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A Glint of the Flint from Thomaston, GA to Apalachicola, FL

Copyright ©2006 Desktop Productions

Lee A. Young, Owner

 

 

A Glint of the Flint from Thomaston, GA to Apalachicola, FL

 

            My journey down the Flint River in Georgia began in Thomaston, Georgia in August of 2003 and it carried me then southward to where Flint converges with the Chattahoochee to form the Apalachicola River at the Florida state line and on into Apalachicola Bay ariving in October, where it performs a miracle of nature.  Apalachicola Bay is one of the most prolific estuaries on the continent.  Thousands of Native Americans came to the area in prehistoric eras each winter to gorge off its bounty.  I suppose one could call them the 1st “Snow Birds”.  The weather during the winter months are pretty mild in that area and the fish, shellfish and crabs live in an ecosystem that is really very self supportive and well maintained.  No longer can fishermen, crabbers, oystermen and shrimpers do as they please.  The money isn’t as good right away, but it will be there longer!

 

            At the head waters of the Flint the Atlanta Airport starts its unavoidable pollution.  The headwaters are located just at the south end of the runways.  The river is mainly non-navigate able though until it gets to around Woodberry, Georgia.  From there to Thomaston it becomes shoal ridden.  Yellow Jacket Shoals is it’s signature shoals and is well shown on the topographic maps and well known by the locals.  The map doesn’t do it justice!  A shoal is where the rock outcroppings are exposed in the mid stream of a river and creates an obstacle to the water causing it to rise to the height of the rock and speed over the top and drop anywhere from 6” to 3-4 feet.  The trick is to figure out where the water is deepest and try your best to get positioned for the assault.  It is generally considered that the shoals on the Flint are no more than Class II’s, but they can be tricky!  In my case, with way too much gear for anyone man in a canoe, I had to spend a lot of time pushing and pulling in the waist deep water a lot in order to gracefully traverse the rapids.  I can only hope that nobody was watching as I fumbled with the rig I had so painstakingly built to my unknowing specifications!

 

            From Thomaston to the top end of Lake Blackshear the current is strong and it takes a little paddling power to keep out of the snags and eddies.  It can get kind of curvy and it will keep you busy dodging the small shoal areas and the growing number of gators.   Not to worry though, for the most part.  These guys are generally more afraid of you than you should be of them, but just in case it’s best to keep a safe distance.  It can get on the serious side, especially during the mating season (November to January) because the bulls can get little testy and protective of their territory.  It’s cool to hear the big bulls bellowing out over the placid waters.  You can almost see the vibrating ripples across the river.  Sometimes it sounds like a bass boat on idol or at a distance.  It’s an experience you just got to have!

 

            At the top of all the man made lakes along the Flint the current slows down to a crawl, and this is where I had to use some “McGiver” skills to try and keep it a moving on.  At the top of Lake Blackshear I had battery power for my trolling motor and I made my way to the dam fairly easily, but that would be the last of the free rides.  You have to understand that I was hauling about 600 lbs of gear on this little outing, and I rode real low in the water.  The drag was immense and there was no real paddling that would do any good.  Keeping batteries up for the trolling motor was about as hopeless as it could get, so it was a real slow trip the length of the lake stoping once along the way to recharge the useless batteries at a dock inhabited by some real fine folks.  Once I got out of the wind and on to a side channel at the lower end where I was to make my first portage it wasn’t so bad.

 

            Finding camp sites up to this point was pretty easy.  There are plenty of sand bars along the sides of the river at nearly every long bend where going ashore is easy and the sand is generally clean and solid.  Here’s a hint though; when you see a sand bar and you are ready to stop for the day, or whatever, be sure to hit the upstream end and not wait until you get to the downstream end because that’s where all the sediment collects and it can be awfully muddy!  The only real rule at these places is to ALWAYS pack out what you pack in!  Nothing makes me madder than to see MY River being polluted!

 

            Stay close to, or on, the water when camping on the sand bars for a couple of reasons.  The first being that there is generally a slight breeze the closer to the water surface you get and the mosquitoes don’t hang out there as much.  The closer you get to the trees the more they swarm and can carry you away!  There were times when I thought that the crop dusting planes were just some of the local mosquitoes looking for a place to land.  The other reason is because when you are on the sand bar you are not trespassing.  Along the Flint there are mostly farms and quite a few hunting and fishing camps too.  Unfortunately not everyone approves of someone camping on their property!

