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Guided Canoe Trip: Moonlight Tour IV

Riverview Road and Cahaba River Road Riverview Road and Cahaba River Road, Birmingham, AL, United States

Saturday, August 6, 2022, 7:00pm | Highway 280 Cahaba Bridge Cahaba River Society offers guided float trips on the Cahaba River. We can supply canoes, paddles, life jackets, and a naturalist with the expertise to allow you a unique, up-close experience with the Cahaba River. A moonlit evening on the Cahaba is a delightful, unique,

$40

Guided Canoe Tour: Overnight Trip to Perry County

Perry Lakes Park State Highway 175, Marion, AL, United States

One of the very best ways to get a feel for the nature of the Cahaba River is to spend a couple of days and a night camping on the river.
The first day is much like the Day Trips described above. But instead of crawling out of the river at the end of the day, we find a sand bar, pitch tents, cook a meal, and spend the night by a campfire. Soaking up an entirely different kind of experience on the river is great fun. You must provide your own camping gear and food.

$40

Guided Canoe Trip: Grants Mill to Old Overton 

Grants Mill River Walk Trail and Cahaba Access 2171 Grants Mill Road, Irondale, AL, United States

Grants Mill to Old Overton is the most popular section of the Cahaba for paddling due to its beauty, ease of access, and proximity to Birmingham. For this trip, we will meet at the Grants Mill access 1.1 miles east of the Grants Mill exit off I-459 at 8:30 am.  We spend 5 or 6

Guided Canoe Trip: Moonlight Tour I

Highway 280 Cahaba Boat Launch Cahaba River Road and Riverview Road, Birmingham, AL, United States

We paddle for about an hour upstream, attempting to stay quiet so that we can see all there is to see. We will then gather around to ask any questions and share our findings with the group, then turn back and paddle downstream to the boat launch.
This is a flat water, out and back trip which means that we won’t be dealing with (or benefitting from) any current and that we will put in and take out at the same location. It is a fairly easy paddle, and we will also set the pace so that no one gets burned out from the onset. In all, we will spend about two hours on the water. Generally, there is about an hour of set up and break down, so I expect the trip to last about 3 hours in total.

$40

Guided Canoe Trip: Cahaba Lily Tour I

Cahaba National Widlife Refuge River Trace, West Blocton, AL, United States

Average water levels for this time of year allow us to paddle a little more than a mile down to the top of Hargrove Shoals, the largest known shoals of lilies left in the world, and back upstream. The special geology that provides the lilies their habitat actually helps us in this case. The riverbed changes between limestone and sandstone, remnants of ancient rising and falling sea levels. Where the riverbed is limestone you will see the shallow shoals that the lilies call home. Where the riverbed is sandstone, there are deep pools where water slows. It is these deep pools of slow moving water that allow us to paddle back upstream and to take out at the same place we put it. We advertise this as one of our more physically demanding trips because at each shoal “step” we have to drag our boats to the next pool. The shoals create obstacles on our way back to the boat launch. Boats will become stuck on rocks across the shoals both headed downstream and back up. Be careful as you step out of your boats to pull across the shoals: the rocks are slippery! The walks across the shoals are why we wear close-toed shoes.

$40

Guided Canoe Trip: Cahaba Lily Tour II

Cahaba National Widlife Refuge River Trace, West Blocton, AL, United States

Cahaba River Society offers guided float trips on the Cahaba River. We can supply canoes, paddles, life jackets, and a naturalist with the expertise to allow you a unique, up-close experience with the Cahaba River. On this tour, you will see the beautiful Cahaba lilies first hand in their natural setting. These are rigorous outings that require wading

Guided Canoe Trip: Cahaba Lily Tour III

Cahaba National Widlife Refuge River Trace, West Blocton, AL, United States

Average water levels for this time of year allow us to paddle a little more than a mile down to the top of Hargrove Shoals, the largest known shoals of lilies left in the world, and back upstream. The special geology that provides the lilies their habitat actually helps us in this case. The riverbed changes between limestone and sandstone, remnants of ancient rising and falling sea levels. Where the riverbed is limestone you will see the shallow shoals that the lilies call home. Where the riverbed is sandstone, there are deep pools where water slows. It is these deep pools of slow moving water that allow us to paddle back upstream and to take out at the same place we put it. We advertise this as one of our more physically demanding trips because at each shoal “step” we have to drag our boats to the next pool. The shoals create obstacles on our way back to the boat launch. Boats will become stuck on rocks across the shoals both headed downstream and back up. Be careful as you step out of your boats to pull across the shoals: the rocks are slippery! The walks across the shoals are why we wear close-toed shoes.

$40

Guided Canoe Trip: Cahaba Lily Tour IV

Cahaba National Widlife Refuge River Trace, West Blocton, AL, United States

Average water levels for this time of year allow us to paddle a little more than a mile down to the top of Hargrove Shoals, the largest known shoals of lilies left in the world, and back upstream. The special geology that provides the lilies their habitat actually helps us in this case. The riverbed changes between limestone and sandstone, remnants of ancient rising and falling sea levels. Where the riverbed is limestone you will see the shallow shoals that the lilies call home. Where the riverbed is sandstone, there are deep pools where water slows. It is these deep pools of slow moving water that allow us to paddle back upstream and to take out at the same place we put it. We advertise this as one of our more physically demanding trips because at each shoal “step” we have to drag our boats to the next pool. The shoals create obstacles on our way back to the boat launch. Boats will become stuck on rocks across the shoals both headed downstream and back up. Be careful as you step out of your boats to pull across the shoals: the rocks are slippery! The walks across the shoals are why we wear close-toed shoes.

$40