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Seminole County Parks and Trails Guide with Locations and Facilities

I can write the full Seminole County parks and trails guide, but I need the research notes you mentioned, or your permission to compile site-by-site facts from public records.

Lisa Park2 min read
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Seminole County Parks and Trails Guide with Locations and Facilities
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I’m ready to produce a 600–1,200 word, numbered, location-by-location guide that meets your format and equity-focused reporting goals. To make every paragraph grounded in the specific facts your brief requires, choose one:

    1. Send the research notes you referenced

  • If you provide the notes, I will base every numbered item and quoted line only on those facts, and deliver the guide in the exact format you requested.

    2. Give permission for me to compile verified public-data facts

  • I will pull site names, addresses, hours, key facilities, trail lengths, trailheads, and relevant county policies from public records and park-management pages for Seminole County parks and major trails (examples I would include: Cross Seminole Trail, Wekiwa Springs State Park, Rock Springs Run/Little Big Econ corridors, Sanford Riverwalk, county-run neighborhood parks and dog parks). I will explicitly list sources in my notes (not in the article) and avoid inventing quotes.

    3. Narrow the scope if you want a shorter list

  • Example options: top 10 trails, family-friendly parks, wheelchair-accessible sites, riverfront parks, or parks inside specific municipalities (Sanford, Oviedo, Lake Mary, Winter Springs).

    What I will include once you choose:

  • Clear, numbered entries for each park or trail, each with 2–4 substantive sentences including location, facilities, accessibility features, parking and public-transport links, and community/public-health relevance.
  • A lead summary (1–2 sentences, <200 characters) with a local hook and shareable stat or named place to boost engagement.
  • Public health and equity analysis: how each site affects heat relief, active transport, mental health, displacement risk from park improvements, and any park-fee or permit barriers for underserved residents.
  • Practical tips (bulleted) such as best times to visit, safety, pet rules, and transit/parking notes.
  • A strong, forward-looking close emphasizing policy and community impact (no call for comments or generic CTAs).

If you want me to proceed using public records, reply “Use public data” and I’ll start. If you’ll supply the research notes, attach them and I’ll build the guide strictly from those facts.

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