The Outdoors · Long Island
Muttontown Preserve trips should start with county preserve rules
Before hiking Muttontown Preserve, check county preserve sources for access, trail expectations, and whether facilities or rules have changed.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Muttontown Preserve can feel informal once you are on the trails, which is exactly why the county route matters. Nassau County lists the preserve, and the conservation-district map gives the landscape a more useful shape before the walk starts.
Wooded preserves can be trickier than paved parks. Trails fork, cell service can vary, old ruins invite wandering, and a pleasant loop can turn vague if the map is an afterthought. Before going, check access, parking, the trail map, seasonal notices, dog rules, and whether any mansion, nature-center, or restroom information has changed.
The official pages keep the preserve from feeling like abandoned land. They make the day calmer: a wooded Nassau County place with trails and history, but also a managed public preserve where rules, maps, and current notices belong in the plan.
That balance is what makes Muttontown interesting. It can feel leafy and a little mysterious on foot, while still being a Nassau County preserve with public responsibilities. Bring the curiosity, but bring the map too.
That is a nice way to treat the place: curious, careful, and ready to enjoy the woods without treating them like nobody manages them. In the Oyster Bay area, the Nassau County preserves page and the Nassau Soil and Water map are the public anchors to keep close.