Parks Hiking Live Oak Lake City Camping Canoeing White Springs Suwannee Festival
The Stephen Foster Folk Culture Center hosts many events throughout the year.
Photo Credit: Contributed Photo
The Live Oak & Lake City area, between the Suwannee and Santa Fe Rivers, has numerous recreational possibilities with natural springs, historical sites and festivals.
If you've ever wondered where "way down upon the Suwannee River" is, you'll find it right here in north central Florida's spring-fed oasis of unscathed beauty. Sandwiched between the Suwannee and the Santa Fe rivers, this region lays claims to more than 100 springs, unadulterated wilderness, rich recreational possibilities, friendly river towns, old-time festivals and intriguing historical sites.
Lake City lies at the crossroads of Interstates 10 and 75, making it a convenient access point to the region. It offers the best variety of accommodations and restaurants in the area.
One soon leaves behind the rush of the freeway upon entering Columbia County, known as the Freshwater Capital of America. Just off the interstate, stop at the Columbia County Tourist Welcome Center. The Lake City/Columbia County Historical Museum resides in a circa-1870 home furnished in keeping with the period and displaying artifacts pertaining to local Civil War lore. Nearby, the Olustee Battle Festival reenacts an important battle each February.
Lake City is the gateway for canoeists, cyclists, bird watchers, campers, hunters, horseback riders and fishermen who make their way to the 200,000-acre Osceola National Forest and other park lands. The Forest's Ocean Pond Campground sits on the north banks of a blue water lake with a beach and boat ramp. A picnic area and sandy beach called Olustee Beach face it across the 1,760-acre Ocean Pond lake.
White Springs is home to the state's Nature & Heritage Tourism Center, which disseminates information on outdoor activities, and to Stephen Foster Folk Culture Center State Park. The latter maintains a Stephen Foster Museum and carillon tower that gongs out his famous compositions. All here is far removed from the "sad and dreary" world of which Stephen Foster, who never laid eyes on the Suwannee River, wrote. Its village of old-time craftspeople stages candle making, blacksmithing and such demonstrations, and every May the park hosts the Florida Folk Festival, along with 15 other annual special events. Once a health spa, White Springs tells its history in a downtown walking tour that takes in more than 20 vintage buildings and sites.
Nearby, Big Shoals Public Lands has the largest whitewater rapids in Florida. Here the Suwannee River rushes over rock shoals to create uncommon (for Florida) Class III rapids to dare intrepid canoeists. The setting flashes back to a time and pace when Timucuan and Creek tribesmen paddled the dark, tannin-tinted waters 'neath heavy forests filled with birds of many feather.
Downriver the paddling gets calmer, easy enough for beginners. You can get outfitted at Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park and Campground, near Suwannee Springs. It hosts country jamborees as well as horseback riders, canoeists, swimmers and other lovers of the oak-shaded setting.
Along the Suwannee and Santa Fe rivers, a number of springs attractions, both public and privately owned, invite visitors into the ever-cool, 72-degree waters for swimming, inner-tubing, snorkeling and diving.
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Suwannee River Greenway at Branford
Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park & Campground
Stephen Foster Folk Culture Center State Park
Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park
Suwannee River State Park
Big Shoals State Park
Twin Rivers State Forest
Florida's Nature & Heritage Tourism Center, Headquarters of the Suwannee River Wilderness Trail
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