It was a good decision. I put in at the Snow Hill Road Bridge. Two cars were parked along the gravel path. On the way in, I saw no cars at the 419 Bridge. Looked like River traffic would be light. I was in the water at 1:40, and began to paddle upstream against a moderate current. Just minutes after I began, a huge alligator slid off the sandy right bank as I approached. It was the beginning of a great afternoon of gator watching.
This photo was taken at 2:17.
This one at 2:40
Profile
After two hours, I turned around. I was about 10 minutes upstream of the high ground on the right as you come downstream. A spot where the River splits, head right, it eventually dead ends, but I always explore the area. There's a eagle nest, and I saw an alligator. As for gators, I lost count of how many I saw. People on the water was easy. Three kayaks. More folks on shore, camping, fishing, hiking and biking in the Little Big Econ State Forest.
This gator was seen at 4:32.
This one, 5:15.
The 5:15 alligator is the same one in the 2:40 photo. Look for the red circle in front of the rear leg. Click on the photos to enlarge.
I saw birds as well.
Anhinga, female.
Blue Heron
Great blue heron.
The tree the blue heron is on would make a fine bald eagle perch, but alas, I saw no eagles this trip. I did see ibis, hawks, kingfishers, great egrets, tri colored herons, woodpeckers and assorted song birds in addition the the ones pictured.
I had to go off the main channel for these sand hill cranes.
There is an opening, downstream left, that leads to a open grassy area. Grassy when River levels are low, a little lake when high. Water levels are coming down. As if today you can paddle into this area, ducking under a log over another and see the cranes, herons and egrets feeding in the saturated grass.
Here is the 5:38 gator sighting. With all the alligators, I though maybe I'd get an action video. A gator bursting into the water with a mighty splash. Of course, this one just lay there. Enjoy the movie.
I think I landed about 6:15, 6:30. According to the Florida Greenways and Trails, its 8 miles from the 419 bridge to the Snowhill bridge. I'd guess I went about 5 miles upstream, then down. For less than 5 hours on the water, my arms are pretty sore. Perhaps the current was a bit stronger than "moderate".
On the way home, a flock of vultures hopped about the side of Snowhill Road. A deer had not made it across.
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