The large alligator off Hontoon Island State Park with some of the houseboat rentals on the opposite shore. |
Over two days we hiked all the trails at Hontoon Island State Park, which has finally reopened but only for day use. |
Cyprus are very common along Florida rivers, and we learned that the tree roots sticking up are called Cyprus knees. |
Before cruising to Silver Glen Springs, we all gathered at St. Johns River Grille, a popular pub with docks on the river. |
We came to the St. Johns River along with 7 other Rosborough boats at the invitation of fellow Rosborough owner Dennis Robbins and Laurie Shipp, who live in Astor, right next to a great boat ramp and parking lot where we could leave our truck and trailer.
Our caravan on Blue Creek. |
Eight Rosboroughs at Silver Glen Springs - Neo, Boundless, Lucky Turn, Boomerang, Pronto, Salty Paws, Grumpy and Dream Come True. |
Molly paddleboard for the first time at Silver Glenn Springs. |
in the spring, saw a couple of manatees, numerous turtles, and one alligator. The next afternoon
Molly snorkeling at Silver Glen. |
Sunrise at Salt Springs. |
Salty Paws and Grumpy at Salt Springs. |
we and Rosborough legend and double Great Looper John Hauck on Grumpy accepted our invitation to join us crossing the skinny bar to go to Salt Springs, 10 miles to the north. The next morning Molly and I also snorkeled that large spring.
The St. Johns is one of the few rivers in the US that flows north. (The St. John in Maine also flows north for half of its length!) The river is also one of the laziest rivers in the country as the St. Johns drops only one inch every mile over its 310-mile journey to the Atlantic. Hurricanes Ian and Nicole in 2022 collectively dropped almost 30 inches of rain on the watershed, raising the river level over 6.5 feet above normal. It then took the better part of three months for the River’s water levels to return to normal. The flooding overwhelmed marinas, river parks and more, and it will likely take another year for there to be a full recovery. Much of Hontoon Island was under water for weeks, and the park facilities will not be fully operational until December 2023 at the earliest.
Dave Rowe captivated the crowd at Sullivan's Irish Pub in Sanford. |
Tory loved her first ice cream cup ever in Sanford. |
The town waterfront was also decorated with several plaques
describing various aspects of town and Florida history. We
enjoy learning about the history of the places we visit, and here we made a
connection to something we learned on our 2nd trip to the Bahamas in
early 2020 about the sad and courageous tale of the Seminoles.
The Spanish claimed dominion over Florida for most of the
roughly 300 years beginning in 1513 when Juan Ponce De Leon came ashore near
present-day St. Augustine. Spanish rule
was first marked by conflict with France and then border wars with the English
and England’s Native American allies. Then the US made incursions in the first of
three wars with the Seminoles, initially to recapture runaway slaves living
among the Seminoles and then seizing some territory. Finally in 1821 now debt-ridden Spain seceded
Florida to the US in exchange for the US absorbing $5 million of claims by US
citizens again Spain.
Seminole means “Free People.” We are particularly intrigued by this tribe as while the U.S. was relentless in pursuing them, and they chose to fight to death or escape over surrender. Some even paddled and sailed across the Gulf Stream an Andros Island in the Bahamas.
As I wrote in our blog back in 2020, “The Seminole story is both tragic and uplifting. The U.S. Government waged a 50-year, often gruesome campaign from roughly 1812 to the Civil War to relocate or eradicate the Seminole Indians of Florida in order to use their lands for whites. The Seminoles were a conglomeration of various tribes that had been forced out of other Southern states and also included runaway slaves. Beginning around 1821 some of the Seminoles fled across the Gulf Stream from Florida to Andros Island in the Bahamas. Here they established a settlement, now called Red Bays, and lived undetected for over 100 years!”
We pulled out of the St. Johns on Wednesday, March 29th, and are now headed back to Maine visiting friends and relatives along the way and spending two nights in state parks using the boat as a RV.
We used Salty Paws as our RV at Suwannee River State Park in northern Florida |
Back in Atlanta we took Charlotte to Sloomoo, where we celebrated Slime in various ways. |
Our return trip included a stop in Leesburg to stay with cousin Bonnie and Al, and we were joined by cousin Paul and Margaret for dinner. |
Fabulous blog, informative and well written. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Becky!
DeleteAll sounds like wonderful adventures to me! See you around the Montsweagers soon I hope! Liz Starr
ReplyDeleteThank you, Liz, and thanks for video that you took at practice. It was great.
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