Trolling down one of the many channels that branches off the Ocklawaha River in Florida, you feel like time has stood still for thousands of years. This river is 17,000 years old, older by far than the St John’s River. Once the Ocklawaha was an inland lagoon with many islands. Today, the Ocklawaha flows 78 miles along the central ridge north and east of the Green Swamp. In this 78 mile area you can find Lakes Griffin, Eustis, Harris, Dora and Apopka. 2,800 square miles of water shed drain here.
We took a channel that off shoots to the west from the Ocklawaha. It’s a beautiful mirrored still waterway winding through a hardwood green swamp. The waterway becomes shallow and we cut off the boat’s engine, lift it and lower the flexible trolling motor, adjusting it to low. We barely cut through the stillness, moving as silently as possible.
The morning is cool and the mist rises from the water bathing the greenery in a vaporized veil as it lifts to the clear sky. Our view is a feast to hungry eyes. Nature left undisturbed and unmolested by man… an eco-system, self contained. Here is home to over 150 varieties of fish. There is a diverse marine and fresh water fauna that have been evolving since the last Ice Age.
I was able to identify many varieties of hardwood trees here. Cypress, red maple, water hickory, sweet gum, water locust, water oaks, and tupelo hardwoods are abundant. This particular meandering channel held many points of interest and beauty. A leaning palm tree provided my eyes with the feast of a huge fat raccoon scurrying from the palm leaves down its long horizontally stretched trunk.