What to expect on a kayak tour of the Matanzas River

familykayaking matanzas river st augustine fl
family kayaking on matanzas

Have you ever wanted to explore the Florida wilderness from the comfort of a kayak? If so, then a tour of the Matanzas River in St Augustine is perfect for you! Here, you’ll paddle through nearly pristine coastal wetlands and get up-close and personal with native wildlife. Our knowledgeable guides will show you all the best spots for photo ops and answer any questions you have along the way. So what are you waiting for? Book your spot on a tour today!

Meet your guide and other kayakers at the designated meeting spot

Paddling kayaks is an excellent way to explore rivers, lakes, and coastlines at your own pace. Kayak tours are the perfect way to take advantage of kayaking in a safe and informative setting. Meet your knowledgeable guide and other kayakers at the designated meeting spot at the time stated on the kayak tour website, as all kayak tours launch on schedule. Your guide will provide essential information needed for the kayaking excursion, such as safety gear, waterway navigation tips, and eco-friendly kayaking practices. Join other kayakers for an unforgettable kayaking experience on a group kayak tour. Or, contact the kayak tour company to arrange a private tour so you can go at your own pace.

 

Kayaking for all ages and senses of humor

Get a safety briefing and paddle instruction from your guide

Before heading out on a kayaking adventure, it is important to attend a safety briefing and paddle instruction from certified kayak instructors. Instructors certified in this field can provide the appropriate guidance for successfully tackling any type of tour. They will make sure all passengers know the basics, from how to properly hold a paddle, to proper usage of the lifejackets that are provided. In addition, certified instructors will make sure each person understands proper safety protocols when during their time on the water. With certified instructors at the helm, you can be sure to relax and enjoy your wonderful kayaking experience!

Inland coastal waterway tides, enjoying the scenery at the right time of day.

Kayaking along an inland coastal waterway can be a tranquil experience, but you’ll want to be sure to plan your journey at the right tide. Depending on your kayaking skill level, whether you are a beginner or have advanced paddling experience, there is a time of day that will suit your needs best. Kayakers with more experience should time their trip when the tide is receding and those in training should opt to stick with the incoming tide so they are pushed along rather than combating against the currents. Either way, timing the tides correctly can help to enhance your Kayak experience ten-fold; plus, you’ll get to enjoy breathtaking scenery in safe conditions.

 

famiy kayak adventures with ecotour guides

Kayaking with friends and family for lifelong memories

Kayaking with friends and family can be a hugely rewarding experience. It’s the perfect way to create lifelong memories that you’ll both treasure for years to come. Kayak adventures provide the opportunity for them to bond and share an unforgettable experience outdoors in nature. Kayaks are easy for beginners, so no matter what everyone’s individual skill level is, you’re guaranteed an exciting journey. You get to sail through mesmerizing waters, uncover hidden spots that only kayakers have access to while sometimes even encountering wildlife along the way – all while surrounded by your loved ones who make it a uniquely special Kayak adventure. Not many things quite compare!

kayaking for live bait in crescent beach

Time flies on our kayak tours since guides are interesting and nature is beautiful.

Taking a kayak tour is a wonderful way to see nature up close and personal. As soon as you set out on the water with a knowledgeable guide, your adventurous spirit will be awakened. The guide is sure to entertain you with interesting stories and commentary while paddling amidst stunning scenery. You’ll be amazed at how quickly time passes as you explore the area, learning about its history. All of us carry away fond memories from kayak tours; looking back, it often feels like not nearly enough time was devoted to the experience!

Return to the starting point and disembark from your kayak

After an incredible adventure on the lagoon, it’s time to end your journey and steer your kayak back to shore. As you paddle along, take one last look at all the natural beauty that has surrounded you-from bridges beckoning to be explored to the pure tranquility that only comes when getting away from it all.

 

 

 

Be Prepared

Kids Kayaking with Mother

So what should you bring on your kayak tour?

