Thrice rescheduled because of water levels and weather,
the
Dead River Sink Hike drew a small but attentive crowd to listen to Practicing Geologist Dennis Price and see the Dead River Confluence, the Dead River,
and the Dead River Sink,
with cypress, tupelo, oaks, pines, and beautyberry along the way,
on a warm November day.
Saturday is rain all day and cold,
so we’re going for 2PM this Sunday, November 7, 2021,
when it should be 60 degrees with zero percent chance of rain.
Join us for an approximately three-mile hike down the Dead River to the Dead River Sink, where the Alapaha River goes underground much of the year.
We will be led by Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price of Hamilton County, Florida.
He will explain the geology, and how unusual this place is:
there’s nothing like it in Florida (or Georgia).
This is a hike: no boat is needed.
(Also, SRWMD has made a road right to the Sink, if you don’t want to hike.)
Also, time permitting, on the way out we will park at Jennings Bluff Cemetery
and look at the nearby Jennings Bluff Spring.
When:
Gather 2:00 PM, launch 2:15 PM, end 5:15 PM, Sunday, November 7, 2021
Put In:
Jennings Bluff Launch.
From Jennings, Hamilton County, FL, travel south on US 41 to NW 25 Lane; turn left; travel east to NW 82 Court and the entrance into the Suwannee River Water Management District’s Jennings Bluff tract; turn left and follow road to canoe launch.
New date: November 6, 2021. October was overbooked, so we have again, for the last time we hope,
rescheduled the Hike to the Dead River Sink.
Join us for an approximately three-mile hike down the Dead River to the Dead River Sink, where the Alapaha River goes underground much of the year.
We will be led by Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price of Hamilton County, Florida.
He will explain the geology, and how unusual this place is:
there’s nothing like it in Florida (or Georgia).
When:
Gather 9:00 AM, launch 9:15 AM, end 12:15 PM, Saturday, November 6, 2021
Put In:
Jennings Bluff Launch.
From Jennings, Hamilton County, FL, travel south on US 41 to NW 25 Lane; turn left; travel east to NW 82 Court and the entrance into the Suwannee River Water Management District’s Jennings Bluff tract; turn left and follow road to canoe launch.
Bring: drinking water, snacks, and first aid kit.
Also trash pickers and trash bags: every WWALS outing is also a cleanup.
Free: This outing is free to WWALS members, and $10 (ten dollars) for non-members.
You can pay the $10 at the outing, or online:
https://wwals.net//outings
Update 2021-08-11:
New date: November 6, 2021. October was overbooked, so we have again, for the last time we hope, rescheduled the Hike to the Dead River Sink.
The Alapaha River is still too high to see the geological marvels
that Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price wants to show us.
So we’re rescheduling again, this time to October.
The first available date is Saturday, October 2, 2021,
but please check back, because there’s no way of knowing
what the water levels or the hurricane situation will be in October.
Join us for an approximately three-mile hike down the Dead River to the Dead River Sink, where the Alapaha River goes underground much of the year.
We will be led by Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price of Hamilton County, Florida.
He will explain the geology, and how unusual this place is:
there’s nothing like it in Florida (or Georgia).
When:
Gather 9:00 AM, launch 9:15 AM, end 12:15 PM, Saturday, October 2 [TBD], 2021
Put In:
Jennings Bluff Launch.
From Jennings, Hamilton County, FL, travel south on US 41 to NW 25 Lane; turn left; travel east to NW 82 Court and the entrance into the Suwannee River Water Management District’s Jennings Bluff tract; turn left and follow road to canoe launch.
Bring: drinking water, snacks, and first aid kit.
Also trash pickers and trash bags: every WWALS outing is also a cleanup.
Free: This outing is free to WWALS members, and $10 (ten dollars) for non-members.
You can pay the $10 at the outing, or online:
https://wwals.net//outings
Our most recent songwriter wrote his song yesterday and sent it in.
Come on, songwriters, make the competition fierce for that $300 cash First Prize,
with $300 equivalent in studio time!
And for the $50 prize for best song from within the Suwannee River Basin,
and $50 for best song from without.
And for the plaques for best in each song genre.
Everybody else, tickets will be on sale soon, to listen to our two headliners, Scott Perkins and his band Little Perks in Paradise from Atlanta, and Valdosta’s own Dirty Bird and the Flu. Each of the three judges will also play, even before we get to the finalists and the judging.
With food by Hibachi Hwy and drinks by The Pour House.
