Canoeing in Okefenokee Swamp
A trip through the wildlife refuge’s waterways reveals more than just gators and grasses
- By Kenneth Fletcher
- Smithsonian.com, April 21, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
I was struck by the absence of any sign of people, but the swamp still teemed with life. As the sky darkened, I heard an orchestra of night sounds. Pairs of cranes sang together, a trumpeting that reverberated across the swamp. Choruses of frogs chimed in. Night fell, and owls hooted and howled from trees dotting the prairie. The stars reflected brightly off the inky water while the Milky Way glowed in the sky. I was content to listen and trace the stars in the constellations.
The next day, the canoe trail narrowed until it was barely wider than the boats as we entered a thick tangle of vines, bushes and trees. Suddenly, something torpedoed out of the water and hit me. An 18-inch chain pickerel fish rolled off my lap and lay flopping in the bottom of the canoe.
We pushed through flooded forest until we finally reached dry ground. Floyd’s Island is a sizeable stand of oaks, pines and magnolia in the middle of the swamp. I spotted a small herd of deer grazing on the sandy soil. An old cabin stood near the boat landing, built in the early 20th century as a hunting retreat for owners of the Hebard Cypress Company, which logged the swamp.
On our last day in the Okefenokee we canoed on the Suwanee Canal, built more than 100 years ago to drain the swamp and make way for sugarcane, rice and cotton plantations. The canal was never completed, and cypress logging became the swamp’s major industry until the refuge was established and prohibited commercial enterprise.
On my trip down the canal, I spotted a new alligator every few minutes, sunning amid fallen logs. Cypress trees lined the banks, nearly lost in the thick, gray tendrils of Spanish moss. The wide, straight canal eased me back into civilization, leading me to the refuge visitor's center.
After leaving the swamp, I called Jackie Carter, who clears canoe trails in the refuge and whose family has lived on the edge of the swamp for generations. He considers the Okefenokee one of the most beautiful places on earth, and says all of us can learn from it. “It teaches you a lot about humility. The swamp is always teaching you something,” he told me. “People get in there and feel the peacefulness and quiet.”
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Comments (2)
I have just read the newsletter article about canoeing the Okeefenokee and enjoyed every word of it. My family lived in Waycross, GA in the early 40's and my father loved to take us in a johnboat into the swamp. He knew his way around out there, unlike the convicts from any prison within running distance, who thought it would be a great place to hide. They were immediately lost and their skeletons showed up eventually There were many ghost stories about them. It was a beautiful, quiet place with wild flowers and exciting smells and strange noises. I have always been afraid to go back for fear it would not be the way I remember it. Your article makes me want to go as soon as possible. Thanks, Lucy Claytor Davis
Posted by Lucy C. Davis on August 21,2010 | 10:04 AM
We first were introduced to Smithsonian Magazine with a gift from a friend.
As Library Media specialist for a High School, I always included a subscription in my limited budget.
I am glad to once again be able to read articles via website
Posted by Clara Beatty on August 3,2010 | 05:58 PM