Getting prepared for your kayak adventures

Here are the important things to consider when you are preparing to go on a kayak adventure.

Firstly, a Local Kayaking Guide is critical if you are unsure of your kayaking skills. Besure you know how to avoid confusing, strong, and turbulent tidal currents when kayaking in St. Augustine, FL.

aca certified kayak eco tour guides
Our Trip Leaders are all ACA Certified.

Clothing: Deciding what to wear is as easy as ABC. Anything But Cotton!

Swimwear and workout clothes made of dry fit fabrics keep us cooler when it’s hot. Synthetic kayaking clothes dry quickly allowing us to get warmer faster if it is cold out. But hey, if you enjoy chafing and shivering, go ahead, wear cotton when you go kayaking.

Change of clothes: Bring something to change into after your kayak tour will ensure your post trip wellbeing and comfort. If it is cold out, a dry change of clothes is essential to your safety.

Headwear: Wider the brim the better. Florida sun and humidity may cause Hyperthermia quickly when exerting ourselves paddling. A hat keeps your brain from frying! Better, it casts cooling shade. Critical to protect your delicate facial skin from direct exposure to the Sun’s damaging UV radiation. Night tours, consider bringing a head lamp.

Sunglasses: Polarized preferred. Easy to loose on the water. Be sure to secure them to your body.

Towels: leave in the car for after the trip. On hot days it’s nice to carry a Sport Towel in your dry bag to wipe your brow or clean the splash from your sunglasses.

Prevent Hypothermia: Yes! It’s also a thing in Florida. Bring a change of clothes and poncho if there is a chance of rain. Even in the middle of summer, getting caught in a cold rain with no Sun… potentially deadly if you are alone and far from home. Most wild areas have no shelter or protection from the wind.

Cold weather: Waterproof clothing, with extra base layers, gloves, ear protection and water resistant outer layers is crucial. Wetsuit or Drysuit is the best if there is a good chance of being drenched.

Prevent Hyperthermia: if you wait to drink water until you feel thirsty, it is too late to prevent overheating. Even for the most macho of machismos, insipid thirst and woozy fog overcomes a dehydrated person very quickly in no shade, hot, humid conditions common in St. Augustine, FL. And exercising? Oi! Your kayak guide is trained to keep you from drowning if you pass out. But let’s not let that happen. Hydrate, hydrate, hydrate!

Hydration: vital to your safety and enjoyment in the great outdoors. Take this advice seriously. Proper hydration for outdoor activities in the hot Florida Sun begins the night before your adventure. We offer our guests cold water on all our Kayak Adventure Tours. We recommend bringing at least a liter, a gallon for a full day tour, when the sweat factor is high.

Alcohol: Drinking can lead to several different emergencies when kayaking. If avoiding alcohol isn’t possible, To eliminate dangers of dehydration double the following recommendations if you drink the night before your Kayaking Tour.

Water: start hydrating the night before your trip. It is not too much to drink a glass of water before bed, upon waking, before leaving home, and when you arrive at the launch point.

For the trip: bring at least one glass for every hour you plan on being out, then double that in case something happens to keep you out longer than expected.

Small bladder: it is extra important to start hydrating the night before and upon waking. Don’t drink the last 2 hours before departure. Fully hydrated and excess water removed, you should be good. Plan to lose up to a liter of sweat per hour when kayaking in Florida’s climate. Bring at least a liter, a gallon for a full day tour, when the sweat factor is high. Some kayak launches have lovely facilities for your pre trip maintenance. Other times, we offer the finest of ‘facilatrees’. On the water, we won’t always be able to get on shore easily. A cup or bottle may be your solution if there are further concerns. becomes an issue. 

Food: trips of four or more hours think snacks, picnics, and water. Four hour GeoAdventures include munchies and refreshments. Full day excursions includes a lunch break. On shorter trips you can add snacks and picnics. If you have the time, consider adding an additional hour and a picnic for a small additional charge.

