Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.

Henry David Thoreau

Last Paddle on the Wekiva River

Monday April 4, 2016                                                           Most Recent Posts:
Wekiwa Springs State Park                                                   Finding the Rock Spring Headwaters and Tubing
Apopka, Florida                                                                    Jumping to the Present(s) – Carrie’s Baby Shower

 

 

This morning is my last paddle from the dock at Wekiwa Springs State Park.  At the end of this morning, I’ll be taking my kayak out and putting it on the car for the trip up to King’s in order to paddle the Rock Creek Run tomorrow. 

As usual, the water looks glorious when I set out early in the morning.  What a great way to start the day!

 

 

I am amazed at the size of the fish.  The spring is not like glass this morning but I do my best to get a picture of this guy who has to be at least 2.5 feet long.

 

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On down the run I find the green heron in his beautiful feathers.

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I’ve been disappointed not to have seen the otters again but imagine my surprise when while looking for them I glance up nad see a swallow tailed kite soaring around in the sky above.   S/he is definitely the joy of the morning.   Just look at that tail.

 

 

The bird performs acrobatics in the air above my head with breathtaking grace and beauty.  Also known as the Scissor Tailed kite this bird is a raptor measuring 19 to 26” with a wing span of around 48” and weighs only 17 oz. 

 

The kite disappears over the trees and out of sight.  I paddle on down the water way.

 

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It reappears over and over.  I take dozens of pictures.  This is the best at showing their destinctive markings.  I could easily have watched this bird all day but eventually my neck got too sore from tilting my head back.

 

 

 

The sun has risen in the sky to just the point of my eyes when I look ahead and can’t believe I’m seeing another otter with his wake trailing behind him.

 

In the picture above it is much more obvious than it was to my eyes that this is a log worn by the water.  But really doesn’t it still look like an otter’s head?

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Further along I find a juvenile little blue heron is just beginning to darken into his blue feathers.  I’ve been seeing them along the run every time I’ve been here but they are usually still totally white.

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All of a sudden I see this fellow glide into the water from the right side of the bank directly in front of him.  At my current spead, I’m going to ram him so I quickly start back paddling to allow him to cross in front of me.  Which he does.

 

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No sense in irritating this reptile.  He won’t bother me at all if I don’t.

 

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Sun’s up, turtles are out.

 

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I pass the bridge and approach Wekiva Island.

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While the spring run looks absolutely pristine to me and is part of the Florida Canoe Trail, the environmentally minded folks at Wekiva Island have the not so happy facts which they post to inform the public.

 

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Only one person is around this morning and she’s sitting right across the river from a pair of Ibis in the tree.

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The turn for the King’s Landing Shuttle is just beyond this cabana where they are setting up balloons and preparing I assume for a party.

 

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Nature’s tenacity always just makes me smile.  A tree can fall into the river, be cut by a chain saw and still put out new growth in the spring.  You have to admire such a will to live.

 

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I paddle on up the river and eventually turn around paddling back by the houseboat for the I don’t know how manyith time since we have been here.   it still looks cute sitting there.  I still wonder when someone uses it and what the path up to it looks like.

 

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The party place now has a canine protector who barks firmly at me as I pass by.

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Folks have arrived and have rented their water craft, both kayaks and paddle boards.

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Back in the spring run I find this juvenile little blue who has only the very beginnings of his blue feathers on his shoulders. 

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I find the water monster keeping watch over who is entering the spring run.

 

 

After safe passage, I enter what becomes turtle territory.

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They seem to be on every log.

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A little blue heron with his amazingly blue beak peeks out of the spatterdock as I paddle by.

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I spy another green heron fairly far up and away from the water.

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I know I’m getting near the park when the boats coming toward me begin to multiply. 

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The poor turtles will have a hard time getting any sun if they slide off of their logs for every boat that comes by.

 

 

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I pass a group of paddleboarders as I enter the lake area before the dock.  I’m glad I’m coming in with all the traffic going out.  I will see the spring run one more time from the water when I paddle back from a float down the Rock Spring Run tomorrow so I don’t have to say good-bye quite yet.

Finding the Rock Spring Headwaters and Tubing


Sunday Afternoon April 3, 2016                                                  Most Recent Posts                                                   
Wekiwa State Park                                                                      Jumping to the Present(s) – Carrie’s Baby Shower
Opopka, Florida                                                                            I Get to Do a Volksmarch

 

 

 

After my morning volksmarch (see post above) we spend Sunday afternoon on some scouting missions.  The first one, since I did not kayak all the way up the Rock Spring Run,  is to find the actual Rock Spring Headwaters which is located in a county park.

Wekiwa Spring is in Wekiwa Spring State park but there is no Rock Spring park.  The Rock Spring is located in Kelly Park run by Orange county. Although I find out that by water it is more than 8.5 miles up, by car it is 7 miles.  We arrive and find a BIG park with a huge very full parking lot.

Looking at the map we can see the headwaters there at the top of the blue spring run.  It’s marked Spring Head on the map. 

 

 

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You cannot launch your kayaks here.  But you can launch tubes if you bring your own or rent them from a vendor outside the park.  Today is Sunday afternoon and lots of people have done just that. 

On the map you can see where the put in is near the spring head.  The take out is the last thing labeled bridge on the river.  Beyond that, you are on your own.  Actually there is fence across the river so kayaks cannot come up that far.  SO where do you launch your kayak if you want to float DOWN the river.   That’s our next stop.  But first we have to check out Kelly Park.

