| From the book, "River
of Lakes: A Journey on Florida's St. Johns River".
"The St. Johns is a river of infinite potential, a place to indulge
myths, to evoke shards of timeless magic, to search for the natural
realities that are sublime instead of merely virtual and safe. After
all, this is a river where dreams have been chased through the early
morning mist for centuries on the peninsula, from inside the
heart-pine log dugouts of the earliest Paleo-Indians to the sleek
polymer hulls of the most modern canoeist and boater. If we are
lucky, we may yet find enough wildness left here to take the
shrillness of civilization out of us, to discover a place, as
Sherwood Anderson once wrote, where we can still "learn the trick of
the quiet."
As the sun rises over the sawgrass marshes that mark the starting
point of the St. Johns River, it slices through the mist that
defines mornings in swampy central Florida. The rain that fell here
overnight may evaporate in the afternoon, it may be used for
irrigation, or it may wind its way along the length of the 310 miles
of the St. Johns River and flow into the Atlantic Ocean.
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Downstream, the St.
Johns will declare itself a mighty river, but here in
Indian River and Brevard counties, there are few defined
banks and boundaries. Waterfowl, wading birds, river
otters and shore birds inhabit the maze of tributaries
and sloughs.
This portion of the river is fed mostly by rainfall,
with the help of a few springs. The molecules of
hydrogen and oxygen that mix in these shallow waters
flow north -- unlike many North American |
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rivers -- and begin a long, slow
journey to the ocean.
The St. Johns River is commonly divided into three drainage basins.
Basins, also called watersheds, are land areas that drain into a
water body. Because the St. Johns River flows north, the upper basin
is the area to the south. The middle basin is the area in
east-central Florida where the river widens. The lower basin is the
area in northeast Florida from Putnam County to the river's mouth in
Duval County, where it empties into the Atlantic Ocean.
The water travels this path slowly. The river's total drop from
beginning to end is less than 30 feet, or about one inch per mile,
making it one of the "laziest" rivers in the world.
A river of many names
Change has always come slowly for the St. Johns River. More than
100,000 years ago, much of the river was an arm of the Atlantic
Ocean. Over time, ocean levels dropped and barrier islands prevented
water from flowing east into the ocean, leaving it trapped in flat
valleys. The water slowly meandered northward and formed the St.
Johns River. The river, thus, is an ancient intracoastal lagoon
system.
As the river flows north and continues to collect water from marshes
and springs, it forms countless lakes on its path. First comes Lake
Hell 'n' Blazes, then Sawgrass Lake, Lake Washington, Lake Winder
and Lake Poinsett. The river flows into Orange, Volusia and Seminole
counties, forming Ruth Lake, Puzzle Lake and Lake Harney.
Because of these lakes, the Timucuan Indians gave the river its
original name, Welaka, meaning river of lakes. The Timucuan used the
river for food, water and transportation for centuries before the
Europeans arrived.
The river has had many names. Spanish seamen renamed the river in
the 1500s and called it Rio de Corrientes, or river of currents. In
1562 -- almost 50 years before the settlement in Jamestown -- the
French established Fort Caroline on a high bluff overlooking the
river they called Riviere de Mai, or river of May, because they
arrived there on May 1.
The establishment of Fort Caroline angered the Spanish, who marched
north from St. Augustine in 1565, captured the fort and slaughtered
the French. The Spanish then named the river San Mateo, honoring the
saint whose feast followed the day they captured the river.
Don Pedro Menendez de Aviles, commander of the Spanish army and
founder of St. Augustine, was impressed with the St. Johns River. In
1596, he made a note in his diary: "The river seems to be full of
goodly fish, and the forest inhabited by all kinds of birds and
beasts, the meat of which is quite tasty."
Later, the river was renamed Rio de San Juan after a Catholic
mission near its mouth named San Juan del Puerto. The English
translated that name into the St. Johns River, a name that lasted
through English, Confederate and American possession of the river
and remains today.
