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Except that the park is closed, look at the stats for a slough run next weekend:
Saturday 19 October - Sunset 18:49, Moonrise 19:24, 99.9 percent illumination
Sunday 20 October - Shark River entrance -.11 low at 09:32
Weather forecast - 88/72, 20 percent precip chance, east wind around 9
Water Station 02290862 Currently around +6 ... or plenty of water.
No backcountry permit necessary for Canepatch
(permits usually start on the Friday before Thanksgiving).
Starting at L-67 about an hour before dawn on Saturday would put paddlers
at the Cattail Route breakout at about dawn. Boats could be closing in on NP202
by sunrise allowing every bit of sunlight for the flat-out, pedal-to-the-metal paddling down
Main Street to get down to Bottle Creek by sunset. Finding your way down Bottle Creek
in the dusk, the full moon would light the paddlers way down Rookery Branch arriving in
Canepatch an hour or two after dark.
Use the full moon on Sunday morning to paddle down Avocado Creek and enjoy the sunrise while
acrossing Tarpon Bay. With a 4 hour delay you'll ride the ebb tide out Shark River with
a light breeze on your back. After passing through Oyster Bay in the later morning you'd
have both Joe River Chickees to stop and stretch before arriving in Flamingo before dark.
Next weekend is the annual best slough run weekend.
As intriguing as it sounds, the reality for me is that paddling 10-20 miles/week does not prepare one adequately for back to back 33+ mile days (in a solo). Could I make it - probably. Is there a good likelihood that I would injure myself and maybe trash the rest of season - probably.
Bucket list for sure with at least a month of prep. Maybe next year.
The idea of doing such a trip in 2 days runs directly contrary to the very reason I go out there in the first place. On my own solo Slough trip I spent 2-1/2 days making my way down the the airboat trails from L67 to Avocado Creek and slept in my skiff for 2 nights, soaking up the experience of just being there for as long as I could. I spent another 3 days noodling around the rivers and creeks of eastern Whitewater Bay before landing at Flamingo. The way I see it, if you're going to just blast through at top speed and not take the time to enjoy the experience, then you've pretty much wasted the 2 days that you're out there. Turning a Glades trip into a race with no big cash prize at the end is just crazy AFAIC.
But that's just me...
Since the Park is effectively "Cerrado" it's more like a thought exercise that this wk-end would in fact be an ideal time for this trip. Thanks to Terry, Charlie and folks from the Marshall Foundation I was able to experience this over a "leisurely" course of 4 days/60 miles last fall (as well documented here: http://kayakfari.wordpress.com/trips-sea-stories-pics/kayaking-the-... ). The area in the middle to lower end of the Shark Slough is where I'd like to spend a few days paddling around - it's all I could think about why paddling through it, has a very appealing feel to it! Also the very end of the slough just before encountering the mangrove "wall" transition is really cool to see and experience!!
Looking forward to the 2013 Invitational !
Hey, okay, nooo problem, go as slow as you want it's still the perfect weekend that we will not be able to use.
The second best weekend is in November but later in the season means that much less water,
it's dropping every day.
Keith W said:
The idea of doing such a trip in 2 days runs directly contrary to the very reason I go out there in the first place. On my own solo Slough trip I spent 2-1/2 days making my way down the the airboat trails from L67 to Avocado Creek and slept in my skiff for 2 nights, soaking up the experience of just being there for as long as I could. I spent another 3 days noodling around the rivers and creeks of eastern Whitewater Bay before landing at Flamingo. The way I see it, if you're going to just blast through at top speed and not take the time to enjoy the experience, then you've pretty much wasted the 2 days that you're out there. Turning a Glades trip into a race with no big cash prize at the end is just crazy AFAIC.
But that's just me...
Since the Park is effectively "Cerrado" it's more like a thought exercise that this wk-end would in fact be an ideal time for this trip. Thanks to Terry, Charlie and folks from the Marshall Foundation I was able to experience this over a "leisurely" course of 4 days/60 miles last fall (as well documented here: http://kayakfari.wordpress.com/trips-sea-stories-pics/kayaking-the-... ). The area in the middle to lower end of the Shark Slough is where I'd like to spend a few days paddling around - it's all I could think about why paddling through it, has a very appealing feel to it! Also the very end of the slough just before encountering the mangrove "wall" transition is really cool to see and experience!!
Looking forward to the 2013 Invitational !
And getting to RB from Pa Hay Okee should be on the to-do list - I've seen it mentioned before. Think of the trip:
Pa Hay Okee - Cane Patch - via RB
Cane Patch - Camp Lonesome - via lost portage
Etc.
Slough trips depend on freshwater levels. We're transitioning to the fall/winter drought period and levels will start to drop fast going forward. It's possible that there will still be enough water to let you push through grass by the middle of November, but I'd keep a close eye on the gages between now and then.
Amazon Bill said:
Terry, Nov 16+17 looks similar for tides and moon. How about that weekend?
Yes, Bill, the 16, 17 November weekend is the second best, however, water is dropping daily.
Vivian, there isn't a minimal water depth it just gets harder and harder, especially in the only spot that
you're on your own - going from L-67 to NP202. I wouldn't call Shark Slough a widow-maker trip but
it's not easy either so reduced water levels just adds to the level of difficulty. The bottom line: October
is the prime month, November is if-fy and December would be only if we get some unusual heavy duty rain.
Picking prime weekends is just a matter of trying to lineup every possible predictable condition to
benefit the paddler. Or, as Keith notes, take plenty of time and meander your way down the slough
where it doesn't matter if you could only push 6 miles in a day, then conditions aren't as important.
Looking back at my records
waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/inventory/?site_no=02290862&agency_cd=USNP&
has always been around +6.5, I have never paddled out of L-67 in less than +6.0. Not that it couldn't be
pushed in less than +6.0, I'm just always in a frenzy to paddle the many other high elevation places that
can only be paddled in high water before getting pushed out to the tourist saturated brochure saltwater routes.
There has been a lot of mapping done since the 2008 trip and since the hard part is getting from L-67 to NP202
this mapping could be done with day trips. NP202 to Bottle Creek is a marked airboat trail, a zig-zag trail to
Main Street that is clearly visible on the aerials. Bottle Creek to Canepatch isn't marked but it's intuitive, water
flow pushes you in the right direction and once you pass Rookery Mound there's only one way to go.
There are three mapped routes from L-67 to NP202: High Route, Cattail Route and Outlaw Route.
High Route gets you out of the canal and into the unspoiled open grass quickest but it's the longest
pushing. In unspoiled grass the navigator perfects the art of finding spike rush channels through sawgrass.
Sparse spike rush is prime paddling, a good example is the Craigheads Pond Canoe Trail, this is
what the grass paddler seeks. Sawgrass requires pushing, sometimes serious pushing and cattails
are to be avoided requiring the most pushing and pulling.
I like Cattail Route the best. It shortens the pushing distance and has very well defined spike rush
channels through sawgrass. There's a short tight twisty creek through cattails right at the edge of L-67
but turns into open grass only a few hundred feet off the canal. A loaded canoe or kayak can make it to
NP202 in about an hour.
Outlaw Route is thickest, it's pushing to the limit without slogging, headway measured in inches,
the only reason it's mapped is because it's at the first opening in the levee to the east. This route
would be considered for paddlers starting Shark Slough from east of L-67 and spending a night at the
soon-to-be Tyre backcountry campsite.
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