Blood sugar issues: Kayaking burns a lot of energy. Everyone is encouraged to bring their favorite snacks. It is nice to take a snack break on longer tours.

Antsy children: Short attention spans are not a reason to avoid kayaking with children. If you couldn’t bare the repercussions of losing or shorting out their favorite distraction, don’t bring it. They may surprise you. For some kids Mother Nature won’t be enough to get them to sit still. Bring the other great pacifier… treats! Your guide offers complimentary fruit, healthy snacks, and water on Trips over two hours.

Picnic: a nice way to finish off the experience. Many of the kayak launch points you’ll be at have grounds and facilities for picnicking. Bring your own or add a picnic and an extra hour to your kayak trip when booking your tickets.

Footwear: Oyster Shell is to Jagged Razor as Muck is to EEeeeewww! A good kayaker plans for the worst scenarios. Protect your feet.

Barefoot: Not recommended. While fun at the beach and around the pool– no good when traipsing through swamps, oysters, estuaries, and other wild areas of Florida. Shoes ensure you experience these places safely. Things happen, bladders burst, cell phones fall overboard. A shoe that won’t be sucked off your foot if you have to step in the mud is critical.

Water shoes: No brainer if you smell what we’re stepping in here. By far the best option will be closed toe and have firm thick soles.

Flip-flops: Many people enjoy wearing flip flops. A great option for convenience and comfort, not safety. Shoes without heel straps are prone to float away and stick to the ground then splash mud up your backside when you walk in the water. You will likely have to walk in water!

Other shoes: old sneakers, Crocs, jellies, sandals are all great options for getting wet. Just make sure you have a dry pair to change into after the trip. After your kayak eco tour is when a pair of flip flops is handy.

New Kicks: Your feet (and more!) will get wet. Leave the nice shoes in the box. This is for all our guests who said before… they never knew. We’ve now told you that you will get wet. How wet is yet to be seen.

Camera: Take nothing but pictures. Be mindful that if you couldn’t stand to loose or ruin something; leave it on shore. Most mobile phones are waterproof today. Having a lanyard for the camera to hang around your neck will prevent dropping your phone overboard.

Medication: Bring any emergency medicine you may need. Even if there is only a remote chance of needing it on your short trip. For example: Epipen, Nitroglycerin, Insulin.

Gratuity: bring cash to tip. Tips are never expected, but always appreciated. When compelled to give a sign of your appreciation and admiration for your guide and crew… cash is best.

Get Close to Bioluminescent Cannibals

Observe Bioluminescence in Florida

Comb Jellies Eat Each Other to Survive

You can see these voracious eaters up close, just like this family is doing in this video. (Actual Customers)

Some scientists refer to  Bioluminescent Comb Jellies, like the ones seen in Guana Lake, as one of the most dangerous animals in the oceans. Even things more than twice their size aren’t safe from being eaten by this prehistoric predator. 

Comb Jellies are voracious eaters. Even their own offspring are not safe. Check out this video of just that.

Call it the Comb Jelly Battle Dome.

Kayak out into Guana Lake at night to observe the bioluminescent Comb Jelly in its natural habitat.

Collect specimen of bioluminescent sea creatures to observe back on land. Watch as they begin to devour each other. Surprises are in store. The family featured also captured some shrimp for added family fun on this easy to get to location.

Bioluminescent Jellies

Bioluminescent Jelly Kayak Tour

Comb Jellies: The ‘Un-Jellyfish’

Reaction to finding a Comb Jelly is often the same as if a jellyfish had been discovered. “Will it sting me?!”. Due to their clear, gelatinous form, Comb Jellies are often misidentified. Jellyfish and comb jellies come from two different phylum. The comb jelly is from the Ctenophora phylum and the jellyfish comes from the Coelenterate (Cnidaria) phylum, which includes hydroids, sea anemones, and coral. The huge difference between these two phyla is that the Ctenophora does not contain stinging cells (nematocysts) like a common Jelly does.

