10 Best Sights in The Coastal Isles and the Okefenokee, Georgia

Georgia Sea Turtle Center

Fodor's choice

A must-see on Jekyll Island, this is one of the few sea turtle centers in the country. This center aims to increase awareness of habitat and wildlife conservation challenges for endangered coastal turtles—loggerheads, green, Kemp's ridley, and diamondback terrapin—through turtle rehabilitation, research, and education programs. The center includes educational exhibits and a "hospital," where visitors can view rescued turtles and read their stories. Sea turtles lay their eggs along Jekyll Island beaches from May through August. Several hundred rehabilitated turtles have been released into the wild since the center opened.

East Beach

The most expansive stretch of public beach on St. Simons is also one of the most popular in all of the Golden Isles. Entrances sit on either end of the beach: at the Coast Guard Station on 1st Street to the north and Massengale Park on Oak Street to the south. Between the two entrances, this ½-mile stretch of hard-packed white sand is vacation central, with calm, shallow water perfect for swimming, boogie boarding, or windsurfing. Plenty of parking is available, lifeguards watch the waves all summer, and drinking is allowed in plastic containers (no glass bottles). Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: swimming; windsurfing.

Great Dunes Beach Park

Starting just north of the entrance road on South Beachview Drive, this 20-acre stretch of beach runs alongside Main Street and the convention center to South Dunes Beach at Glory Boardwalk (built when the final battle scene of the film Glory was shot here), next to the soccer complex. This is one of the most accessible beaches on the island, with parking at both ends and good shower-restroom facilities. The white-sand beach is backed by dunes, which are protected wildlife areas, while calm, shallow water, and a mild shore break make this a good spot to swim and play in the surf. It's the most popular beach for families on the island. Amenities: parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: swimming.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Great Dunes Park

A newer addition to Jekyll Island's beach facilities is this centrally located park next to the newly renovated convention center on South Beachview Drive. A beach deck and multiple dune crossovers provide access to the hard-packed beach, and a boardwalk offers beachfront bike parking. Facilities include ample parking, restrooms and changing areas, and a pavilion for local events and festivals. Amenities: parking; showers; toilets. Best for: swimming.

Neptune Park

Named after Neptune Small, a former slave who owned property where the park is now located, this lovely waterfront park is located near Pier Village on the island's south end. The expansive park boasts a picturesque oak canopy and picnic tables amid a sprawling lawn, beach access, and a large recreation area perfect for families. The Neptune Park Fun Zone has a free playground, a swimming pool ($8 per person) that opens in the warmer months, and a year-round miniature golf course ($8 per round). Also newly renovated, the adjacent pier is good for fishing or watching ships roll in. Public restrooms are outside the library.

550 Beachview Dr., St. Simons Island, Georgia, 31522, USA
912-279–2836
Sights Details
Rate Includes: No golf Mon.–Thurs. fall--winter; pools closed Labor Day–May

Okefenokee Swamp Park

This privately owned and operated park serves as the northern entrance to the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, offering live animal exhibits and orientation programs for the entire family. The park has observation areas, wilderness walkways, an outdoor museum of pioneer life, and boat tours into the swamp that reveal its unique ecology. The 90-foot-tall observation tower is an excellent place to glimpse cruising gators and birds. A 1½-mile train tour (included in the admission price) passes by a Seminole village and stops at Pioneer Island, a re-created pioneer homestead, for a 15-minute walking tour.

5700 Okefenokee Swamp Park Rd., Waycross, Georgia, 31503, USA
912-283–0583
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $20, $30 with 45-minute boat tour

St. Andrews Beach

Stretching south of Glory Boardwalk to the St. Andrews Picnic Area at the very southern end of the island, this narrow beach backs up to dense maritime forest, making it a quiet, secluded bit of coast and a great spot for wildlife viewing or beachcombing. At the picnic area, a short trail leads to a viewing platform overlooking the outflow of Jekyll Creek—keep an eye out for dolphins cruising near the shoreline. A memorial and memory trail honors the landing of one of the last American slave ships, The Wanderer. Amenities: parking (no fee); toilets. Best for: solitude.

St. Marys Aquatic Center

If the heat has you, and the kids are itching to get wet, head to this full-service water park on the mainland, where you can get an inner tube and relax floating down the Oasis lazy river, hurtle down Splash Mountain, or corkscrew yourself silly sliding down the Orange Crush.

Summer Waves Water Park

At this 11-acre park more than a million gallons of water are used in the 18,000-square-foot wave pool, waterslides, children's activity pool with two slides, splash zone, and circular river for tubing and rafting. Inner tubes and life vests are provided at no extra charge.

210 S. Riverview Dr., Jekyll Island, Georgia, 31527, USA
912-635–2074
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $18, Closed Oct.–Apr.

World War II Home Front Museum

Set in a restored 1936 Coast Guard station and renovated in 2017, this museum—geared as much to kids as adults—features the life of a "Coastie" in the early 1940s, told through personal accounts of the WWII history of St. Simons Island. Exhibits explore how small communities like St. Simons came close to conflict due to the threat of German U-boats just offshore, and how the military shipbuilding industry sprung up in nearby Brunswick. The museum demonstrates how Georgia's Golden Isles were transformed during and after the Second World War and the important role civilians played on the home front.

4201 1st St., St. Simons Island, Georgia, 31522, USA
912-638–4666
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $12, with combined access to lighthouse $20, Mon.–Sat. 10–noon and 1–5, Sun. 1:30–5