Hahira, Georgia, June 19, 2025 — Speakers from Georgia and
Florida will talk about where to paddle Georgia rivers and legal
issues with that, as well as contamination in the Withlacoochee
River in north Florida, much of it coming from Georgia, at the WWALS
River Revue, September 6, 2025.
Suzanne Welander wrote the book on Canoeing and Kayaking Georgia.
She will speak about that and her work to get the Georgia
legislature to fix its antique 1863 navigability law. According to
that law, river passage depends on navigability, and streams in
Georgia are only navigable if they can, all or part of a year, be
used to transport goods to market. Nobody ships bales of cotton down
our rivers, and for most of them nobody ever did. What people use
our rivers for these days is fishing, paddling, motoring, and
swimming. The law needs to be updated from the nineteenth to the
twenty-first century.
Suwannee Riverkeeper John S. Quarterman wrote about her book,
“It is even more thorough than previous editions, with some
new put-ins added (even Banks Lake!), and others no longer
accessible deleted. Working with Suzanne on the WWALS rivers was a
pleasure, and the WWALS water trail maps and other materials also
improved because of it, adding some new-to-us landings and improving
descriptions. The book contains pithy yet informative narrative and
very usable summary maps, plus admirable recommendations of each
river.”
Rick Davis, Madison County Commissioner District 5, will speak about
fecal contamination in the Withlacoochee River and nearby wells, and
the task force he chairs of the dozen downstream Florida counties.
Back in 2020, after Valdosta’s huge sewage spills, he chaired that
task force, which was instrumental in getting a Consent Order on
Valdosta from the Georgia Environmental Protection Division.
Although Valdosta has made great strides towards fixing its
antiquated sewage infrastructure, and has floated $67 million in
municipal bonds for further water and sewer projects, it still has
spills, and the dozen downstream Florida counties are once again
watching.
WWALS Board Member Scotti Jay said, “We like to paddle the
rivers, and nobody wants to drink, paddle in, or eat fish out of
contaminated water.”
WWALS River Revue is Continue reading →