“Catch me if you can!”

Comb jellies are transparent and very delicate so they are hard to spot. They are a large marine plankton often found near the surface of coastal waters, but can at be found further out in the ocean and at great depths (Barnes, 1980: Meglitsch, 1972). Warmer tropical waters are favored, but they can be found in the Artic (Mills, 2001). Typically measuring less than 4 inches helps add to their invisibility, with one exception, the Venus’s-girdle whose ribbon shaped body can be five feet long (Comb Jellies, 2001). When being caught for study, plankton nets are two rough on fragile comb jellies. Scientists instead use glass jars (Coulombe, 1984).

Comb Jellies Versus Jellyfish

There are clearly visible traits comb jellies have that distinguish them from jellyfish. Foremost, radially arranged rows of ciliated plates for swimming. If a comb jelly has tentacles , they do not originate around the mouth. They gave adhesive cells for food capture and the absence of stinging cells. And they have an organ that helps them stay oriented in space. A few of the similarities between the two phylums of gelatinous sea creatures we’re discussion include having a strong biradial symmetry and an oral-aboral axis, a gelatinous medusa-like body, and one body cavity.

Comb Jelly Structure

The phylum name, Ctenophora, literally means “comb-bearers” (Introduction, 2001). In general, a comb jellies’ body can be considered spherical and having bilateral symmetry, but there are exceptions such as the ribbon shaped Venus’s-girdle, which was mentioned earlier. The body is best described if divided into two hemispheres. On the oral pole, the lower half, is the mouth and the other half, the aboral pole, contains the statolith, which will be described later in this paper. All comb jellies possess eight rows of comb rows/bands, which divide the body into eight equal sections. The comb row/bands are made up of cilia and are used to propel the comb jelly through the water (Coulombe, 1984).

Comb jellies are planktonic, meaning the ocean currents move them long distances, but they can move up and down in the water column using their cilia. The cilia move in a sweeping motion from the oral end to the aboral end, which propels the animal forward. They usually move mouth first through the water and if they come upon an object they can reserve their direction of movement by moving their cilia in the opposite direction (Barnes, 1980). Comb jellies are the largest animals to possess cilia (Mills, 2001).

Most comb jellies have two tentacles that they use for feeding. Jellyfish tentacles are attached to the surface of the animal, but this is not so for comb jellies (Barnes, 1980). The tentacles on comb jellies come from within deep sheaths (tentacular sheath/pouch) on each side of the body near the aboral end. The tentacles are long with additional branching tentacles on just one side. In some species, such as the Pleurobrachia (sea gooseberry), the tentacles can extended to a length of 3 to 4 centimeters. The tentacles can be extended or contracted because they are made of smooth muscle (Barnes, 1980).

The tentacles do not contain nematocysts (stinging cells) like jelly fish, but rather contain colloblasts. There is one exception and that is the Euchlora rubra, which does not contain colloblasts. Euchlora obtains nematocysts in a interesting fashion. When they eat trachyline medusae, they store the unused nematocysts from the jellyfish in their own tentacles. These nematocysts are not used to catch prey, but for protection (Kozloff, 1990).

Nervous system

The nervous system of the comb jelly is not made up of true nerves, but a subepidermal nerve network that is best developed under the comb rows (Barnes, 1980: Meglitsch, 1972). On the aboral end of the comb jelly their only sense organ is found, the statolith. This organ helps the comb jelly keep balanced and moving in the right direction. The statolith is in a pit sitting on top of four tufts of balancer cilia and each tuft is connected to a comb row. Say a wave comes along and causes the comb jelly to tilt to the left side. The tilting action would cause pressure on the balancer cilia on that side. That pressure signals to the cilia on that side to beat faster in order to make the animal move in the correct direction once again (Barnes, 1980).

