Recreation
Home Explore by Area Explore by Activity What Are WMAs  

Cary Wildlife Management Area

Managed in cooperation with
Florida Division of Forestry
photo of family at picnic table

Cary WMA is located west of Jacksonville in Nassau and Duval counties and consists of more than 3,000 acres of forested uplands and swamps. This area is managed for many uses including hunting, wildlife viewing, horseback riding, camping, hiking, biking, environmental education, and picnicking. Horseback riding is allowed on all forest roads as well as on three designated trails. Only primitive weapons (bows and arrows and muzzleloading guns) are allowed on this area during hunting seasons. Camping is not allowed during hunting seasons. A 1.2 mile nature trail and boardwalk winds into the forest and through a cypress swamp. Along the trail, a food plot near the observation tower attracts a variety of wildlife, particularly early in the morning and late in the evening. Wildlife species found on the forest include osprey, gopher tortoise, fox squirrel, turkey, bobcat, great horned owl, barred owl, feral hog, white-tailed deer, American alligator, pileated woodpecker, yellow-throated vireo, and the pinewoods treefrog.

Visit Florida Division of Forestry's information on Cary State Forest.

View FWC's Regulations Summary for Cary (pdf file) for an area map, hunting seasons, permits, fees, and area regulations.

arrowReturn to North Central Region

Explore by Area - Explore by Activity - Site Index - Publications
General Wildlife Viewing - Additional Resources

Ask FWC

MyFWC.com Copyright © 1999-2008 State of FloridaPrivacy StatementEEO/AA/ADA
Advertising Statement & Disclaimer

Top up arrow