Sports
Best beaches in Fort Pierce, Port St. Lucie: Blind Creek nude beach
Fort Pierce Inlet State Park, South Causeway, Jetty Park, Avalon, Gulfstream, John Brooks, Frederick Douglass, Kimberly Bergalis top the list.
Let’s go to the beach — in Fort Pierce and near Port St. Lucie.
These are the best beaches in the area, either popular and packed with people or lesser-known with small parking lots to keep crowds away.
This list includes whether these beaches have restrooms and outdoor showers, as well as other amenities such as picnic pavilions and sand volleyball courts. All have parking lots, some paved and others not.
No lifeguards are on duty unless otherwise noted. All are free except state parks. No pets, alcohol, fires, camping or fireworks are allowed at beaches in Fort Pierce and St. Lucie County — with the exception of Walton Rocks Beach in Jensen Beach, which allows pets.
Here are the 16 best beaches in Fort Pierce and near Port St. Lucie, from north to south in St. Lucie County.
Avalon State Park
- North State Road A1A, 4 miles north of Fort Pierce Inlet State Park or 9 miles south of Vero Beach
- Open 8 a.m. to sunset daily
- $2 per vehicle, pedestrians and bicyclists (use honor box to pay fees; correct change required)
- Includes 1.7 miles of beach, restrooms, showers, water fountains, picnic pavilions, paved parking, nature trail
- Popular surf spot for beginner and intermediate surfers
Pepper Park Beachside
- 3302 N. State Road A1A, Fort Pierce
- 52-acre park next to National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum
- Open 24 hours daily
- Lifeguards on duty during day
- Includes restrooms, showers, water fountains, picnic pavilions, grills, sand volleyball court, tennis courts, pickleball courts, basketball court, paved parking
- Popular beginner surf spot and snorkeling spot because of shallow reefs about 100 yards offshore and Urca de Lima shipwreck, the state’s first underwater archeological preserve located in about 20 feet of water
Fort Pierce Inlet State Park
- 905 Shorewinds Drive, Fort Pierce
- Half-mile of dune, coastal hammock and pristine beach
- Open 8 a.m. to sunset daily
- $6 per vehicle up to 8 people; $4 single-occupant vehicle; $2 per pedestrian, bicyclist, extra passenger
- Includes restrooms, showers, water fountains, picnic pavilions, hiking trails, bicycle path, paved parking
- Popular experienced surf spot and snorkeling spot because of rocky jetty to see snook, lobsters, sea turtles, nurse sharks, tropical fish, jacks and the occasional hogfish
South Causeway Beach
Jetty Park Beach (Fort Pierce Beach)
- Seaway Drive and State Road A1A, Fort Pierce
- Open sunrise to sunset daily
- Includes restrooms, pavilions, deck, bike rack, paved parking lot
- Walk along the South Jetty to see manatees and dolphins when conditions allowed and watch kite surfers on windy days fly across the water
Porpoise Beach
Gulfstream Beach
- State Road A1A and Gulfstream Avenue, Fort Pierce
- Open sunrise to sunset daily
- Small paved parking lot
South Beach Park
Kimberly Bergalis Memorial Park
- S. Ocean Drive and Melaleuca Drive, Fort Pierce
- Open sunrise to sunset daily
- Includes restrooms, showers, pavilions, grills, paved parking lot
- Named after 23-year-old woman who died of AIDS-related illnesses in 1991 after she was infected with HIV by a Jensen Beach dentist
Surfside Park
Coconut Drive Park
Blue Heron Beach
John Brooks Park Beachside
- 3300 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce
- Open sunrise to sunset daily
- 226-acre upland and wetland preserve with 2 miles of beachfront dunes
- Includes wooden ramp dune crossover with covered viewing area, small unpaved parking lot
- Named after environmental activist John Brooks
- Only beach that allows horseback riding tours
Frederick Douglass Memorial Park
- 3600 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce
- Open sunrise to sunset daily
- Includes restrooms, pavilions, picnic tables, unpaved parking lot
- Named after the famous African-American abolitionist, editor and author
Middle Cove Beach
Blind Creek Beachside
Laurie K. Blandford is TCPalm’s entertainment reporter dedicated to finding the best things to do on the Treasure Coast. Email her at laurie.blandford@tcpalm.com. Sign up for her What To Do in 772 weekly newsletter at profile.tcpalm.com/newsletters/manage.