 

            There are no locks at the dam at the bottom end of Lake Blackshear, so you’ll have to portage around it, and my moving all my gear was a pain in the stern.  I lucked out and happen to catch a fisherman that wasn’t to busy and he offered to help me get to a park on the downstream side of the dam.  It is a real nice park and I would recommend it for a good supply and rest point.  I spent my time reorganizing gear and trying to charge up the batteries for the next stretch of water.  You have to be watchful of the dam and listen for the sirens letting you know when they are releasing water because you might end up having to drag your canoe across some muck or have to look downstream for it if you happened to leave it moored too loosely.  Lesson learned and now passed on!

 

            The river widens and slows a little from there on until you get closer to Albany and the small lake ahead of the dam.  There is another nice little park on the upstream side of the dam along the west bank where you can portage.  It’s about 100 yards from the park over the dam to the ramp below on the downstream side, so I didn’t have all that much trouble getting around this one.  It just took a little muscle and knowledge of leverage.  Met some nice folks there, just like all the others along the river, at least those that I saw because there just aren’t a whole lot of folks actually on the water or along the banks.  It seems like a real isolated river when you are floating along with the current, but there are always those little noises from civilization that you hear through the silence and katydid/cricket serenade.  During the early morning hours, just after sunrise you’ll hear, and occasionally get a sight on, a crop dusting plane.  The noises along the river can go for miles when the wind is still.  The corridor guarded by oaks and willows creates a noise funnel that can carry certain sounds for miles!  The Flint River doesn’t really parallel any major roads so you don’t get that constant roar from engines keeping you up at night.

 

            The banks of the river south of Albany take on a different look as you speed along with the flow.  The shores are rocky and steep in many places and the sand bars sort of disappear as the river cuts through a limestone shelf.  Every once in a while there is a bar large enough to camp on, but they get fewer the further you go.  The current slows to a real crawl just before you get into the head of Lake Seminole.  It’s a little swampier in this particular area and camp sites are restricted to landings around the lake.  If it isn’t privately owned the land is too wet for a bed, of course you could hang a hammock between a two of cypress snags. 

 

            Just before I started across the lake north of Albany I tried my hand at sail making and built a mast and square sail for my vessel.  Well, I didn’t get a chance to use it much because that particular lake was pretty short.  I did, however, get the chance to try it out on Lake Seminole and it worked!  My 9’x10’ poly tarp square rigged sail worked real well actually……as long as the wind was behind me.  My only problem was that I couldn’t see ahead of me through the big blue sail, and sure enough I ran slap into one of those cypress trees (snags) sticking up running a branch right through the sail and sending me tumbling towards the bow.  I was embarrassed, and the first thing I did after collecting myself from being thrown nearly out of the boat was to check to see if anybody was watching.  It was Labor Day weekend and the lake was busy, but I lucked out and didn’t catch anyone’s eye!

 

            The wind was my friend that morning, but by the time I made sight of the dam later that afternoon the wind turned and came from the southeast pushing me helplessly into a field of grass and cypress stumps right in the middle of the convergence of the Chattahoochee and Flint where I found myself playing “where did he go” with a 12 foot gator who had an eye on my dog.  The wind was a servant as well as hindrance to me for the more than 4 hours I spent stranded in the grass and stumps.  The wind kept me pushed into the snags, but also kept at bay the little non-biting yet annoying bugs that swarmed everywhere. 

 

            As it got closer to evening I was getting desperate to get out of there and began trying to flag down someone in the line of airboats that I had seen and heard (they can be pretty darn loud!) several times passing at a distance during the day.  As the line began to fade out of sight and up the Chattahoochee, the last airboat in line saw my frantic waving thankfully and turned about to help me.  It had to be an airboat to come to my rescue because nothing else could have gotten too me through the stumps and grass.  They were sure a welcome site!  They tied on and pulled me over to the edge of the grass at the main channel where I sat out the next couple of hours waiting for the wind to die before I could attempt to make my push across the ¼ mile wide main channel to a park on the eastern shore with docks where I could hopefully get some rest because it had been one heck of tiring day.

 

            The park had electricity that I used to charge the batteries for the next day’s push on to the dam, and finally some locks!  This meant I would not have to completely disassemble the vessel and reassemble on the other side again, or any more!  It was pretty neat sitting in that big old lock designed to hold large barges and boats all alone, except for the little 3 foot gator that got caught up in there with me.  When the gate opened we both made a run for it in a swish!

