Few things are more quintessential to South Carolina than Southern live oaks with strand after stand of Spanish moss swaying in the breeze. Finding those trees planted on either side of a road reaching high above to form a tunnel, though, is positively magical. There are several key places in South Carolina where you can drive beneath an enchanting tunnel of trees, but none are as beautiful as the tunnel found on Botany Bay Road at Edisto.
It only adds to the splendor that Botany Bay Road actually leads to someplace equally inspiring. After approximately three miles on this gorgeous sand and dirt road, visitors end up at Botany Bay Plantation Heritage Preserve.
Here, visitors can walk among the remnants and ruins of a couple of plantation properties that merged in the 1930s and then were bequeathed to the state in 1977.
Along the easternmost portion of the property is a near one-mile sandy trail that leads to one of the most remote and beautiful beaches in the South: Botany Bay Beach.
For those who didn't grow up in the South, a live oak is simply called "live" because it's evergreen. Other oaks tend to lose their green leaves in the winter but the live oak does not.
This makes the tunnel of trees on Botany Bay Road (as with most tree tunnels in South Carolina) an evergreen experience you can expect to have all through even the winter season.
Please note: If making the drive to this locale to also visit the ruins and the beach, the Botany Bay Plantation Heritage Preserve and Wildlife Management Area is occasionally closed to the public for specific events, such as its annual deer hunts. Cruise over to the website to learn more and also be sure to call ahead to confirm it’s open. The phone number is (843) 869-2713.
Botany Bay Plantation Heritage Preserve and Wildlife Management Area is generally open 30 minutes before sunrise until 30 minutes after sunset.
OnlyInYourState may earn compensation through affiliate links in this article. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.