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Spooker Spooker is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jan 2011
Posts: 160
Default Everglades Wilderness Waterway

In article ,
says...

On Fri, 28 Jan 2011 08:47:40 -0500, Spooker wrote:

In article 882db5b3-d5d2-41b4-9958-
,
says...

Anyone who is looking for a slightly offbeat boating adventure should
consider the Everglades Wilderness Waterway. It extends inland
approximately 100 miles south from Everglades City in southwestern
Florida all the way to the southernmost tip of mainland Florida, a
little park ranger outpost called Flamingo.

We have not yet navigated the entire length but have now been on three
different segments of it: North from Flamingo into the south end of
Whitewater Bay; the area extending from the north end of Whitewater
Bay up into the Shark River and Tarpon Bay areas; and today a short
distance on the northern portion extending south from Everglades
City.

This is not your typical boating trip with well charted routes,
frequent navigational markers and convenient access to marinas and
other services. Au contraire, the charts are incredibly inaccurate
with GPS tracks frequently running over dry land; navigational
markers, where they exist at all, are likely to be rotting wodden
stakes, sometimes with a hand painted number; services and other signs
of civilization are totally non-existent. It is not an area forgiving
of poor planning or ineptitude although we at times today we touched
on both and nevertheless returned unassisted.

http://www.tinyurl.com/waynebspottrack

For gfretwell's benefit, it makes navigating the Estero River look
like deep water and a piece of cake. :-)

We encountered a number of spots where even local knowledge is not
enough - there just isn't enough water except at high tide, and high
tide on the Gulf of Mexico is basically a once-a-day thing, and today
it is at night. It's an interesting challenge however and beautiful
country, even if best seen in a canoe or kayak as opposed to our
dinghy and outboard.

Here are some other sites:

http://www.evergladesdiary.com/

http://www.nps.gov/ever/planyourvisi...ast-trails.htm

http://www.evergladeshostel.com/gall...s/waterway.htm


I've canoed/camped/fished the area, Chokoloskee Bay, if the spelling's
correct.


Yes, Chokoloskee Bay is at the northern end of the Waterway and
Chokoloskee Island is where Smallwood's store is located. We were
right behind the store and their dock on our way around the island
yesterday.


Yes, that's it!