 

            This is when the river makes it’s most drastic change.  The current slows down to next to nil and the shores became swamps.  I had spent several nights previously sleeping on the vessel, and it looked like I was going to have to prepare for a lot more nights on the water.  With a 2’x8’ piece of ¼” plywood I fashioned a removable deck that tied down on top of my gear right down the middle of the vessel and there I had a place to roll out the sleeping bag.  I was able to do this comfortably because I had built outriggers for my 16’ Old Town canoe that helped to stabilize it in the water and keep it from turning over when I turned over in my sleep.  This arrangement served well from that point on until the journey came to an end on the shores of Apalachicola Bay.

 

            Fishing on the Flint is good!  I was able to catch a meal most anytime of the day.  I ate catfish mainly in about every way it can be cooked.  The largest catfish I caught was about 15 lbs, but I lost a few much bigger and I could tell some tales!.  I found out that the best place to catch catfish was at the downstream end of sand bars just as eddies began their swirl.  I found bait all along the river pretty easily, becoming a worm finder extraordinaire.  A bit of a hint; if the ground is dry look in the bark of fallen trees (cypress or hardwoods) and you’ll probably find enough worms for a fish catching day.  There are many other natural types of bait too, like crickets and grubs, but I preferred the worms.  They just seemed to work better and are more abundant generally.  During the day I would fish for small perch along the willow lined shore and next to the roots of the live oaks at the cut banks, and then at night, using my big pole, I’d use the perch for bait to try and catch the big catfish that run looking for food at night, and most of the time I had great success.  Just be sure not to leave a stringer of fresh fish floating in the water at night because the gators and gars like to patrol the shores at night looking for an easy meal.  Another lesson learned and passed on!

 

            All kinds of wildlife abound on this nearly pristine paradise.  I had families of wild hogs come to the shore line to watch me pass by, and I saw deer swimming across the current to get from one side to the other for some unknown reason and nearly getting hit by speedy jet skis.  Just south of Albany a beaver swam not 5’ from the boat along side of me once for about a quarter of a mile before disappearing into a cavern in the bank.  Birds of prey and water foul can be seen daily feeding along the graceful river, so there is always something to see.

 

            There are plenty of snakes along the Flint, but fortunately I only came in close contact with a couple.  You just have to keep a watchful eye, and be sure to flip over logs with a stick before looking under it for worms.  I found one little water moccasin sleeping just under the bow of my vessel one morning while shoving off, but he was so frightened that before he, or I, could do anything he was gone!   I began floating in the brackish water the closer I got to the mouth of the Apalachicola River.  In this area, and during the time of year I was there, just happened to be the time for the black flies to proliferate.  I want to tell you that they are as thick as fles during the last week of the month of September!  The flies were worse on shore, but they swarmed out on the water too.  It is best to have yourself plenty of insect repellent with you if you are planning this journey.  The mosquitoes and flies can be pretty rough at times!

 

            Right at the mouth of the river you come to a tee.  Going right will take you through a cut and out into the marsh and mangroves along the Inter Coastal Waterway and going to the left you go around to the east past the docks with shrimp boats, and other vessels of various persuasions, and into the Apalachicola Bay.  I saw my first dolphin right at the mouth of the river and knew then that I was close to the Gulf of Mexico and near my journey’s end.

 

            The fishing community of Apalachicola is a peaceful little community with some mighty fine folks making their living from nature, and I was met with a warm reception for the most part though it was pretty late at night when my long slow paddling with the tide carried me to the docks near the bridge where the $100,000 yachts were tied, marking the beginning of the actual bay.  My little contrived vessel was dwarfed by the yachts and the docks that stuck up 6’ to 8’ above the water surface.  I had to climb up about 6’ to get on to the docks at the fancy yacht club there.  It had been a long 350 river mile journey and I celebrated by going to a local bar and having myself a good cold beer!  I would have stopped in the yacht club but the folks there were a little out of my league and smelt a little better too. 

 

            I would recommend this trip to anyone who has that desire to really experience nature and all it has to offer.  I enjoyed every mile of the journey and will be looking forward to my next one where I will take the Oconee River in central Georgia to the convergence of the Oconee and Okmulgee into the Altamaha River and on to the Altamaha Sound and the Atlantic Ocean, and who knows from there!  I am looking into making a side trip up into the Okefenokee Swamp, but that’s just a thought.

 

            The experience I had on the actual bay is a whole other story, and I will post this at a later time!  So, until my next post, keep your oars in the water and your sights on the shoals!  Keep the adventure alive!