In laboratory experiments, one of the balancer cilia was cut. When this was done the comb row connected to the cut balancer cilia started moving independent of the other comb rows (Barnes, 1980). If the statolith was completely removed, all rows moved independently. If the comb row was cut in half the top and bottom cilia acted independently of each other, but the top was coordinated with itself and the bottom coordinated with itself (Meglitsch, 1972).

Food: What and how they eat

Comb jellies are carnivorous, feeding on plankton including copepods, small crustaceans, larval fish and fish eggs (Mills, 2001: Voss, 1976: Kozloff 1990). When it comes to catching food, the colloblasts mentioned earlier come in handy as well as having a mucus covered surface and a big mouth. The comb jellies with colloblasts, such as the Pleurobrachia, put their tentacles out into the water to form a large net. A food item will move into the tentacle net and become caught on one of the sticky colloblasts. Then the tentacle is pulled up to the mouth and wiped off (Barnes, 1980: Meglitsch, 1972).

Some comb jellies use just surface mucus or a combination of surface mucus and tentacles to catch food. If the food item is caught on the surface mucus, it is moved to the mouth by the cilia. This is usually done by lobate comb jellies such as Mnemiopsis and Leucothea. If you are a Beroe comb jelly you use your big mouth to catch food. Beroe often eats other comb jellies with a gulping movement that pulls the prey in their month (Barnes, 1980: Meglitsch, 1972). The food starts to be digested extracellularly in the pharynx and is moved on to the stomach and canal system where it is fully digested. When done, the wastes are passed out through the mouth and anal pores (Barnes, 1980).

Comb jellies can often be found in large groups and after they leave an area there is often very little plankton left behind. (Coulombe, 1984). On the other hand, comb jellies are preyed upon by: jellyfish, fish (e.g. mackerel, ocean sunfish), sea turtles, birds, sharks (e.g. spiny dogfish), and other various marine organisms (Mills, 2001).

Bioluminescence

What really created an interest in comb jellies for me was their bioluminescence. The bioluminescence (cold light) on comb jellies comes from the gastrodermis cells in the walls of the meridional canals. This makes it look like the light is coming from the comb rows and giving an overall appearance of a pulse or blob of light. When disturbed, the comb jellies as well as many other marine organisms (jellyfish, siphonophores, deep sea squid, etc), glow with bioluminescence. Some of those mentioned (unclear if comb jellies do) lose their glowing tentacles or release a glowing cloud to distract predators (Waller, 1996).

Loose Ends

A few more random things about comb jellies: Comb jellies are hermaphroditic, the majority simultaneously, but a few have protandry, first being a male and then a female. Fertilization usually takes place in the seawater, but several species brood their eggs (Barnes, 1980). Self-fertilization can occur (Kozloff, 1990). Unlike jellyfish, the comb jellies do not have alternation of generations, the larva grows right into a comb jelly (Coulombe, 1984).

The comb jellies found on the east coast are: Pleurobranchia pileus, Sea gooseberry (Range: Maine to North Carolina); Mnemiopsis mccradyi, Lobate comb jelly (Range: Florida and Caribbean); Bolinopsis infunbulum, Common northern comb jelly (Range: north of Cape Cod); Mnemiopsis leidi, Leidy’s comb jelly (Range: south of Cape Cod); Beroe, Beroe’s comb jelly (Range: south of Cape Cod) (Coulombe, 1984). Hopefully we will have the opportunity of seeing some bioluminescence while were are on our trip to the Keys and the Bahamas.

Works Cited

Barnes, R.D. Invertebrate Zoology 4th edition. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders College.
1980.

Comb Jellies. MicrosoftÒEncartaÒ Online Encyclopedia 2001. Available from the
Internet, http://encarta.msn.com, accessed 5/13/01.

Coulombe, Deborah A. The Seashore Naturalist. New York, New York: Simon &
Schuster. 1984.