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2026 Men’s Track & Field Season Preview
Over his first two campaigns, Caleb Smith has produced successful efforts in the heptathlon and decathlon events. He broke the school record in the heptathlon, posting his best total of 4,952 points to win the Middlebury Winter Classic. A few weeks later, Smith paced the event at the Division III New England Championships to earn all-region accolades and qualify for the NCAA Championships. He translated that success to the decathlon, winning the title at the Carla Coffey Invitational and Williams’ Farley Interregional Extravaganza. He garnered All-NESCAC accolades with a third-place showing in the high jump and claimed all-region honors in the decathlon.
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Multiple athletes earn all state volleyball honors
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Cedar Rapids wrestler chases her dream, from a volleyball player to a young star in the sport
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (KCRG) – When Maggie Peters is home, she’s locked in.
She lifts weights at a gym in her hometown of Cedar Rapids. But it’s not just for strength – it’s for safety.
“One things goes wrong, and you’ve got people’s lives in your hands,” she said. “I mean, you don’t want to drop somebody on their head.”
But more often than not, Peters is on the road. Her sport is professional wrestling.
She’s performed performed in front of thousands in arenas and on television. Her fights may be scripted, but her dream of reaching WWE is real.
Peters has a background in volleyball, playing at Cedar Rapids Jefferson, Kirkwood Community College and Mount Mercy. But her dream has always been in the wrestling ring.
“I wanted to do it right when I started watching I wanna say I was eight or nine I would just go wrestle on my trampoline,” Peters said.
She went from the volleyball court at Mount Mercy to a wrestling school in Davenport.
“We would have a show on a Thursday night, so I would leave class early,” said Peters. “But at that point, I will say, my senior year was my worst year of school. Once I got the wrestling training done, I was like, ‘ooh, this is what I want to do.’”
In professional wrestling, the winner and loser are predetermined, unlike traditional sports.
“Pro wrestling, I will say, is like a dance,” Peters said.
But there’s nothing fake about the pain wrestlers endure, what they call “bumps.”
“Any time you get put down on the mat, you’re taking a bump. You’re hitting the top of your back,” Peters said. “Higher on your neck, sometimes, (is) not good.”
Maggie wrestles in independent shows across the Midwest under the ring name Maggie Lee. She also performs in front of thousands in TNA Wrestling as the villainous character “M By Elegance.”
“Yeah, I do like being the bad guy,” Peters said. “I’ve worked a mix of both the bad guy and the good guy on the independents. But everybody was like, ‘you look more like you as the bad guy.’ I was like, ‘gee, thanks,” Peters said.
TNA – Total Nonstop Action – is high-level televised professional wrestling, one step below WWE.
“I actually really love the whole TV aspect. It’s very organized. Being able to see myself on TV is really cool,” Peters laughed.
Maggie hopes a full-time contract with WWE is next. She’s banking on it, writing a card to her mother labeled “open when I’m in the WWE.”
“And it was one of many letters. I made them for her birthday,” Peters said.
When asked about the letter’s contents, Peters said she doesn’t remember what she wrote as a girl.
“I don’t even remember what’s in it, so I’m kind of like scared,” she said. “When she does open it, I feel like it’s going to be a big deal and I might get embarrassed.”
Sometimes she’s flying high, sometimes she’s taking bumps.
Either way, she’s racing towards her dream.
Copyright 2025 KCRG. All rights reserved.
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“To have people that know just kind of what makes you tick and what you need on the court and off the court is super helpful,” Tebrake said. “Obviously we’re all learning that about each other but just to come in knowing that there’s people that already know that about me has been super comforting.”
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