Here are the signs for Lakeland Boat Ramp on GA 122
for the Alapaha River Water Trail,
put in the ground by the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT)
the other day, along with signs for eight other landings.
You can help pay for these signs.
Randy Patten used to say he’d never seen an alligator on the Alapaha River
in Lanier County, but he just saw a log with eyes and a tail.
He also changed his mind about something else:
I have been against the publication and the making public of our river
for people kayaking it, due to the fact that we couldn’t get people
out of the river if they got in trouble.
Well, after a couple of years of planning with the assistance of the
county commissioners, and volunteer firefighters, and everybody that would
assist, we now have signs, 24 actually, up and down the river,
from Atkinson County to Echols County.
So every few miles you’ll see a sign with a phone number.
And later on, when I get close to one I’ll go live again and show you
what they look like.
But it makes it a lot nicer to know that if we have people looking at its beauty,
which should never be kept a secret, but if something does happen,
we have the ability to come get you. Continue reading →
This morning I was on
The Morning Drive with Steve Nichols on 105.9 FM WVGA, Valdosta, Georgia,
which Steve says reaches 100,000 people.
We talked about
all the things we said we would: Troupville cleanup, water trails, paddle race, film festival,
songwriting contest, outings, and more.
Here’s
the video extracted from WVGA’s facebook live.
Suwannee Riverkeeper on Steve Nichols Drive-time Radio 2018-04-24
Video by Black Crow Media for WVGA 105.9 FM, Valdosta, GA
I don’t know why the video is mirror-flipped, but below are a few stills right-way around.
If you want to see the whole morning’s video, it’s
on the show’s website.
This interview runs about -23:40 to -1:20.
Received April 21, 2018. I’ve added some links. -jsq
Seven of us drove down from north Georgia to the Alapaha for a long
weekend paddling trip starting April 12. I had long thought of
making this trip, especially because the
Canoeing and Kayaking Guide to Georgia
rated it as one of the state’s most scenic rivers,
“A+.”
We chose the upper stretches, between Willacoochee
and Lakeland. One of our group arranged, through extended family, to
“camp” the night before putting in, at a house in Lax,
just a few miles from
the GA-135 bridge where we we started out the
next day.
We launched with four boats, three canoes and a kayak, and
found the river every bit as scenic as the guide described. We
enjoyed the forests of cypress, tupelo, pine, oaks, maples, birch
and willow. And the wildlife was equally magnificent: ibis, geese,
egrets, herons, buzzards, woodpeckers, beavers (evident through
their marks on the trees), and deer and raccoon tracks on the
beaches.
First Camp: a beach on a point
The paddling was nice and easy, making about 3 mph without breaking
a sweat. We had a few tight spots, including Continue reading →
Here are Gretchen Quarterman and Dave Hetzel at Heather Brasell’s annual
A Day in the Woods
at the Gaskins Forest Education Center near Alapaha, Berrien County, Georgia.
Sometimes it takes paddlers from Atlanta to alert us to a river obstruction,
in this case Robert Marshall about the Alapaha River:
A group of seven of us mostly from Atlanta paddled from GA-135 south
of Willacoochee, to US-129 east of Lakeland, this last weekend.
Loved the river, and appreciate all your organization does to
promote its preservation.
You probably already know this, but there is a huge tree totally
blocking the river, about halfway between the GA-168 bridge and the
US-129 bridge. Water level at Statenville was about 3.5 during our
trip. The tree’s top surface was probably a foot and a half above
water level, and it spanned from bank to bank. We portaged on the
right side.
You’ve already seen the videos of the two resolutions, for the
Withlacoochee and Little River Water Trail (WLRWT)
and the
Alapaha River Water Trail (ARWT).
Here are videos of three WWALS members thanking Valdosta Mayor and Council
for those, plus three festivals.
We call WWALS a coalition because many people
are involved, from many backgrounds, doing many different things
to conserve and advocate for our watersheds being swimmable, fishable,
and at least our well water drinkable.
It wouldn’t hurt for some WWALS members,
especially ones who live in Valdosta, to
stand up and thank the City Council in Citizens to be Heard at the end of the meeting,
Let’s not count our chickens before they’re hatched,
since they could modify the resolutions or not pass them,
but here are the PDFs I sent them for the
WLRWT
and the
ARWT.
At Heather Brasell’s annual outdoor event at the
Gaskins Forest Education Center,
WWALS will have a table as usual, thanks to WWALS Ambassador Dave Hetzel.
Photo:
WG Bailey of Dave Hetzel at WWALS table, 2015-04-18.
The GFEC backs up to several miles of the Alapaha River
on the
Alapaha River Water Trail,
and is itself an excellent example of native longleaf and riparian forest.