The Ichetucknee Spring Run Is Still Worth Your Time—If You Go Wrong
Ichetucknee Springs near Fort White, Florida is the kind of place that shows up on every "best springs" listicle, which means half the people who read about it assume it's already ruined. That's the thing most paddlers miss: the real magic isn't in the main spring basin where the tour groups gather like manatees at a warm-water outlet. It's the upper run.
The spring discharge hits around 72 degrees year-round—cool enough to feel alive, warm enough that you're not shivering by mile two. Clarity runs 30-40 feet on a normal day, which means you're paddling over limestone formations that look airbrushed. The current is steady but manageable, averaging 1.5 knots, and it does most of the work for you. Tides don't matter here; springs ignore the moon's nonsense.
Here's what everyone gets wrong: they skip the upper tributary. Most paddlers hit the main spring and immediately push downstream toward the takeout. The upper run—between the spring head and where it merges with the main flow—is narrower, shallower, and absolutely packed with fish, turtles, and the kind of cypress tunnels that make you understand why people actually like nature. You'll pass maybe two other kayaks instead of two hundred. The paddling is tighter, technical without being dangerous, and you'll see more wildlife in an hour than most people see in a month.
One safety detail that matters: the current picks up significantly about two-thirds of the way down the main run. If you're a beginner, plan your turnback point before you reach it. Trying to paddle upstream against full-throttle spring discharge isn't happening. Neither is standing up to scout—the limestone bottom is sharp, and the current will own you.
Gear opinion time: forget the inflatable kayak for springs. I know, I know—they're packable and cheaper. But Ichetucknee's rocky takeout and cypress snags demand a rigid hull. An old-school plastic kayak or a hardshell touring boat handles this run better and lasts longer. Inflatables are great for lakes and flatwater. Springs are where solid boats prove their worth.
Bring water, not coffee. Bring sunscreen—the reflection off that spring water is relentless. Wear shoes with traction because the takeout is basically a rock garden, and nobody looks cool limping to their car with a bleeding shin.
The best part? It's a state park, which means it's regulated but accessible. Check the parking situation before you go—popularity has finally caught up to the place. Early mornings still feel like you found a secret.
QUICK HITS:- • Parking fills by 10 a.m. on weekends. Seriously. You want a spot, you're there by 8:30 or you're parking half a mile away and hiking in angry.
- • The springs are cold enough that a 3mm rashguard isn't overkill, even in summer. Hypothermia doesn't care if it's July.
- • Rent locally if you don't have gear. It's cheaper than driving home wet and fighting with your truck bed.
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