Please Note, this is not an official Sierra Club outing. You must preregister directly with Lars Anderson to participate - (386) 497-4214.
Fees: This one is $55 for Sierra Club members (normally $65). With your own boat it will be $45 for Sierra Club members (usually $55).
There are few places, in Florida or elsewhere, where you can find as many beautiful and unique springs as are found along the middle Suwannee River. On this trip, we'll visit Telford, Bathtub, Convict, Running and Royal springs.
This is a relatively wide section of the Suwannee, averaging 300 - 400 feet across, that flows lazily in long, sweeping curves. Stained dark brown with tannins, much of it having come from the swampy headwaters of the Okefenokee swamp, contrast sharply with sandy white beaches and sloping bluffs. Perched above the riverbank and stretching unseen for miles in all directions, mixed forests of pine and oak dominate. It's a higher, drier terrain than we experience on our "swampier" rivers, with nice, expansive vistas - plenty of Kodak moments.
The width of this section can make it sunny and hot or breezy at times. It's a fairly long stretch too (about 11 miles) and usually takes us about 4 - 4.5 hours, including swim and lunch stops at the springs.
Wildlife
At this time of year, Middle Suwannee is the stomping grounds (or rather, splashing grounds) of the amazing Gulf sturgeon. Unlike some wildlife encounters, spotting sturgeons takes no skill at all. Just keep your eye trained to the open water for a few moments and you'll likely see a glistening, 6 - 7-foot-long torpedo launch into the air. Then, with a grace that defies it's 80 - 90 pounds (the largest are nearly 200 pounds), and the joie de vivre of a sparrow, it arches through the air, spinning and gyrating in wild celebration of its momentary freedom, before plunging back into the river.
On average, we see a few dozen of these primitive fish on this trip during the spring and summer months. As with mullet, their reason for jumping is still a mystery. Theories include predator avoidance, gill cleaning and communication, but the verdict is still out. Their reason for coming here is better understood - they're spawning. During this period, they are totally devoted to the business of reproduction. Even the basic function of eating is put on hold until they return to the open Gulf in the fall.
In general, we see less wildlife on this part of the Suwannee than we are used to seeing on some of our other trips. Wading birds prefer shallower, marshier waters while upland species such as perching birds, woodpeckers and raptors are harder to spot in forest set so far back from the water.
Other animals that live along this section of the Suwannee include such upland species as deer, squirrels and wild hog. Beavers live here too, but because they are nocturnal, we're more likely to see their handy work such as chewed branches and tree trunks.