US-MI-Cheboygan+State+Park


 * =Birding in Michigan=

Cheboygan County
=Cheboygan State Park= 4490 Beach Road Cheboygan, MI 49721 [|Cheboygan State Park web site] [|Cheboygan State Park map]

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Cheboygan SP
Coordinates: 45.6477885, -84.41921 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

About Cheboygan State Park
Located on the Straits of Mackinac and Duncan Bay in upper Lake Huron, this gem of a state park has seven miles of Great Lakes frontage. Its rich mixture of habitats is one of its strong points. Habitats close to the lake range from Great Lakes marshes, to cobblestone and lake sand beaches, to open sand dunes, to inter-dunal wetlands. Inland habitats are forested, ranging from dry maple, beach, and oak forests, to moist northern white cedar and lowland conifer swamps. The park offers modern camping facilities, rustic cabins, marked hiking and skiing trails, and a rich diversity of plants and animals. The seven miles of marked hiking trails pass through diverse habitats and offer hikers great wildlife viewing opportunities. Some of the best wildlife watching in the park awaits those who are willing to take a map and compass and set off on their own into the wildness that this special site has to offer.

This park offers superb bird watching opportunities due to its rich and diverse habitats. The swamps and wetlands in the low, wet areas along Lake Huron are good places to see ducks, geese, egrets, herons, and even the elusive American Bittern. Several species of gulls, the rare Black Tern and Common Tern, plus the Caspian Tern, can be seen working these wetlands and extensive shorelines for food. The park’s coastal habitats have a number of threatened and endangered plants such as Houghton’s goldenrod, Pitcher’s thistle, and dwarf lake iris. Many orchid species including the Calypso and ram’s head orchids are found in the moist white cedar habitats. Carnivorous (insect-eating) pitcher plants are common here, but you’ll have to get off the trails to find them. Look for their tall and beautiful, deep red flowers in mid to late summer in wetland habitats in the park. Colorful speckled Brook Trout may be seen in Little Billy Elliot’s Creek during late summer, and concentrations of Black Bass are often found in the weed beds of Duncan Bay near the campground. Bobcats are common in the interior of the park. Although these shy and reclusive predators are rarely seen, campers sometimes hear them screaming at night. The scream is a normal call for the Bobcat, but it can definitely catch your attention if you’ve never heard it before.

From [|Cheboygan State Park web site]
 * Portions of this area are open to public hunting.** Contact the Michigan Department of Natural Resources for affected seasons and locations.

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media type="custom" key="27356006" || L1807808 US US-MI US-MI-031 45.6477885 -84.41921 Cheboygan SP