Introduction to Ctenophore. Available from the Internet,
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cnidaria/ctenophora.html, accessed 5/13/01.

Kozloff, Eugene N. Invertebrates. New York, New York: Saunders College Publishing.
1990.

Meglitsch, Paul. Invertebrate Zoology 2nd edition. New York, New York: Oxford
University Press. 1972.

Mills, Claudia. Comb Jellies. Available from the Internet,
http://fp.redshift.com/pelagia/ctenophores.htm, accessed 5/13/01.

Voss, Gilbert. Seashore Life of Florida and the Caribbean. Miami, Florida: E.A.
Seemann Publishing Inc. 1976.

Waller, Geoffrey ed. Sea Life. Washington D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. 1996.

Historic Day Trips

Castillo de San Marco and St Augustine waterfront kayak tour
St Augustine Pirate Ship Tour
Pirate Ship , St Augustine Marina

“Th’ar be treasure in those depths!” Saint Augustine Inlet’s moving shoals and quickly shifting sand bars are notorious for sinking ships. Hire a guide to safely get a kayakers-eye view of the historic waterfront sights. 

A view of Historic St. Augustine only the brave ever see. 

How much of the inlet you see depends on a few factors. Your level of fitness. Wind, waves, and tidal currents. Which launch will you set off from? Will you leave at the wrong time from the wrong place and get swept out to sea? There are no wrong choices of where and when to start your Epic St. Augustine Adventure except heading out into St. Augustine Inlet without a well trained guide.

Saint Augustine Inlet Kayak Tours
St. Augustine Inlet

There’s pride when effortlessly gliding past the pedestrians exploring the St. Augustine Waterfront. How effortlessly a kayak moves along the sea wall.  From water level, there are stories and Eco-treasures hiding right under the noses of the average passerby.

kayak tour great cross st augustine
Kayakers’ view of the Great Cross

Weather Patterns: Inexperienced kayakers should not attempt to kayak here without a local guide. Those interested in paddling alone should think about taking a GeoTrippin’ Coastal Kayaking Workshop. The conditions at the inlet are prone to sudden changes with significant wind, current, and waves. This area has many wind breaks so it is possible to still enjoy during high tide when the inlet is not comfortably passable. Sun heats up quickly. Wind speeds generally increase as the morning progresses.

Shark Eco Tour St Augustine
Unlikely to See Sharks

Wildlife: Early morning we get to catch the birds waking up and beginning their day before they fly off to begin hunting for food. In the evening they return to their resting grounds.

      • Expect to see Wading Birds, Water Fowl, Birds of Prey, Marine Birds, and special visitors as migration seasons progress.
      • Jumping Fish, Sea Turtles, Dolphins, Sharks, Whales are also possible sightings.

Topography

      • A mixture of oyster beds, estuary, sand bars, beaches, and sea walls.
      • Confluence of 4 bodies of water. Intracoastal Waterway, Atlantic Ocean, Salt Run, and the Matanzas River.
      • Surrounded by Villano Beach, Anastasia State Park, Anastasia Island, and Old Town St. Augustine.
bridge of lions kayak tour
Strongest currents under the bridge.

Tidal

      • Complex currents.
      • At times, currents may be too strong for some paddlers.
      • Boat Ramp is dangerously slippery during low tide.
      • Best to Avoid grass maze and beware of Oyster Beds during low tide.
      • Wide channel that narrows at Bridge of Lions creating significant current and whirlpools.
  •  

Evidence Based Discussion 😱

sea turtle kayak tour

The end of the world will come only if we do nothing about it. Ponder the concepts and controversies in environmental theory. Have evidenced based discussions shaping public policy. Bleak sensational headlines may fall apart upon reasonable consideration of scientific findings.

gtm grass maze kayak tour
#EcoMazeChallenge

Ever changing findings from the researchers, scientists, and students working on the tough and pressing issues all agree. Our civilization must act immediately and swiftly to lessen the blow from the impending climactic and biological catastrophe human activity ignited.  NOAA’s National Estuarine Research Reserves provide a granular look at how our irreplaceable wetlands changes and evolves.

