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4 votes

Botany Bay

Botany Bay Rd, Johns Island, South Carolina 29438 USA

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Free
Free to Visit
Open Now
Thu 6a-8p
  • Independent
  • Credit Cards
    not Accepted
  • Pet Friendly
  • Wheelchair
    Accessible
  • No Wifi
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“over 3000 protected acres of natural beauty”

If you want to see the South Carolina coast the way the original settlers did, take a step back in time at Botany Bay Plantation Heritage Preserve on Edisto Island. The 4,600-acre preserve includes almost three miles of undeveloped, breathtaking beachfront that you’ll never forget. Located approximately 45 miles south of Charleston just off SC Hwy. 174, this wildlife management area exhibits many characteristics common to sea islands along the southeast coast: pine hardwood forests, agricultural fields, coastal wetlands and a barrier island with a beachfront. Only this tract has been left undisturbed, providing coastal habitat for a wide range of wildlife species, including loggerhead sea turtles, the state-threatened least tern and neo-tropical songbirds like the painted bunting and summer tanager. Botany Bay is very accessible; you can tour most of the property in half a day or less. Simply pick up a free self-guided driving tour guide at the information kiosk and you’re on your way. The 6.5-mile route begins along a magnificent avenue of oaks interspersed with loblolly pine and cabbage palmetto, the state tree. Look for colonies of resurrection fern growing on the spreading oak limbs. After a rain, the leaves of the resurrection ferns turn a beautiful bright green. When you get to the four-way stop, turn right into the beach access parking lot. There you’ll find the trailhead to the half-mile Pockoy Island Trail, where a causeway built by slaves takes you over the marsh and through a densely wooded hammock. Then cross a small barrier island to arrive at the preserve’s 2.8 miles of seashore. Erosion on Botany Bay Beach has left a “boneyard” of dead trees along the sand, creating a unique coastline you’ve got to walk to fully appreciate. Shell collection is prohibited; as a result the beach is full of whelks, scallops, clams, mussels, oysters, sea stars and sand dollars. Continue the driving tour by staying on the beach access road until you get to another parking area just past the four-way stop. It’s a short walk from here to two small buildings built in the 1800s. The white wooden Gothic Revival structure once served as the icehouse for Bleak Hall. In the old days, ice shipped from the north was packed in sawdust and stored in the tabby wall foundation. The other building is a tabby gardener’s shed erected next to the now overgrown Japanese formal garden, the first of its kind in North America. The camphor, olive and spice trees are long gone, but ivy, several types of privet and a few other exotic plants still thrive along the edges of the old garden. Farther along is another tabby structure. During the Colonial period, it was used as a barn and later it was used as an equipment shed. The road then takes a couple of sharp 90-degree turns, winding along the salt marsh and offering spectacular views of Ocella Creek. This section also features lots of century-old live oaks draped in Spanish moss. From there, you’ll pass the chimney of a slave house and a couple of ponds created in the 1970s as a habitat for wood ducks, wading birds and many aquatic species. Cross the dike and you’ll enter the former Sea Cloud Plantation. The final section of the driving tour features the remains of the Sea Cloud Plantation house and a brick beehive built by slaves in the 1700s as a source of drinking water. Botany Bay is free and open to the public except on Tuesdays and during scheduled hunts. A full calendar of events and closures at Botany Bay is available on the South Carolina DNR website. SOURCE: http://discoversouthcarolina.com/articles/edisto-islands-botany-bay-preserves-plantation-landscape

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Reviewed by
HDFarmland

  • 2 Reviews
  • 7 Helpful
June 17, 2016
Rated

drove all the way there - closed on Tuesdays :'(

4 people found this review helpful

Reviewed by
LucyW

  • 1 Review
  • 2 Helpful
March 21, 2017
Rated

I visit Edisto Island at least once a year and always make it a point to take a trip to Botany Bay. I just love it. The boneyard beach looks so majestic and prehistoric. We usually pack a picnic and hang out there for a while. It's also fun to bike the loop. Love Botany Bay!

2 people found this review helpful

Reviewed by
dfcourtright

  • 1 Review
  • 2 Helpful
August 30, 2014
Rated 3.0

the hiking is nice, with a gorgeous driftwood beach. the real highlight of this place was kayaking the inlets on the north end of the park, traveling the serpentine channels just before sunset with dolphins following us the whole way!

2 people found this review helpful

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Botany Bay

Botany Bay Rd
Johns Island, South Carolina
29438 USA
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Hours

Open now until 8:00 pm
  • Sun - Sat: 6:00 am - 8:00 pm

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    Pets Allowed
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