Virginia offers horses, birdwatching, no crowds
Sure, summer is nice on Assateague Island — but so is springtime
![]() | A wild horse grazes on Assateague Island, a barrier island off the coast of Maryland and Virginia. |
Beth J. Harpaz / AP |
ASSATEAGUE ISLAND, Va. - Some 40,000 spectators crowd in here each July to watch the famed Chincoteague Wild Pony Swim. That's when the horses that inhabit part of this barrier island off the coast of Maryland and Virginia are rounded up for a 3-minute swim across the channel.
Beach resorts in the area, including Ocean City, Md., also attract thousands of visitors each summer. Rooms at the best hotels are expensive and can be hard to come by.
But there is an alternative.
Go now, as winter turns to spring. The area is part of the Atlantic flyway for migrating shorebirds, and even amateurs can enjoy the birdwatching. The roads, beaches and hiking trails through the woods and dunes are quiet and uncrowded. And best of all, you might snare a private viewing of the shaggy brown and white horses that make this place so famous.
Start your visit on the southern end of Assateague Island at the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, just across a bridge from the smaller island of Chincoteague, Va. (The northern part of the island belongs to Maryland.) This is where the famous Pony Swim takes place, and where the children's book "Misty of Chincoteague" is set. Some of the rounded-up foals and yearlings are auctioned off to thin out the herd, with proceeds going to support the Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Department.
Take a slow drive along Beach Road. Blue herons and white egrets are easy to spot fishing and flying by the waterways, along with turtles, swans and other wildlife.
From there, the beach is a short drive. It's too cold to swim this time of year, but you can run your toes through the sand, dip them in the ocean for a chill-thrill, and look for seashells. If you're there late in the day, the 3-mile Wildlife Loop is open to cars from 3 p.m. to dusk. You'll see more birds here, and also maybe white-tail or Sika deer.
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Then we headed back to the island, this time to the Maryland end, just over a bridge from Ocean City. While the horses on the Virginia side stay in the Black Duck Marsh, the horses on the Maryland side are free to roam.
They could be standing by the side of the road near the park entrance as you drive by. Or you might have to hike all three of the main trails in the Maryland district of Assateague Island National Seashore - the Life of the Dunes, Life of the Marsh and Life of the Forest trails, each one a half-mile loop - just to get a glimpse.
After thinking we might not find them at all, there they were, so still and silent as we came upon them along the Life of the Forest Trail that I wondered whether perhaps we'd walked right past them elsewhere.
We were the only ones on the trail that day. Knowing that the crowds would descend in just a few months made our private viewing all the more special.
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