Legal access to rivers and other waterways in Georgia is unclear, and federal law may trump state law anyway.
Dan Washburn wrote some time in 2000 for The Times of Gainesville, GA, Access denied: Owners, users spar over land, which applies as much to the rest of Georgia as to north Georgia:
The conflict in North Georgia is a confusing amalgam of the old and the new, of state and federal laws, of mountains and streams. Its cast of characters includes landowners and land managers, bureaucrats and businessmen, environmentalists and adventure seekers — and lawyers, plenty of lawyers.
And much of it involves a splitting of legal and philosophical hairs that would make Mother Nature and Uncle Sam cringe.
Nowhere has this tug-of-war played out more dramatically than on Georgia’s rivers and streams, where the dispute over what is public and what is private is as murky as the Chattahoochee River after a hard rain.
There’s a lot more in the article, including this box:
Getting to the water an issue for paddlers, anglers alike
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