Skip to Main Content

Heritage Community Park and Natural Area

Description

Elevation: 2011 ft

This 169-acre tract of land, bordered by rural communities, offers visiting naturalists access to a variety of habitats, including open meadows, streambeds, cattail and sedge marshes, and extensive floodplain. Over 120 species of birds have been documented at this site. Breeding residents include whip-poor-will, willow flycatcher, yellow-breasted chat, and pileated woodpecker. Spring migration can bring about a large diversity of neotropical songbirds as well as other migrants, such as common snipe. Fall migration, however, probably produces the best birding opportunities. Look for olive-sided flycatcher, blackpoll, palm and bay-breasted warblers, as well as migrant raptors. Loggerhead shrike has been known to reside here in the winter. Other wildlife abounds such as white-tailed deer and wild turkey. Other mammals of interest include long-tailed and least weasels, short-tail shrew, river otter, woodchuck, muskrat, bog lemming, red fox, and bobcat. Four species of bats eastern pipistrelle, big brown, little brown, and red have also been seen at this site. Herp lovers might find black racer, queen, black rat, and eastern garter snakes. Frog and toad species include American toad, pickerel, green, and upland chorus frogs, spring peeper, and gray treefrog. Northern dusky salamanders can be found buried beneath rocks and logs along Tom’s Creek. Butterfly enthusiasts can enjoy at least four species of swallowtails, five species of whites and sulphurs, and 13 species of skippers, including Peck’s, tawny-edged, and Hobomok skippers.

Wildlife Sightings

Birds Recently Seen at Heritage Community Park and Natural Area:

  • Wilson's Snipe
  • Red-tailed Hawk
  • American Crow
  • Carolina Wren
  • Northern Mockingbird
  • Eastern Bluebird
  • House Finch
  • White-crowned Sparrow
  • White-throated Sparrow
  • Song Sparrow

175 species have been reported at this site to date.

Recent Checklists:

Date# of SpeciesSubmitted By
31 Jan 20261Ben Stalheim
28 Jan 202610Reinhard Beatty
28 Jan 202610Mara Grossman
24 Jan 202616Reinhard Beatty
24 Jan 20262Ben Stalheim

See more recent checklists…

Amenities & Accessibility Considerations

Site Amenities

  • On-site Parking
  • No Fee or Permit/Pass Requirement

Other Site Amenities: Hiking Trails, Interpretive Program/Events

Maps & Directions

View on Google Maps

From the Virginia Tech Museum of Natural History, return to SR 412, turn left, and travel west for 0.8 miles to Old Glade Road. Turn right onto Old Glade Road and continue for 0.2 miles to Glade Drive. Turn left on Glade Drive and follow it for 1.4 miles to Heritage Community Park and Natural Area on the right.

Site Information

Managed By:

  • 0

Access Requirements:

Contact Information:

  • Visit Website
  • Sites, or portions of sites, can be closed periodically for management activities. Please always check the site’s website for additional information prior to visiting.

About the VBWT

The Virginia Bird and Wildlife Trail is a network of over 600 greenspaces and blueways throughout the Commonwealth selected for their wildlife viewing potential. Walk a nature trail, paddle a river, or enjoy a scenic overlook and you’ll soon see why Virginia is a premier destination for birding and wildlife viewing.

Related Links