Caspersen Beach has black sand. Caspersen Beach is one of the many beaches on Florida's gulf coast and it has black' ish beaches. Not black sand beaches in the purest sense but part of the beach are very dark and can appear to be black at times.
That same white quartz sand is located at Caspersen Beach. The only difference is it is mixed with a lot of dark brown fossil fragments. The beach stretches for about 2,000 feet and is known as the longest beach in Sarasota County. It lies between Lake Venice Golf Club and Manasota Key Beach. You need not be concerned about anything other than being barefoot in the wrong place. As you can see there are rocks and even sharks teeth in the sand. However, other than that is a very healthy and clean beach.
Parking at Caspersen Beach is free to the best of my knowledge. It is not one of these easy to get to beautiful white sand beaches like to the south. Since it is an almost black sand beach and just a little darker than Venice Beach's black sand most people pass it by unless they are specifically headed to Venice Beach to look for shark teeth and also head here.
Venice Beach is worth a visit also. You can even eat a meal and enjoy some time at the local pier which extends for around 700 feet and is open 24 hours a day and seven days a week. The Sunshine State has many such piers and this one is designed to fish from and worth planning a family trip to. Especially if you love hunting for interesting things on the beach. Venice Florida is loaded with tiny fossils and just one long walk and I am sure you will find plenty.
After you find you shark tooth at the water's edge you will probably want to leave this popular fossil bonanza and head south. No, not to the Southeast Florida Coast but to the best beaches in Florida. Although not typically found on someone's first visit to one of the many Florida Beaches I have saved the best for last.
Florida has many special gulf beaches some with eroded volcanic material and dark sand, others with sugary white sand beaches where you can hear is squeak as you walk on it. Sand that does not burn your feet and that is filled with sparkling quartz crystals. One of those is the nearby Clearwater Beach to the south. From there all of the way to Fort Myers Beach, Siesta Key and Marco Island at the southern tip you will find countless beautiful white sand beaches.
Pink beaches or not so white beaches can be found on the Atlantic Coast. Namely Daytona Beach, Cocoa Beach and Palm Beach. Fort Lauderdale and Miami Beach seem to be slightly whiter. The only real perk is for those who love the turquoise blue water and expensive hard to find parking like at South Beach. Stick with the white sands and see you soon in Tampa Bay.
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