🐾 Kids at the Dog Park: Real Stories, Safety Risks & Smarter Solutions
If you’ve spent time at an off-leash park, you’ve probably seen it:A parent strolls in with a stroller 🚼 or […]
Persimmon Park is a hidden gem, offering pet-friendly trails and a natural escape right in Brighton, NY. This small, lesser-known park is perfect for dog owners seeking a quiet spot to enjoy nature walks with their furry friends. With its grassy clearing, minimal amenities, and a wild, overgrown charm, it feels more like a pocket of untouched woodland in the city. Local wildlife such as deer, foxes, and a resident owl add to its unique atmosphere.
While you won’t find a formal fenced dog area or elaborate facilities, Persimmon Park offers a couple of benches for resting and a network of hiking trails ideal for leashed walks. Parking is available on nearby Eldridge Ave. The park is best for those looking for a peaceful stroll, light birdwatching, or a natural, dog-friendly adventure close to home in Brighton, New York.
Persimmon Park is wet, overgrown and wild. Thriving with wildlife, from deer, fox and many types of birds. The only thing added to this park is two benches and a sign. Trails can be very muddy, so be prepared.
Not many people know about this park, yet thousands drive by it daily.
Fairly basic park with a small grassy area and some hiking trails. Not the most scenic, and you are never far from the road. Not ideal, but not bad either. Parking is on Eldridge Ave. off of Highland Ave.
This small park is fairly unremarkable. Its main entrance is on South Clinton and has a small clearing just a few steps into the park. There is a small trail that curves around to Eldridge Ave. There is no play structure, no eating area, and the open space is not really conducive to any kind of activity. This park is frequented by people walking by and investigating and a small number of folks that take a lunch break there.
Very small park, but not well-known. A large owl also lives there too!
Nice park, very limited trail system overall. Mostly just the pictured green area with a couple benches and some small trail offshoots. Can be entered from South Clinton or Eldridge Avenues. No parking, but a great urban park to just sit and take in nature, or walk around and find something new! We went birding, which was pretty productive, and also found a deer skull (now at the base of the sign). Get outside and have fun!