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Masons Mill Park

Description

Elevation: 931 ft.

Masons Mill Park is located less than one mile from East Gate Park, offering similar habitat and wildlife-watching opportunities. This park is slightly smaller that East Gate Park, less heavily wooded, and offers grassier, weedy embankments along the creek. Common yellowthroat can be seen and heard along the creek edges, especially where lined with tall grasses. Urban mallards are in good numbers here, but still allow nesting wood ducks to take residence within these waters. Acadian flycatcher and eastern phoebe nest along the creek, and can often be seen sallying from their perches on tall sycamore, maple, or magnolia trees. Green heron is common along the creek banks, and occasionally, belted kingfisher hunts these waters as well. Butterflies flutter about the wildflowers in bloom on the banks of the creek. Look for dun, zabulon, and silver-spotted skippers, cabbage white, clouded sulphur, great spangled fritillary, and red-spotted purple. Dragon- and damselfly species to be expected are similar to those at East Gate Park, but due to the shadier creekside edges, Masons Mill Park is also home to ebony jewelwing.

Wildlife Sightings

Birds Recently Seen at Masons Mill Park:

    95 species have been reported at this site to date.

    Recent Checklists:

    Date# of SpeciesSubmitted By
    11 Jan 20264Lucinda Hodges
    27 Jul 20256Louis Sokolow
    23 Jul 20258Kirk Gardner
    6 Apr 20254Mary Barritt
    5 Apr 20257Kirk Gardner

    See more recent checklists…

    Amenities & Accessibility Considerations

    Site Amenities

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

    Maps & Directions

    View on Google Maps

    From East Gate Park, continue northwest less than 0.1 miles on 13th Street to Masons Mill Road. Turn right onto Masons Mill Road and travel for 0.1 miles to Mason Mills Park on the left.

    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.

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