Toft's Point Natural Area (Baileys Harbor)
Nature & Parks· Door County

Toft's Point Natural Area (Baileys Harbor)

Good forOutdoor lovers

Toft Point occupies a mile-wide peninsula on Door County's Lake Michigan shore, pinched between Moonlight Bay to the north and Baileys Harbor to the south — 732 acres owned jointly by the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and the Wisconsin chapter of The Nature Conservancy. The habitat mix is dense for the acreage: a relict boreal strip of balsam fir and white spruce along the shoreline, mesic woods of sugar maple, yellow birch, hemlock, and white pine inland, and a cedar-dominated wet-mesic forest and calcareous sedge meadow rimming Moonlight Bay. Limestone cobble beach and wave-cut dolomite cliffs line more than two miles of shoreline.

More than 440 vascular plant species grow here, alongside one of Wisconsin's most diverse bryophyte floras and several rare orchids. Seventeen warbler species nest in the peninsula's forest canopy. Toft Point was designated a State Natural Area in 1967 and later recognized as a National Natural Landmark.

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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.