For a deep connection with the natural world, all kayakers need to visit the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (The GTM).

GTM Education Center Kayak Tours
Free Admission to GTM Education Center
This kayakers heaven is a partnership between the US Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the State of Florida, and Department of Environmental Protection.  This reserve in St. Johns and Flagler County encompasses numerous state parks, forests, and gardens. National monuments and parks, county boat ramps and recreation amenities, as well as multiple city parks and attractions. The St Johns River Water Management District, Florida Fish and wild-life commission, even the department of forestry, maintain several preserves and waterways  for kayaking which are part of the research reserve… Not to leave out several universities and colleges with laboratories here using the area for field study. Its not just kayakers who have so much love for this area…

Say You Saw it All

Link to search map of kayak launch locations and tours.

St. Augustine is surrounded by a National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) just begging you to come on a Eco Kayak Tour. Explore a living laboratory spanning 40 miles of iconic Florida Coastal Waterways with one of our certified kayak guides. Have an intimate experience of this significant, rare, and valuable estuary system by kayak. The GTM Research Reserve incorporates three rivers that converge on the Saint Augustine Inlet.

The Matanzas River is a thrilling kayak tour adventure since it also influenced by a natural inlet to the south. Immerse yourself in the diverse habitats Florida has to offer

Marsh maze kayak tour guana lake
Guana Lake Marsh Maze

Kayakers who explore where a river meets the sea have special kayak tour experiences. 

Kayaking trails in St. Johns also attract countless species of birds, fish, mollusks, dolphins, turtles, manatees and tons of other wildlife to live and reproduce providing ecological, cultural, and economical benefits. The GTM Reserve serves as an important habitat for migrating species including calving North Atlantic right whales and serves as a critical feeding and resting location for migrating shorebirds. Manatees, wood storks, roseate spoonbills, bald eagles and peregrine falcons find refuge in the GTM. When you are looking for things to do in St. Augustine, come kayaking with our ACA Certified Guides so you can get up close and see it all by kayak.

Ideal for the most enthusiastic kayakers, St. Johns County offers an uncut gem of eco exploration. Our breathtaking shoreline is enriched with inland navigable waters, lakes, rivers, bays, estuaries, marshes, swamps, and tidal planes. It’s almost heaven for the water recreation and sporting enthusiasts, especially kayakers.

Climate Change Study
 Tri-color Egrets on Bullow Creek

all in one place. Take a kayaking lesson if you want to see first hand how all the life sustaining magic happens  here.A key location to study climate change and other global ecological processes. The Reserve‟s pristine condition, unique climate and biodiversity are ideal for eco tourism as well as scientific research and study.

The time has come for visitors and locals to start a love affair for exploration of this living laboratory in their kayaks. Known as an EcoTone, this one of a kind region of Florida transitions between the tropical and temperate climate zone. There are dramatic transformations from the freshwater habitats of the Guana River, erosion zones created by the intracoastal waterway, expansive oyster fields, spoil islands, tidal creeks, grass marshes, ripping tidal flows, hidden isolated beaches, even freshwater swamps. Taking multiple kayak tours of the GTM Research Reserve is a requirement to say you’ve seen it all.

More than History

Erosion threatens historic artifacts

St. Johns County has all the elements that attract tourists to Florida. There are romantic warm breezes, sandy beaches and sunny skies. Waterfront dining, museums, art galleries, music venues, golf courses, cultural events,  limitless outdoor adventure options.

