Bartram Canoe Trail
The Bartram Canoe Trail is a system of canoe and kayak trails in the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta and is named for explorer and naturalist William Bartram.
The 200-mile-long trail system is one of the longest in the United States.[1] It includes bottomland hardwood swamp, creeks, side channel sloughs, lakes and backwaters. The trail system also includes Bottle Creek which is in close proximity to the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds.
The trail system is operated by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.[2]
Features
Point | Coordinates (links to map & photo sources) |
---|---|
Boatyard Landing | 31°10′36″N 87°50′26″W / 31.1768°N 87.84068°W |
Canal Island Platform Campsite | 31°05′23″N 87°53′28″W / 31.08983°N 87.89123°W |
Champion Cypress Tree | 31°00′04″N 87°54′41″W / 31.001028°N 87.911472°W[notes 1] |
Dead Lake Platform Campsite | 31°02′38″N 87°54′56″W / 31.0439°N 87.9155°W |
French’s Lake | 31°08′08″N 87°50′43″W / 31.13568°N 87.84518°W |
Holley Creek | 31°10′57″N 87°51′15″W / 31.1824°N 87.85417°W |
Hubbard’s Landing | 31°03′49″N 87°52′13″W / 31.0637°N 87.87028°W |
Jacintoport Campsite | 30°49′18″N 88°02′46″W / 30.82159705°N 88.04618424°W |
Jug Lake Platform Campsite | 31°00′42″N 87°54′29″W / 31.01173365°N 87.90813999°W |
Rice Creek Landing | 31°00′57″N 87°51′49″W / 31.01578°N 87.8636°W |
Spoonbill Sandbar Campsite | 31°10′05″N 87°53′38″W / 31.16797°N 87.89384°W |
Two Rivers Point Campsite | 31°01′11″N 87°57′45″W / 31.01968°N 87.96262°W |
Upper Bryant Landing | 31°02′40″N 87°52′35″W / 31.04437°N 87.87635°W |
- ↑ 200 yards @ 206 degrees from tree on bank marked "5" in blue
References
- ↑ Alabama State Parks Archived March 18, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Outdoor Alabama
External links
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