'A brief place of time and beauty'
The flow of the St. Johns River is strengthened south of Lake Harney
by the confluence of the Econolockatchee River in Seminole County.
After Lake Harney, the St. Johns begins a transformation. Banks
become better defined and a recognizable river is formed that flows
north of Sanford into lakes Jessup and Monroe.
In her 1942 book Cross Creek, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings wrote of this
area. "If I could have, to hold forever, one brief place of time and
beauty, I think I might choose the night on the high lonely bank
above the St. Johns River," she wrote.
These lonely banks mark the beginning of the river's middle basin.
This area has historically been prized for its bass fishing, and
boasts a diverse bird population that includes egrets, ibis and
great blue herons, ospreys, turkeys, cranes and a sizeable
population of bald eagles. Deer and a large number of alligators
reside in protected areas here along the river's banks.
One of these protected lands is the Lake Monroe Conservation Area.
Owned by the St. Johns River Water Management District, 94 percent
of the conservation area is wetlands that constitute the majority of
the floodplain of Lake Monroe. The District has many properties open
to the public and allows recreational activities on these lands
whenever such activities don't pose a threat to protected water
resources. The Lake Monroe Conservation Area allows hiking, fishing,
horseback riding, bicycling, camping and boating in designated
areas.
North of Lake Monroe, the winding waterway consolidates and
continues, straddling the county lines of Lake and Volusia counties.
South of Lake Beresford, the river meets Blue Springs State Park,
the ancient home of the Timucuan Indians and one of the modern-day
homes of some of Florida's manatees. The banks of the river still
display artifacts and mounds of discarded snail shells left by the
Indians centuries ago.
Beyond Blue Springs, the river enters a region of Florida famed for
its resemblance to the Florida of legend. As the river runs through
the Ocala National Forest and feeds into the Lake Woodruff National
Wildlife Refuge, it feeds wet prairies, ponds and lakes. The Ocala
National Forest is a landmark of Florida, being the most heavily
visited of the state's three national forests.
Regardless of its popularity, this part of the river offers a sense
of solitude that is not easily paralleled. The land is lined with
towering palms, large live oaks and scrubby sand pines. Behind the
tree line, bobcats, panthers and black bears roam. The contiguous
landscape goes on unspoiled for miles in every direction.
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Highway of the
centuries
Traveling through Ocala, one can more easily imagine the
sense of adventure and awe that must have overtaken the
first Europeans to see the region. Two of the most
famous explorers of the river were John and William
Bartram. In 1763, King George III sent the two to
explore Florida, which England had recently acquired.
William Bartram published his book Travels as a result,
detailing his exploration of the river as far south as
Lake Harney.
In 1765, William
Bartram wrote of the stretch of the river in what is now
the Ocala National Forest.........blessed land where the
gods have |
amassed into one heap all the
flowering plants, birds, fish and other wildlife of two continents
in order to turn the rushing streams, the silent lake shores and the
awe-abiding woodlands of this mysterious land into a true garden of
Eden," he wrote.
Here the river creates Lake George, the largest lake on the St.
Johns River. Though it is large -- 12 miles long and six miles wide
-- the lake is remarkably shallow, averaging only about 10 feet
throughout. The water of Lake George is also variably brackish, or
high in salt content. This is because the river flows so slowly it
is influenced by the tide from the Atlantic Ocean for hundreds of
miles upstream. In years when little rain has fallen, sharks have
been seen in the river as far south as Lake George.
Past Lake George, the St. Johns River goes through yet another
transformation. It exits Volusia County and enters Putnam County,
running along the Marion County line for a few miles. In Putnam
County, the St. Johns River widens where it meets the Ocklawaha
River, the largest tributary that meets the St. Johns. Here, the
river enters its lower basin.