 

           

 

Captain Natural Lee

Only published comments... Oct 08 2006, 06:21 AM by CaptNaturalLee with 247 view(s)

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About CaptNaturalLee

Who Was That Guy? This is a question I, along with thousands of others, have asked since the day of my birth in Portsmouth, Virginia back in 1951. So far few have even come close to the truth, including myself. To say the least I am a complicated man with many facets to my personality, yet I am simple in my heart. Years of adverse conditions may have hardened my exterior, but I have remained soft in soul, and meaningful in action. One could only imagine the life I have lived, for in these days of modern transportation little is known of the ways our forefathers and foremothers got from place to place. I wanted to find out what it was like and I did, to some extent. I was a post product of the baby boom in the early 1950's, and born unto the couple, Mel and Alice Young. The home was not a stable place for me and what I can remember of my childhood is vague and seems surreal. My mother was a strong woman who threw my father out when I was a very young, Young. His drinking had a lot to do with it, and would eventually be the cause of his demise. Fortunately I have refrained from following in those footsteps, though in my early years I made a short lived attempt. I get sick when I drink, and I don't like to be sick! The mother of my older sister, and two younger half brothers was a strong woman of high moral fiber, a Christian, and a very good provider. The lessons she taught me and my siblings have helped to make our lives better. All of us except for my youngest brother who at the young age of 21 died due to mysterious circumstances I believe to be drug related, but can't prove. My older sister, in many ways has turned into an exact duplicate of my mother, though she is denial. I have strived not to resemble either my mother nor my father, however my mother's influence has molded me in ways that were good for my spirit. Though I don't follow the Christian belief the moral values taught me in the Christian household did shape the way I am today. It took years for me to finally come to the conclusion that what my mother said was right, true and said with devout love. I was inspired to write this poem when I was in my early 40's that basically tells what my Momma truly meant to me. WHAT MY MOMMA SAID Walk with kings and dine with paupers, is what my momma taught me. "No man is any greater or less than you. Just be what you want to be. Don't give up hope, and trust in yourself. It's every persons right to be free. You've got to be your own man, my son. Learn this lesson from me." I've always remembered what my momma said. I'll take it to the grave with me. Her wisdom, and her understanding of life, I will cherish eternally. To say that I was a "good boy" during my childhood would definitely be a false statement. There was little I didn't try to get away with, and little that I actually got caught at, though some may beg to differ. Even in all of my mischievousness I did my best not to hurt anyone, except for when I was put in a fight that generally I never started. Then I would get mean and nasty, and the opponent would feel the wrath of a wild animal in defense of his domain (My well being). Getting hurt physically has been a plague following me throughout my life, and I have acquired a high tolerance for pain, both emotional and physical. The physical pain has been easy to build a resistance to, but the emotional pain has been something that I still have to fight with just to stay alive in spirit. There are two basic sides to this ol' Saddle Tramp. The first is my serious side that tries it's best to keep me in line, and the second is the child in me that struggles to throw me into fits of laughter whenever it can. The latter generally rules and I find myself in some pretty funny situations because of it. It is with serious humor that I try to deal with life. If I laugh at my mistakes I can cover up it's serious implications to me emotionally. It's hard to keep a straight face all the time! Into my teenage years the way I handled life was maintained as usual, and my sense for adventure began to emerge. From the time of my 1st year in school, to my last days of high school, I looked for things that weren't there, but I felt there might be something to see, do and act upon. If the day wasn't going as I wanted I simply changed things. Sometimes my decisions took me far beyond where I thought it would go, and in the end I would be surprised at the exciting outcome. I was willing to try most anything within reason, and my reasoning was lacking in most cases. "Ours is not to reason why. Ours is but to do or die!" said a famous person. I was never afraid of dying, and still I am not. I suppose that lack of fear has opened a world to me that many folks only dream of, and never will they take the step into the unknown. It is the unknown that intrigues me, not frighten me! It is without question that I am a patriot to our country, the "United States of America." Even with all its flaws it still is the greatest country on earth in which to live. Just ask all those who keep trying to get in, and those who are so jealous as to try and tear it down. I joined the US Army in 1969 to do my part, just as my father, uncles and cousins had done. My father had nearly made a career of the army, but his drinking caused him to make some pretty unwise decisions that got him discharged (honorably) before he could retire legitimately. My father's brother, whom I am named after, lost his life on D-day in World War II. So following tradition, I joined up and went on to do well, yet it wasn't meant for me to be a career soldier, so I got out on my own terms, unlike my dad. This was the