Home › Field Notes › Withlacoochee River
From the Blackwater · Withlacoochee

3 Days Alone on the Withlacoochee, the River That Turns Clear as Glass

Blackwater Outdoor Journeys · a solo canoe camping trip toward Madison Blue Springs

In short: This is a solo canoe camping trip down the Withlacoochee River in north Florida, with a trolling motor already broken once and a fix that would not hold. The heart of it is a night alone on a tiny limestone island in the middle of the river, hammock strung between two trees, an MRE for lunch and gumbo for supper. The next morning it opens up at Madison Blue Springs, where the water runs clear and cold and meets the tannic river the color of sweet tea.

A night on a limestone island

Seven miles downriver a decision was waiting that would end the trip early, but first the river handed me a gift. Right in the middle of the Withlacoochee sat a little limestone island, and I knew it the second I saw it. This might be home. I got out, stretched my legs, and set the hammock from one tree to a crooked one across the way, with the rainfly rigged back into the trees. I had to trim a few limbs so they would not touch, but it worked. The current ran hard on both sides, and I could not imagine swimming against it. That is the beauty of a trip like this. As long as I make it out tomorrow, all is good.

MREs, gumbo, and a redbreast

For lunch I tried an MRE, a honey barbecue beef and bread, and I will tell you it gives you real respect for our military eating that every day. It is not bad, just a unique preserved flavor. I climbed in that hammock about 3:30 and fell dead asleep, then got up and tossed a line in. It barely hit the water before a little redbreast took it. Supper was quick and easy, chicken and sausage gumbo with a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, and I said grace and thanked the Lord for holding off the rain and letting me find such a beautiful spot in the shade and out of the sun.

Where the water turns clear as glass

The second night was rougher. I had forgotten my medicine, woke around midnight, took it, and laid there until two in the morning before a crow finally called me awake at six. By 9:30 Saturday I reached Madison Blue Springs near Live Oak, Florida, with people already in the water. The spring pushes out clear and cold, and right where it meets the tannic waters of the Coochie the whole thing turns the color of sweet tea, two waters becoming one. A nice man named Nile, like the river, took my GoPro down and swam it into the cave while I sat in the cool of it and watched. A long way from where the trip began.

Knowing when to call it

Past the springs the motor started spinning loose on the shaft again. The MacGyver fix was slipping, the Suwannee was still seven miles ahead, and a man at the boat ramp warned me about a bad set of shoals I would have to portage around. So I made the call, take out Saturday, and turn a three nighter into a two. When the boat ramp finally came into view we almost paddled right past it. Two nights and three days on the Withlacoochee, and I had a blast every mile.

What this trip teaches

Solo island camping, field-repairing gear, reading shoals, and knowing when to shorten a trip. It is all in the Canoe Camping Playbook.

Read the Canoe Camping Playbook

Questions about the Withlacoochee

Where is Madison Blue Springs?

It is a state park on the Withlacoochee River near Live Oak, Florida. The spring pushes out clear and cold, and where it meets the tannic river water the two blend into the color of sweet tea.

Why does the river turn clear as glass?

The Withlacoochee runs dark and tannic from the swamps upstream, but springs like Madison Blue push cold, clear water up from the aquifer. Right where the spring meets the river you can watch the two waters becoming one.

Is it safe to camp alone on a river island?

It can be, if you pick high solid ground, set your shelter for wind and rain, secure your gear and food, and let someone know your route and takeout day. On this trip a tiny limestone island made a fine one-night camp.

Come paddle with the crew

Trip plans, gear systems, and a community of people who actually go. Free to join.

Join THE CAMPFIRE, free