After the St. Johns meets the Ocklawaha River, it flows along the
Caravelle Ranch Wildlife Management Area for several miles. Jointly
owned by the District and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission, the area helps the restoration of these two major rivers
and protects threatened and endangered species. The hammock islands
are favored nesting sites for bald eagles.
Other significant wildlife species found here include alligator,
gopher tortoise, eastern indigo snake, spotted turtle, Florida black
bear, little blue and tri-colored heron, snowy egret, southeastern
kestrel and limpkin. In the St. Johns River, manatee and snail
bullhead can be seen as the river continues its half-completed
journey north.
Several miles downstream, the St. Johns River runs through the city
of Palatka. Originally named Pilotaikita, a Seminole word for "boat
crossing," the area has been used for hundreds of years as a
transportation hub on the river.
Transportation has always been an important use of the St. Johns
River. When William Bartram sailed down the river, he stopped
briefly at an Indian village on the very spot where Palatka is
located. Into the 1830s, the area was a trading post, until Fort
Shannon was built there in 1935 to secure the strategic location
during the Seminole Indian Wars.
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In the 1850s, Palatka
became a port of entry into the interior of the state.
Steamboats brought tourism and were vital to the city's
economy until the 1920s. Modern ships still traverse the
river. Cruise lines, recreational boats and commercial
shipping are interwoven into the river's economy.
N. of Palatka, ships on the St. Johns see a much more
expansive river as it continues. As the river straddles
the St. Johns County line, leaving Putnam County for
Clay County, it widens considerably, averaging up to two
miles across. Standing on one of these ships
one sees the St. |
 |
Johns for what it is, a powerful &
steady force of nature.
A beginning and an end
On the west shore of the river between Palatka and Jacksonville lies
the District's Bayard Conservation Area. For roughly seven miles,
the river is bordered with riverine bottomland hardwoods, pine
flatwoods and sandhill communities. Woodland birds, such as warblers
and woodpeckers, share the area with an assortment of creatures.
The river crosses out of St. Johns County and then Clay County and
completely enters Duval County and the heart of Jacksonville. This
is the largest city in Florida and, like Palatka, was founded with
the river as its primary asset. The U.S. Navy presently has several
bases in Jacksonville along the river, contributing greatly to the
local economy. Additionally, gypsum, oil depots, and a variety of
commercial traffic strengthen the city's economy.
In Jacksonville, the river turns sharply to the east toward the
Atlantic Ocean, only a few miles away. Here, the river is always a
mix of fresh and salt water, making the St. Johns River more an
estuary than a freshwater body.
An estuary is a place where freshwater meets salt water, and is home
to an extraordinary diversity of life. The beauty and diversity of
this region is punctuated by sandy barrier islands, inlets and a
combination of sounds, rivers and extensive coastal marshes.
As it leaves Jacksonville and runs along the spot Fort Caroline
stood long ago, the St. Johns River meets the Intracoastal Waterway,
forming an expanse of marshes with fluctuating depths. Due to the
fact the mouth of the river was often shallow, jetties were built
here at the end of the 19th century, allowing Jacksonville to become
a viable ocean-going port. Jetties are pier-like structures that
project into a body of water to influence the current or tide or to
protect a shoreline from storms or erosion. Improvements through the
20th century have prevented erosion along the river.
After passing Mayport, the longest river contained in the state of
Florida ends its journey where it spills into the Atlantic Ocean.
Over its length of hundreds of miles, it has collected runoff from
thousands of square miles of land. But here, things don't seem to be
measured in miles or gallons. Where the ocean envelops the St. Johns
River with a docile embrace, the sky and the ocean seem to stretch
on endlessly.
As the sun sets over Florida, the water cycle continues. It is
likely that some of the unfathomable amount of molecules gushing
into the ocean will rise into the sky and fall into the St. Johns'
watershed again. The resources offered by the river will continue to
sustain Florida's residents in many ways. With responsible human
stewardship, the beauty, tradition and abundance of this great river
will flow on.
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