Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Wild horses of Assateague Island National Seashore.

© Vicky Faye Aquino / Shutterstock

Assateague Island National Seashore

Maryland


A low-key barrier island, Assateague is a place to relax. In the Maryland section of the national seashore, you can cycle along a 4-mile road, hike nature trails, paddle a kayak, check out the exhibits at the visitor center, catch a ranger talk or simply chill out on the beach. You might even spot some of the famed wild horses. If you enter the park as a pedestrian or cyclist, admission is free. Camping is allowed year-round.


Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby Maryland attractions

1. Assateague State Park

2.95 MILES

The Maryland-run section of Assateague Island stretches for 2 miles along the coast and is tucked within the boundaries of the national seashore. Come…

2. Ocean City Life-Saving Station Museum

9.67 MILES

This small but engaging museum sits inside an 1891 life-saving station at the southern end of the boardwalk. Here, the station keeper and six to eight …

3. Trimpers Rides

9.75 MILES

If you really want to engage in tacky seaside fun to the fullest possible extent, hit up Trimpers Rides, one of the oldest of old-school amusement parks…

4. Calvin B Taylor House Museum

9.8 MILES

Built in 1832, this green-shuttered Federal-style house evokes everyday smalltown life in the 1800s and 1900s through period furnishings and exhibits…

5. Ocean Gallery

10.26 MILES

An enormous art gallery stuffed with prints of varying quality (mostly bad, but there are a few gems), with an exterior papered in vibrant folk art.

6. Julia A Purnell Museum

13.27 MILES

While away an odd, rewarding half-hour in this tiny structure, which feels like an attic for the entire Eastern Shore. Highlights include the town's first…

7. Pocomoke River State Park

16.09 MILES

The Shad Landing section of Pocomoke River State Park, part of the 15,000-acre Pocomoke State Forest and located about 3.5 miles south of Snow Hill, is an…

8. Furnace Town

17.25 MILES

History buffs will enjoy this multi-building living-history museum that marks the old location of a 19th-century iron-smelting town.