Ozark National Scenic
Riverways is at its wildest and scenic best on the Jacks Fork from the
Mo. 17 bridge crossing to Alley Spring. The Jacks Fork can be floated year-round
if you have learned to "read" the water currents and are prepared to sacrifice
some aluminum from your canoe to the underlying rocks. But spring is the
best time of year to float for the water is up. There are only a few thin
shoals where you will have to step out and lead your canoe; you can't portage.
Buck Hollow is
the favored access for a long, fast one-day float trio or a lazy two-day
trip to Alley Spring. For a shorter trip, intermediate putins/takeouts are
available at Ebb and Flow Spring, Bay Creek, Alley Spring, and Eminence.
Average floating time
in hours from BUCK HOLLOW:
Blue Spring
- 1 hour
Ebb and Flow Spring - 3 hours
Bay Creek - 6 hours
Alley Spring - 8 hours
Eminence, Mo. - 10 hours
Two Rivers - 13 hours
Here is a sample of
the treasures along the float.
BLUE SPRlNG -
In the bare-rock cliff on the left is Hospital Cave. Here at various times
during the Civil War both Northern and Southern soldiers were given care.
Just downstream, Blue Spring flows from a cave through rocks strewn at the
base of the cliff.
BAPTIZING HOLE
- The old road that wound back and forth across fords in the river for many
kilometers seemed to pause at this wide bank and invite the community to
basket dinners and camping r creation. Church groups often gathered for
services at Baptizing Hole.
MUCK 40 HOLE
- Here's the place where Ozarkers tell the story of John "Muck" Reece. It
seems Reece and some friends were fishing one night wit gigs for yellow
suckers by the light from pine knots burning on clay mud in the middle of
their John Boat. As he struck for a fish, Muck lost his footing and fell
over board. When he finally came up sputtering, he claimed he had sunk for
40 "foot." His friends teased him about it for years.
JAM UP CAVE -
Following the path about half way up the bluff you will find the entrance
to this long cave. From here you can see a falls and pool inside the cave.
MEETING HOUSE CAVE
- The Civil War broke out just when it could be said that newcomers from
the east had fairly settled the Ozark Mountain region. Farms were neglected
and homesteads destroyed as guerrilla bands marauded through the region
from 1862 to 1865. When it was over, a large part of the population had
scatter . According to legend, this cave was used as a hideout by both sides
dun g the war.
EBB AND FLOW SPRING
- The spring on the left is attractive during "flow," but may be only a
trickle during "ebb." The intervals are very irregular and not well understood,
except that they probably bear some relation to local precipitation and
its effect on the water table below ground. What's your theory?
RYMERS - Access
here is off county highway M at the site of an old resort.
BUNKER HILL RANCH
- No access please respect the private property rights of the Missouri State
Teachers Association.
CHALK BLUFF -
This long, high bluff comes into view at t e beginning of a sharp left bend
in the river after you pass Still House Hollow. Chalky limestone and dolomite,
which make up most of the other river bluffs, are the most resistant forms
of limestone, but for different reasons. Dolomite is hard enough to withstand
erosion, while the chalk is so soft and porous that water immediately penetrates
through it with hardly any erosive effect.
LEATHERWOOD CREEK
- This is just one place along the river where you can pause and see a wide
variety of Ozark flora. Species characteristic of the Appalachians far to
the east grow on the cliff bluffs and ridges. Southern plant varieties are
found in the low marshes d near potholes Even the plants f the arid West
have their place in the Ozark woods, a botanical mix at the temperate center
of the continent.
BEE BLUFF - Homes
of honey bees can sometimes be seen in the holes high in Bee Bluff's uneven
face.
BAY CREEK - Now
you pick up the access road (from Mo. 106) that follows the north bank of
the river. Campsites continue down to Bay Creek.
FISH TRAP HOLE
- Ozark Mountain streams are among the best in Missouri for fishing. Smallmouth
and large-mouth bass, rock bass, and walleye are some of the 93 known species
of fish that swim the Jacks Fork and the Current Rivers. Any of the fishing
holes far too numerous to count might yield proof of the Ozark's reputation.
A favorite spot is here in the deepening river after a sharp right turn
through Grandma Rocks.
ALLEY SPRING
- Just after the bridge, get out and walk a short way up the spring branch.
There at the base of a high concave cliff, Alley Spring gushes forth 307
million liters (81 million gallons) of water daily. The spring, among the
four largest on the Riverways still supplies power for Red Mill. When the
mill is open, visitors are invited inside to see demonstrations of the ingeniously
contrived machinery of the 1890s. The reconstructed one-room schoolhouse
nearby is open in season.
EMINENCE, MO
- . Access is at the Mo. 19 bridge in Eminence.
LITTLE SHAWNEE CREEK
- The camping area is on the flat near this tributary. The campground just
upstream on the same side is private; please respect property rights of
landowners.
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