 

Kelly Park is named for Dr. Howard A Kelly, a famous surgeon and one of the founders of Johns Hopkins University. On one of his vacations to Florida he was very impressed with the springs which orginate from a cave in a bluff unlike most Florida Springs which come up from boils in the ground. He purchased 200 acres around the springs to preserve it. He tried to donate it to the state of Florida but they had no State Parks at that time so they told him they had no use for it. WOW! He did manage to donate it to Orange County in 1927 and they named it in his honor. Over the years the county has doubled the size of the park.   Take a good look at this picture of Dr. Kelly at the head springs cave.  I have a picture of it from today a little later on.

 

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If you look again at the map above you can see that Kelly park is sprawling.  It’s hard to describe it as the water coming out of the cave floats through a canal into a large pool and then out into a more natural river like area to the end of the tubing run.  The main purpose of this park is tubing.  Bring your own tube or rent it from an outside vendor. Or just lay down and float without a device.  Parking is $3 per vehicle for 1 to 2 people and $5 for 3-8 people.  There is a concession stand, picnic tables and pavillions and a playground.  The park is open 8 to 8 in the summer and 8 to 6 in the winter, 7 days a week.

There is also a campground for tents and RVs.  More on that later.

We enter the park and walk by the Concession stand which has anything you might want or need to eat or to play with in the water.

 

 

In front of us is the large pool that is on the map between the canal from the head spring and the rest of the spring run available for tubing or swimming.

 

 

Lots of people are all around this afternoon but there is still room in the water.  The spring is 70 degrees but I don’t know what the temperature of the water is by the time it arrives in the “pool” which I assume is man made.

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On the map you can see that the spring run leaves the headwaters and branches out around an island.  Not sure if that’s man made too since one side of each is cement to contain the island and the other side is natural vegetation.

 

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From the point, looking up the stream, I can see people in tubes and just floating swimming along approaching the island.

 

From there they go around the island 

either around the right side

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  or the left side.  One of the women in the bottom of the picture is towing the other back up stream.  Might be a shorter trip than to get out and walk around.

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From which ever side you come, you end up in the big pool before floating on down to the end. 

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The water is quite shallow, clear and the grasses abundant.

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We decide to walk down to the take out before going up to see the Spring Head.  We walk over the bridge and find folks coming toward the ramp to get out, walk back up and start again.

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We walk back up too, this time to find the actual spring head.

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I recognize this spot from the picture in the 20’s of Doctor Kelly taken right here.

 

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As you can see in the first picture of the cave, no one is paying any attention to the signs saying don’t cross buoy line.

 

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From here just beyond the buoy line you can put in to float under the bridge and down the spring run.

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Or just play in the water as many people were doing.

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MANY people as you can see from this picture taken from the bridge back up to the spring cave.

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I would like to come play in the water too and float down, but not today.  Maybe a Tuesday, before Spring Break season or is it too cold then?  After Spring Break season at the end of April, I won’t be in Florida.

The drumming of this red bellied woodpeck grabs my attention as we walk back to the car.

 

Once we drive around through the campground we realize it would have been just as easy to walk through.  I read that there are 26 sites tucked under a dense canopy of pine and hardwood forest, ranging from 35 to 70 feet deep with comfortable separation between sites that afford unusual privacy.  This appears to be true and on this late Sunday afternoon there are 2 campers here.

The cost for the 2015-16 Season is $18 for county residents and $23 for all others.  Water and electric sites with a dump station

 

Sites and Roads are hard packed.

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They are advertising for a camphost.

 

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From Kelly Park we drive less than a mile up the road to Kings Landing where you can launch a kayak.  You can see from the map the Spring head, the “emerald cut” around what I called the island at Kelly Park and off to the left, a canal that leads to Kings Landing which is mighty lucky to be the private enterprise with THE ONLY entrance to the rock spring run.

You launch here or you paddle up the 8.5 miles from Wekiwa Springs State Park.  In the map you can also see Wekiwa Springs where I launch from at the park and how its spring run combines with the Rock Spring Run to form the river.  King’s Take Out and Shuttle pick up  is just beyond the bridge and behind, or perhaps part of, Wekiva Island.   Also notice that on this map everything is Wekiwa including the river.  Not so my friends.

 

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Kings Landing is right here at the end of the road.  They have no parking inside their grounds so you have to park on the side of the road.

We do and walk inside where we see their shuttle bus and get information about kayaking down the run from here and getting a shuttle to come back and get the car.

They say the trip down the Rock Spring run is 8.5 miles and takes 4.5 hours. We later find that is true if you don’t just float.

Kings has lots of rental offerings. To rent their canoes for the day including shuttle back is $40. Same cost for a one person kayak, $50 for a two person kayak.

If you want to just play in the run, paddle down a couple of miles, swim along the way and then paddle back the cost is $20 for a canoe. Kayaks are 1 person $30, 2 person $40.   This is for all day. If you bring your own kayak it is $10 per boat to launch and paddle back or anywhere on the Florida Canoe Trail you like or $20 per boat for the shuttle.

We sign up for a Tuesday put in and a shuttle for one.  I’ll paddle to the park and David will paddle to King’s and ride the shuttle.  As it turns out, that might not have been the best plan.

 

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Cute sign on the shuttle bus which pulls a boat trailer.

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I guess they don’t really care if you read the information and rules sign.  Wish I’d asked what happened to it.  Did something really chew it up? 

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This late in the day all of these folks are coming back from their  paddle down 2 miles and then paddle back.  You have to be on the river by 11am if you want to use the shuttle which picks up at 4pm week days and 2:30 and 4pm on week-ends.

 

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Having seen everything we came for and gotten all the information we need from both Kelly and King’s, we head back to the rig.  On the way into the park we notice the sign in the window (blue arrow on the left).  It reads:

Volunteer Host Postions Available
Inquire Within

Looks like you might be able to hang out at either of these two parks for the winter if you want to and kayak, tube and swim to your heart’s content.