Scott Perkins singing Hoochie Coochie for the Withlacoochee, Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting 2020
Videos by Phillip Plumlee and John S. Quarterman for WWALS Watershed Coalition (WWALS),
Turner Center Art Park, Valdosta, Georgia, August 22, 2020.
Rescheduled, to this new date of the last Saturday in July!
Join us for an approximately three-mile hike down the Dead River to the Dead River Sink, where the Alapaha River goes underground much of the year.
We will be led by Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price of Hamilton County, Florida.
He will explain the geology, and how unusual this place is:
there’s nothing like it in Florida (or Georgia).
When:
Gather 9:00 AM, launch 9:15 AM, end 12:15 PM, Saturday, July 10, 2021
Put In:
Jennings Bluff Launch.
From Jennings, Hamilton County, FL, travel south on US 41 to NW 25 Lane; turn left; travel east to NW 82 Court and the entrance into the Suwannee River Water Management District’s Jennings Bluff tract; turn left and follow road to canoe launch.
Bring: drinking water, snacks, and first aid kit.
Also trash pickers and trash bags: every WWALS outing is also a cleanup.
Free: This outing is free to WWALS members, and $10 (ten dollars) for non-members.
You can pay the $10 at the outing, or online:
https://wwals.net//outings
Join us for an approximately three-mile hike down the Dead River to the Dead River Sink, where the Alapaha River goes underground much of the year.
We will be led by Practicing Geologist Dennis J. Price of Hamilton County, Florida.
He will explain the geology, and how unusual this place is:
there’s nothing like it in Florida (or Georgia).
When:
Gather 9:00 AM, launch 9:15 AM, end 12:15 PM, Saturday, July 10, 2021
Put In:
Jennings Bluff Launch.
From Jennings, Hamilton County, FL, travel south on US 41 to NW 25 Lane; turn left; travel east to NW 82 Court and the entrance into the Suwannee River Water Management District’s Jennings Bluff tract; turn left and follow road to canoe launch.
Bring: drinking water, snacks, and first aid kit.
Also trash pickers and trash bags: every WWALS outing is also a cleanup.
Free: This outing is free to WWALS members, and $10 (ten dollars) for non-members.
You can pay the $10 at the outing, or online:
https://wwals.net//outings
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea.
So twice five miles of fertile ground
With walls and towers were girdled round:
And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills,
Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree;
And here were forests ancient as the hills,
Enfolding sunny spots of greenery.
Insert three ‘A” and the dreamscape river becomes the Alapaha,
and appropriately so. Yesterday, I embarked on the foolish idea of a
solo kayak journey up 3 miles of the Alapaha from Sasser Landing
(just below the confluence of the Alapaha and the Alapahoochee
rivers) to the site of the 1800s Roebucks Ferry and later Roebucks
Bridge.
That crossing brought settlers and other travelers from
Jacksonville and Fernandina along the GA/FL border across the
Alapaha to Miccotown, the old Seminole Indian town in the triangle
of land protected by the two flanking rivers. The road/trail (gone
now on both sides) continued west across the Alapahoochee at the
site of the early 1900s Beatty Bridge (undoubtedly preceded in the
mid-1800s by an undocumented ferry), and on to Hickstown in Madison
County and westward. Miccotown became the first county seat of
Hamilton County as the settlers suppressed the Seminoles and the old
Indian town faded into obscurity in 1839. Continue reading →
Unlike FDEP’s BMAP plans,
“When a new building code is final in Florida, [Rusty] Payton [CEO, Florida Home Builders Association] said,
“there’s always six months between the final rule and the date
the rule takes effect.”
Because of his organization’s petition for more time to file a protest,
none of Florida’s new Basin Management Action Plans (BMAPs) have gone
into effect yet, which gives spring and river advocates (and FDEP)
more time to try to fix them.
A sweeping effort to adopt action plans to improve water quality in
13 springs systems across the state is on hold after a dozen groups
and individuals asked to intervene with the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection, including one of the department’s own
springs experts.
Thomas Greenhalgh, a hydrogeologist with the department’s Florida
Geological Survey, is one of two people who asked for an
administrative hearing on one of the 13 “basin management
action plans” signed by Noah Valenstein in late June.
Thomas Greenhalgh
suiting up before releasing dye
into the Dead River of the Alapaha River to go into the Dead River Sink,
2016-06-22, Picture by John S. Quarterman for WWALS.
“There are many claims and statements in the BMAP that I
believe are inaccurate and unsubstantiated,” wrote Greenhalgh
in seeking a state hearing on the plan for the Suwannee River, where
he owns property.