first time that I noticed that I was following in my dad's footsteps to some degree. There was one major difference, I chose to leave the army! The war in Vietnam was underway when I went into active service, and I found myself in that far off land that I had only heard about on TV. It was a culture shock for me and from the time I hit Oakland, California to embark on the army's mission, I got a big grin on my face that stayed there until I touched back down on American soil. Everyone in Vietnam had a nickname, and mine was bestowed upon me by "Rabbit", a long drink of water from Tennessee. Rabbit called me "Sunshine". Partially because I was from Florida, and partially because I smiled constantly. I smiled because I was scared to death, and I had every right to be. This was war, and people were dying, and getting wounded every minute of every day. This was something that I would experience first hand in a very short time. On my 23rd day "In Country" I became a casualty being wounded by shrapnel from a mortar that awoke me from a peaceful sleep at Fire Base Sally in the Teh Ninh province. It was an explosion that would ring in my ears for the rest of my life. Still the smile was there, sort of brought on by the large amount of morphine in my system, and somewhat because I knew I hadn't been killed! I was relieved to have survived the war, and felt like I had done my part, so it was time for me to go home, even though I hadn't been in combat long enough to get my uniform dirty. They had their shot at me and they missed, so I was going home the first and only one in my family to be wounded in battle since World War II. Upon my return to the US I married my high school sweetheart. I still maintained my patriotism by getting married on the 4th of July in 1970. For another year and a half, or so, the two of us lived as military folk spending most of that time in Aschaffenburg, Germany. It was a good time in my life, but I didn't want the military life as a career at that time, so when it came time for getting out, I jumped at the chance. I had made the rank of Sergeant before I went home, and was proud of my service. However, the civilian life would proved to be much rougher than I had imagined for a young man with little education and skills, and who became a father with a family to support. Making a living in the early 70's in Florida was rough for me, and I thought about what a great deal it was to have all those benefits the service offered, so after a struggle of about a year and a half I went back into the army with the goal in mind to make it my career. (Just like dear ol' Dad?) We ended up in Germany once more where I made my way through the mud and slush as a Combat Engineer for a couple of years, hating every moment. By 1975 I had gotten another stripe and was on my way back to the states for schooling in the art of getting folks to get along. Though I had been working as a Race Relations Facilitator for my last 2 years in Germany I had only had rudimentary schooling and was in need of more to properly do the job. It was something I enjoyed doing, however many of the upper echelon folks didn't much care for the program and the harassment was much too much for me to have to deal with, so I quit! Not just the program, but the army as well. It took a while, but the honorable discharge came through and once again I was among the civilian population. A few years later my marriage turned sour and I took to the sky to spread my very weak wings, but as time went on I grew stronger, and my will to fly strengthened along with my spirit. I had put my time in trying to be the "correct" kind of person that society expected of me, but I bored easily and settling down was not an option that I could see myself taking seriously, for the most part. I did give it a very hard try a few times, and even went so far as to go into business for myself as an agricultural engineer, but that too wasn't meant to be. My business failed, and I lost my second wife all in the course of a few months, all because of my decision to take to the saddle and ride across the United States from Florida to Alaska. "What a hair brained idea" it was, or so I was told by many, however not all felt that way, including myself. I sought a new direction in life that would allow me the opportunity to express myself artistically and challenge me physically. So, what better way for me to become a writer could there have been than riding a horse from coast to coast? That was my thinking anyway. I had no real idea as to what I was going to encounter on such a journey, or whether or not I was going to reach my destination alive. All I knew was that if I didn't give it my all I would not even make it out of the state of Florida. I did give my all, and it took even more, this monster I created, Yea, I called it a monster because for the next 12 years (1987-2000) it would devour all I was, and spit me out like a piece of slimy cud, and who wants a piece of slimy cud from a monster's mouth? So, here I am in 2006, in Georgia, working as a Survey Technician, eking out a living, and keeping my head above water....barely. One thing I have ALWAYS maintained through all that I have been faced with.... my dignity. That is something that NO ONE can take away from me! For the next two years I am going to make the best of my situation, try and write down what I set out to write about and hopefully....hopefully....someone will recognize that I have a tremendous story to tell! Oh, I forgot to mention that I took a short hiatus about 2 years ago and floated my canoe from Atlanta, Georgia to Apalachicola, Florida. You can take the adventurer out of the adventure, but a dream will live on forever, and I have a lot more years to go before I hang up my boots for good.
 
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