History & Culture · Capital Region
Schodack Rests on the River Island
Schodack Island State Park gives Schodack a Hudson River landscape of shoreline, trails, estuary habitat, and local history.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Schodack Island makes the town feel more like a Hudson River place than a name you pass on the Thruway.
New York State Parks describes Schodack Island State Park with campsites, a bike trail, kayak and canoe access, picnic areas, and signs about historic and environmental significance. The state reservation page gives the place its scale: about seven miles of Hudson River and Schodack Creek shoreline around a 1,052-acre park, with State Estuary designation, a Bird Conservation Area, and eight miles of multi-use trails.
That is a lot of river life for one town edge. Schodack gets shoreline, camping, cottonwoods, paddling, bird habitat, and quiet trails in one public landscape.
The island also changes an early read of the map. Schodack is not simply south of Albany, near exits and river crossings. It has a place where the Hudson slows the pace down and lets the town show its softer side.
On a good day, the park reads as Schodack’s river lesson: water on both sides, woods close by, boats launching, and history on the signs along the way.