurricane. Access to the pristine ocean beach
is by four-wheel drive vehicles only and can be closed in the
summer for plover nesting. You can also try parking along the
Montauk Highway (Route 27) and hike less than a half-mile to
the beach on the sand road.
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Ditch Plains Beach
Shadmoor State Park
This beach backed by high bluffs can be reached by hiking through
the state park or from township parks from Ditch Plains Road
off the Montauk Highway. Although there are large cobbles on
the beach, this is the last big stretch of Atlantic Ocean sands
on the eastern tip of Long Island.
Camp Hero Beach
Montauk Point
The beach below the bluffs in the old military reservation is
reached by hiking down via an access road from the main parking
lot. The beach is all large cobbles and the rough surf makes
this primarily a beach for surfcasters and athletic swimming
dogs.
BAY BEACHES AROUND THE LONG ISLAND FORKS
Montauk Point Beaches
Montauk Point State Park
These beaches on the open waters of Block Island Sound are not
wide but not crowded either, reached only by hiking trail. Although
the cobbles ease up as you move further west, these are not sunbathing
beaches. Rather, the dune-backed beaches are ideal for hiking
with your dog and fetching in the light waves.
Outer Beach
Theodore Roosevelt County Park
Located at the end of East Lake Road, this beach is fronted by
a self-contained camper-only campground. You can also hike to
this sandy/pebbly beach from the Big Reed Nature Trail in the
park. On the west side of East Lake Road you can pull off the
side of the road and toss a stick for your dog in Lake Montauk
from a small sandy beach that is an East Hampton Township preserve.
Cedar Point Beach
Cedar Point County Park
Although this beach is mostly cobbles there is more than a mile
of frontage on Gardiner's Bay. Stick close to water for easy
hiking.
Wades Beach
Shelter Island
Most of the island between the Forks is comprised of the Mashomack
Preserve that does not allow dogs. But on Midway Road, to the
west of Route 114, your dog can play on 500 yards of soft sand
beach on the north shore of Shelter Island Sound.
Long Beach Park
Noyack
With is shallow aqua-tinged water, this long curving beach at
the foot of Noyack Bay resembles the edge of a tropical harbor.
The gentle waves will entice any level of canine swimmer. Dogs
are allowed on the beach year-round in designated areas, usually
where the cobbles dominate the sand.
Indian Island Beach
Indian Island County Park
A crescent-shaped strip of thick sand has formed to connect Indian
Island to the mainland in Flanders Bay. Some shells and stones
mix with the sand and your wave-loving dog will enjoy a frothy
challenge here.
Orient Point Beach
Orient
At the tip of the North Fork. Suffolk County maintains a 48-acre
open space. This beach and Truman's Beach down Route 25 (East
Marion res- idents only) played an important role during the
War of 1812. A short half-mile trail leads your dog to over a
mile of beach on the Long Island Sound.
WANT THE ENTIRE BOOK?
DOGGIN'
AMERICA'S BEACHES: A TRAVELER'S GUIDE TO DOG-FRIENDLY BEACHES
(AND THOSE THAT AREN'T)
124 pages; 97809797074-4-5;
$12.95
Back to DOGGIN' AMERICA'S BEACHES
Go To Our Online Store
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