Quick Paddling trip destination: Lake Blackshear, GA | SouthernPaddler.com

Quick Paddling trip destination: Lake Blackshear, GA

stickbow

Well-Known Member
Feb 25, 2009
46
0
61
Americus, GA
Quick Paddling trip destination: Georgia Veterans Memorial Park, Lake Blackshear, GA

Lake Blackshear's Veterans Memorial State Park is a great family friendly destination for paddling. The primary focus of the trip is not distance, but wildlife viewing. This report outlines an area with minimal motorized boat traffic, easy launching, and clean facilities, covering an out-and-back exploration of the cove just as you enter the state park. Pretty much any floating craft is acceptable for this trip. We are able to get farther into the cove in short recreational kayaks, but any paddle craft are fine.

Launch from the picnic area to your left as you cross the bridge into the park on GA 230, or along the shore near the official day-use boat ramp to the right. The latter can be busy with motor boat traffic on summer weekends. After launching, head East (right) into the cove. Paddle back as far as you can in this area, hugging either the north or south shore, then return along the other. Total distance is probably a little over a mile, depending on how far you want to/are able to get back into the upper (eastern) end of the cove and where you launch. For best wildlife viewing, this should be a slow, leisurely paddle.

When the undergrowth is light, you can paddle all the way back to the primitive camping area at the far end of the cove. Getting in and out of your boat there can be tricky though; there is not an official launch spot.

Things to watch for:

Just before you reach the railroad trestle bridge, there is a large tree sticking up in the water with an osprey's nest. In spring and summer, watch for the osprey babies in the nest, but don’t get too close. You will likely see the parents coming and going with food for the babies.
On the other side of the RR bridge, watch for alligators (some rather large), nests of great blue and green herons in the trees on the south side of the cove, and various woodpeckers in holes throughout the area. Near dark, you'll hear a pair of great horned owls calling to each other.
In the heavy lily pads and grasses during spring through early fall, you will see Common Moorhens and occasionally even Purple Gallinules. Frogs and turtles are common sights.

On the north side are small hammocks of cypress with lily pad jungles behind them. In some areas, you are gliding through large mats of duckweed, and feel you're floating in a sea of green. Sunsets are spectacular on the lake, as you get the outlines of the cypress trees and a broad expanse of sky behind.

Deer and squirrels are common sights when you can see dry land, with an occasional beaver or even rarely an otter in the water.

Other places to paddle:
There are other areas worth exploring in Lake Blackshear, especially the north end of the lake where there are many cypress covered islands and backwaters. Launching is possible for these areas from Turkey Creek Fish Camp (off Hwy 27 in Drayton) and other private ramps. The south end of the lake has many more houses and private docks, plus heavier boat traffic, making it less suitable for paddling.

A good day trip is to leave Pat's Fish Camp on Turkey Creek at Drayton and paddle down to the park. This can be a long trip depending on whether or not you stick to shore or get out in the channel, and if there is a headwind (like any reasonably large lake with little or no current). Setting up a shuttle is easy; take GA 230 from the park to Drayton; about 15 or 20 minutes.

Hazards: There are alligators and probably Cottonmouth snakes, along with biting/stinging insects in warmer months(watch for wasps' nests in the shrubs), Towards evening, you may want to spray down with mosquito repellant. Otherwise, learn to blow the gnats like a good south Georgia resident

Getting there:
From Americus: travel east on US 280 approx. 22 miles, turn left onto Georgia 230 at the sign for Georgia Veterans Memorial State Park.
From Cordele (exit 101 on I-75). Drive east on US 280 for approximately 10 miles, turn left on GA 230 at the Georgia Veterans' Memorial State Park sign.

Facilities:
Motels in Cordele and Americus, Camping at the state park, nice overnight facilities at the Lake Blackshear Resort (www.lakeblackshearresort.com). Restrooms are available at many areas in the park. Restaurants and fast food in Cordele and Americus, at the Resort (part of the park) or picnic with food from either Striplings Store or Arrowhead Grocery. Be sure to stop by Stripling's and get some of their house-made sausage. I like the hot smoked link best.

Costs:
$2 Georgia Park day-use fee, or buy a yearly permit.

Maps:
Delorme Atlas; "Fishing and Boating Map for Lake Blackshear" (Available at Stripling's Store near the park entrance); USGS quad topo map for Warwick, GA; Google Earth, Google Maps or other online sources are useful;
 

Kayak Jack

Well-Known Member
Aug 26, 2003
13,976
171
86
Okemos / East Lansing Michigan
About three years ago, there were osprey on the Au Sable near Camp 10 Bridge. As we passed, red winged black birds were harassing the osprey. I expected to see an osprey dive in at about 60 mph and have an explosion of black feathers. No such thing. Damned black birds drove away the osprey!
 

stickbow

Well-Known Member
Feb 25, 2009
46
0
61
Americus, GA
Paddled at Veteran's state park on Blackshear for the first time this summer on Saturday. My son had told me a month or so ago that water hyacinth had blocked off the best, most scenic portion on the far side of the railroad trestle, but I figured that, being the most excellent paddler I am, I could bull my way through.

Nope - there must be at least four or five acres of really, really thick stuff blocking the way back there. Hopefully it'll at least die back in the fall.

For now, if you paddle in the state park, launch nearer the traffic bridge unless you want the extra distance or to launch near the osprey nest, and check out the areas across the way that are closer to the road. Less wildlife, but you can at least get through. This is a great paddle for kids/family/people who haven't paddled before.

Alternative nice paddling spots on the north end of Blackshear - really the Flint River:

Launch from "Pat's Fish Camp" at Drayton, GA off GA 27 (32.062301, -83.975526) and paddle out of Turkey Creek and either up or downstream. Upstream has more cypress swamp and wildlife. Sometimes there's a fee, sometimes there isn't - depends on who's running the place at that time.

Launch from Reeves Landing on the Sumter County side of the river (32.124422, -84.012411) and paddle up or downstream.

If you have a long day and a shuttle, a nice trip would be downstream from Reeves Landing to Pat's Fish Camp. You can use the coordinates above in Google Maps/Earth to see the locations and get directions - probably much better directions that I'd give.