Springs Fever: A Field & Recreation Guide to 500 Florida Springs.
3rd Edition by Joe Follman and Richard Buchanan

GIL928971

Gilchrist County

Summary of Features

  • Scale - 3rd magnitude
  • Scenery - good-very good
  • How Pristine? - houses nearby
  • Swimming - no
  • Protection - unknown-private
  • Crowds - none
  • Access - none, may be viewed from a distance by boat
  • Facilities - none
  • Safety - unknown
  • Scuba - no

Directions

From Fort White, drive south on State Road 47 about five miles to bridge over the Santa Fe River and put in at boat ramp (going downstream). After about 15 minutes, look for a creek mouth on left and then another just before the river narrows, deepens, and makes a left turn around some houses and exposed limestone. There is another creek mouth on the left after the turn. These mouths appear to lead to the spring.

Note: these tiny runs are not to be confused with the mouth of Cow Creek, which empties into the Santa Fe River above these runs and nearer the boat ramp at the State Road 47 bridge. Traveling downriver from the bridge, one would encounter Cow Creek first, on the left, as a much fuller run that flows south for several miles.

Spring Description

The spring is on private property, and its runs were virtually dry and not navigable the date of the authors' visit (Jan. 2001), a time of drought. Viewed from a distance, the spring appears to form a circular pool and three runs. The runs create a sort of semicircular island of several acres. The land around the spring is rolling and covered in thick floodplain forest including cypress trees and cypress knees. There is a 2-3 story house on the island overlooking the spring pool. A small bridge connects the house to the mainland, crossing the upstream run from the spring.

The upstream (most eastern) run had some water for about 75 feet, but no flow. The mouth of the middle run is rocky and had some mucky pools but no flow on date of visit. The third run downstream is about 100 yards long. The downstream run was flowing, with water tinkling over rocks and tree roots into the Santa Fe River. The water was clear and only a few inches deep. The runs create channels that are several feet below the surrounding land.

Use/Access

The spring is on private property and not accessible.

Personal Impressions

The authors were confused trying to figure out whether the runs were from different springs or same one, where they led, and if they were indeed all from GIL928971. The western, downstream run was the only one flowing. It is not clear whether one could canoe up the lower run to the springpool (in times of normal or high water), and/or if doing so would constitute trespassing.

Nearby Springs

  • White (or White Sulfur) Springs
  • 47 Boatramp Spring
  • Cedar Spring
  • GIL928972
  • COL928971
  • Wilson Spring

Other Nearby Natural Features

  • Ichetucknee Springs State Park
  • O'Leno State Park
  • River Rise State Preserve