Find the top rated dog walking trails in Seaside, whether you're looking for an easy short dog walking trail or a long dog walking trail, you'll find what you're looking for. Click on a dog walking trail below to find trail descriptions, trail maps, photos, and reviews.




Dangerous glorified sidewalk marketed as a trail. Rode whole route out and back. Poor condition multi surface with sand, gravel broken surface or whatever a business or home owner chooses to use. Poorly marked as a trail. Blind driveways throughout too many close calls to count. This is not a bike trail but a marketing idea. Ride the whole trail from end to end before you get families with children on this route.
Nice scenic ride. It was a little hectic with the construction and going through the towns, especially around spring break. But for just a leisurely ride with lots of shops and food places to stop at not bad at all.
Rode the entire length of this trail from Inlet Beach to Topsail State Park. Online, the state and others promote this trail as one of the best in the state. It runs through some of the most beautiful beach towns and some of the most hyper expensive real estate around. Why then is this trail so poorly engineered and why does the state of Florida allow this trail to deteriorate to level that it has? Bumps, cracks, washouts, missing segments, etc and such a heavily used trail. Anyhow, once is enough for this trail I think, as my arms and back are gonna need some ibuprofen tonight…
Nice trail. We rode only 10 miles from Dune Allen Beach to Grayson Beach and back, limited by time and weather. We're in our early and late 60s. Easy ride. Pavement in good shape. Varied seashore properties kept our interest plus some good nature. In January path traffic very light.
Yes it’s beside the highway, but it’s safe and still picturesque. We parked in Rosemary Beach at a free 3 hour parking spot. It was a Tuesday 1pm in November and there were plenty of parking. We went west and stayed on the left side as it was shadier all the way to Deer Lake State Park where we entered to check out the beach access there and used the restrooms. Hardly any other walkers or bikers. Such a fun safe leisurely drive. Got to see all the new architecture going up that has Greek vibes. Stopped at Pizza by the Sea for lunch and had great pizza and margs.
Yes there are many crossings throughout the 3 miles…maybe 4 or so crossings but a quiet easy ride. There was a bike fixing station next to a water fountain along the ride that my husband used to tighten his brakes which was making a loud noise. This was cool. We parked at the Ray Wishart Trail Head 2919 US-231, Panama City, FL
Great trail, allow plenty of time to explore as much of the trail as possible. Different terrains to keep the trail exciting. Went in November so the weather was great and it wasn’t crowded at all. We parked at the Frank Brown Park for free and had a nice ride before we made it to the conservatory. There’s trailhead parking closer to the conservatory by the bathrooms but not as much parking.
3 star trail upgraded to 4 stars due to access to beaches via public access ways and state parks. Be sure to stop at Deer Lake State Park and walk your bike on the walkway through the dunes to the beach if it’s not too busy. Lots to see and enjoy, expect a rough trail through tourist beach towns with lots of bikes and pedestrians. North end trail is much smoother.
but is too short. I rode from Hwy 231 entrance crossing several streets including Hwy. 77, and they were all safe. The paintings on the walkway near the Hwy 231 entrance are entertaining. Met joggers, bicyclists and others walking. Hope the trail will be completed all the way to old oil terminal soon.
I spent the month of January, riding this trail. The area was a strange interface of crowded developments and state parks. There are many roads and driveways intersecting the trail. I imagine, at the height of the Spring Break Season, the crowds would be terrible.
Not a fan. Very busy because there is no place else to ride. Crosses driveways, roads, nothing to see of the coastline. The development is out of control. We turned around after about six miles and headed back to the state park.
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