5 outdoor adventures to try while exploring Augusta, Georgia

Augusta offers more than just golf.

What can an outdoorsy person get up to in Augusta, Georgia? Is golf all that comes to mind? If so, you’re missing out on some of the city’s most interesting adventures.

Located near the border between Georgia and South Carolina, Augusta enjoys access to the Savannah River and plenty of green spaces. In fact, the town’s abundance of lush, plant-filled parks and gardens earned it the nickname “The Garden City.” In between the river and the gardens, visitors exploring the region can find places to hike, bike, kayak, and more. For people who know the city as golf-central, this sprawling world of options may come as a surprise. So, whether you’ll be in town for the Masters or are curious enough to visit on a weekend getaway, get inspired with this list of the best outdoor activities in Augusta.

See Georgia’s wild wetlands at Phinizy Swamp Nature Park

Wade into the swamp.

Do creatures from the Black Lagoon and swamp things pique your curiosity? Have you ever wondered what lurks in the murky depths? If so, the Phinizy Swamp Nature Park in Augusta, Georgia, is for you. Here’s what you should know about the gorgeous and mysterious environments you can explore there.

Guests are invited to visit Phinizy Swamp Nature Park year-round, admission-free. And it’s worth the trip. After arriving at the park’s unassuming gravel parking lot, visitors can follow a short and serene tree-lined walking path down to the Floodplain Boardwalk. Here, atmospheric swamp landscapes will immediately draw you in. The boardwalk stretches out across the floodplain of Butler Creek, where egrets, beavers, and other critters hide in the trees and brush.

A forked walking path through a fall forest leading to a bridge.

Since 1996, the Phinizy Center has worked to protect these wild landscapes and build healthy, sustainable watersheds. Before the nonprofit’s establishment, the area was an illegal dumping site, where trash and other pollutants compromised downstream water quality. It took teams of students, researchers, and other volunteers to clean up the land and rehabilitate it back to natural wonder status. Today, educators, caretakers, and other park team members use the thriving Phinizy Swamp Nature Park to educate the community and advocate for conservation.

A boardwalk through a fall swamp.

While a stroll along the park’s beautiful Beaver Dam Trail can teach you a lot about the region, science-minded and outdoors-loving guests can deepen their understanding of the area through Phinizy’s Eco Explorers program. Just be prepared to wade through swamp water and face some bugs. The program takes visitors on a guided park tour, from the boardwalk down to Sunrise Pond.

A fall swamp.

At the pond, park volunteers and researchers like Rachael Gonzalez and Jacob Lott will guide explorers through the process of catching aquatic macroinvertebrates with a dip net. From there, you’ll take your catches up to a nearby covered pavilion and look at them under microscopes. As you try to identify which critters you’ve caught, your guides will provide insight into how these minuscule insects help researchers track water quality and environmental health.

A yellow swamp in the fall with a bridge in the background.

 

Guests may very well come away from the program with a new love for Georgia’s wetlands. And if they do, there are some pretty cool ways to get involved at Phinizy. Volunteers, Phinizy members, and citizen scientists can all help make a difference.

Interested in learning more about the research projects going on at Phinizy? You can explore that, too! The park’s research page provides excellent resources and information on initiatives like the effort to monitor and restore the Shoals spider lily.

A boardwalk through a fall swamp.

Tee times and tournament history for Georgia Bulldogs at 2021 Masters

There are six former Bulldogs competing at the 2021 Masters. Here is tournament history and tee times for the former Dawgs in Augusta.

Spring is in the air in the first week of April, which means the annual Masters Tournament in Augusta, Ga., is upon us.

COVID-19 forced the postponement of last year’s tournament that was eventually played in November. Former South Carolina Gamecock Dustin Johnson secured his first ever green jacket and will look to defend his title as the tournament begins its first round of play on Thursday.

Georgia golf has had a very strong presence on the PGA Tour and just last year at the 2020 Championship, eight Bulldogs made the cut. The field is no different at the 2021 Masters. Six Georgia Bulldogs (seven if you count Patrick Reed) will tee off for the 85th version of the tournament.

Here they are…

The 2020 Masters in a year unlike any other

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak previews the 2020 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak previews the 2020 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.