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Activities in the Parks

Activities in the Parks

Can’t Choose Your Own Adventure? Start Here and Go!

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Picturesque landscapes abound in the Golden Gate National Parks

Paul Myers/Parks Conservancy

With hundreds of miles of trails threading through 37 distinct sites across 80,000 acres of the Golden Gate National Parks, it can be hard to decide where to go and what to do. Let the Parks Conservancy’s experts be your guide! We’ve carefully curated our favorite hikes, walks, and excursions to share with you and your loved ones. There’s something (and some place) for everyone! We reveal some of the natural wonders and historical highlights you’ll experience along the way, but there are plenty more surprises for you to discover. So browse below, then grab your boots and backpack. Your national parks are waiting.

Golden Gate Bridge views from the paths at Fort Mason
Great Meadow Paths Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 0.67 miles round trip

From Golden Gate National Recreation Area headquarters at Fort Mason (the big, green-roofed building), follow the winding, paved pathway across the Great Meadow...beloved by locals as one of San Francisco's most popular "backyards." On sunny weekends, you'll find its grassy expanses covered by San Franciscans lounging, picknicking, and soaking up

Green Gulch Farm
Green Gulch Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 2.82 miles round trip

To get to the trailhead, you'll need to make your way into the Green Gulch Farm. Go past the left side of the farm, and you'll start an ascent.

Soaring red-tailed hawk
Hawk Hill Hike

Difficulty: Easy to Moderate

With stunning views of the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco beyond, Hawk Hill Trail brings visitors to the top of the Marin Headlands. During migration season, Hawk Hill lives up to its name with dozens, sometimes hundreds, of hawks spotted in a day. Wheelchair accessible.

GGRO Hawkwatchers spy the skies from Hawk Hill
Hawk Hill Road Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 0.21 miles round trip

Watch hawks trace circles in the sky from rolling hills in the Marin Headlands. Besides its widescreen vistas of the Pacific and the Golden Gate, Hawk Hill offers fascinating wildlife experiences.

It is the best place to witness the fall raptor migration with the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory,

Hikers explore a newly built segment of the Hawk Hill Trail
Hawk Hill Trail
Difficulty Level: Moderately Strenuous
Trail Length: 0.20 miles round trip

Some of the most eye-popping vistas in the Bay Area—beloved by Golden Gate Raptor Observatory staff and volunteers who annually monitor the fall migration from Hawk Hill—are available to individuals with a wide range of abilities.

Span of the Golden Gate Bridge over the entrance to the Bay.
Headlands Rodeo Beach Ramble Hike

Take Golden Gate 70/80 from Civic Center in San Francisco to Marin City transfer station. A short walk through a residential neighborhood will lead you to the Pacheco Fire Road trail head.

Trail work on the Heather Cutoff Trail on National Trails Day
Heather Cutoff Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 2.67 miles round trip

Start at the southern end of the Coastal South Trail and head east. The trail starts out dropping on a fairly straight trail. Soon, the very tight switchbacks will start and continue, and proceed until you are dropped out in a flat field.

Poppies overlooking Fort Cronkhite and Rodeo Beach
Hill 88 Hike

Beautiful ocean views abound as you meander through picturesque Headlands scenery. This hike to Hill 88, the launch site for Cold War missiles, is a joy in spring: Wildflowers everywhere, great views, no fog.

Poppies overlooking Fort Cronkhite and Rodeo Beach
Hill 88 Trail
Difficulty Level: Moderate
Trail Length: 2.96 miles round trip

During the Cold War, anti-aircraft missile stations were constructed on the northern and southern sides of Rodeo Lagoon in the Marin Headlands. Radar sites were placed atop Hawk Hill and Hill 88.

Visitors stroll through Muir Woods
Hillside Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 1.41 miles round trip

Most hikers utilize this trail to complete the shorter loop through the Muir Woods National Monument. This direction is a gradual climb and connects with the Redwood Creek Trail at the end of the valley. Expect a good amount of traffic going in both directions.

Fog rolls over the Marin Headlands
Julian Trail
Difficulty Level: Easiest
Trail Length: 3.26 miles round trip

This trail segment, technically part of the Coastal Trail, takes visitors past jaw-dropping views of the Marin Headlands and valleys, on the way to a beautiful lookout point and, beyond that, Black Sands Beach. In the spring, you're treated to a stunning trailside display of wildflowers.

View of the Golden Gate Bridge from Kirby Cove Road in the Marin Headlands.
Kirby Cove Road
Difficulty Level: Moderately Strenuous
Trail Length: 2.25 miles round trip

The steep, mile-long trail to the cove begins at the parking area above Battery Spencer on Conzelman Road—eye-level with the Golden Gate Bridge's towers—and descends through a grove of cypress, eucalyptus, and pine.