Kayaking at Genung's Fish Camp
Genung’s Fish Camp. Built in 1948

There are many other great alternatives to do nearby. St. Johns isn’t just about the old fort and the Fountain of Youth set among the faux Spanish architecture built by Henry Flagler. Venture out into nature for an escape from America’s First Tourist Trap. The bigger story is the rare, pristine, one of a kind ecosystem we are surrounded by. St Augustine’s history starts in our endangered wetlands millennia, if not eons, before the European Invasion. Ancient civilizations with a complex economy thrived in this area because of this ecosystem. Their sophisticated society vanished… This is uncomfortable to discuss by those who stick to party lines.

Castillo de San Marco and St Augustine waterfront kayak tour

Kayak tours of St. Augustine Riverfront

There are so many other known archaeological sites off the beaten path around St. Augustine to explore. Sites of interest include pre-historic burial mounds and shell middens, plus ruins from Spanish colonial, British Plantations, Menorcan settlements, old Florida nostalgia, confederate relics, civil rights era, and other historically significant sites along the waterways we love to kayak. Start  kayaking and hiking St. Johns County to explore historical and natural treasures undiscovered by many.

Kayaking is by far the best thing to do beside strolling down King Street and the St Augustine Waterfront.  Join us when you are over the famous tourist attractions, theme parks, and other cliche vacation activities in St. Augustine. Head out on a Kayak Tour in the areas pristine ecosystem.

 

Stuck & Stranded

kayak stranded in creek

Sure way of getting yourself stuck up a creek without a paddle.

Kayak Creek Tour St. Augustine
Deep Creek, Hastings, FL

 

 

 Planning your swamp and creek trips without consulting the tide charts is a sure way to get your self stuck up a creek.

GeoTrippin’ gets you up our creeks with an extra paddle and a swift current on your tail. Your GeoGuide ensures enjoyment of the sights, sounds smells, sensations, and tastes of precious First Coast wetlands.

There is no sense in concerning yourself over what might happen. That’s why you are coming out with GeoTrippin’. A car is thousands of times more dangerous, no matter how intense fears of kayaking in the wild can be.  You wouldn’t tempt fate by standing yourself on the side of the road. So, don’t get yourself stuck up a creek. Even then, you are more likely to get hurt on the road.

Marsh maze kayak tour guana lake
Guana Lake Marsh Maze

Get stuck in the mud flats of St. Johns County and it may be hours until a helicopter can be called in to rescue you. Not to mention the $5000 ticket price. On the road the ambulance can reach you quickly. Up a creek… its not so easy.

Its best to plan your creek experience properly.

Tidal creeks are one of the most notorious bodies of water for stranding people if the tide goes out before you are out. Non-savvy kayakers may find themselves up a creek in a bad way. Coordinating launch times for when the tide is just right is crucial.

Be ready for any emergency. 

Your guide will even have have an extra paddle, UHF radio, emergency water, and first aide kit.  Not to mention, we’ll be riding the tide up the creek and back down again. So no worries here.  Easy peasy.

Oyster Reef at Low Tide

Leave at any other time without reading the tides and the cliche will snag you hard… It won’t matter that you do have a paddle. Going with a tour avoids fighting strong currents and getting stranded. Otherwise you could be forced to traipse through fossil making muck filled with jagged razors (no joke). A guide ensures you aren’t stuck baking in the sun while you sit six hours dehydrating without enough water. Waiting on the tide to return.

Buy tickets for tours of Moultrie, Pelicier, and Deep Creeks, plus the San Sabastian and Guana Rivers. 

North Guana Outpost

From here, Geotrippin’ Adventure Co. offers guided kayak tours and ACA accredited lessons. Accommodates parties of 60+ people. Launch from four different locations. Plus, their trailer will bring kayaks all over Northeast Florida if you call to plan a private tour.

Call: (904) 373-0306

Facilities: Restroom, Shower, Patio with Picnic Tables, Bait and Fishing Shop, cold beverages, popsicles, boat charters, kayak rentals and paddleboard sales.

North Guana Outpost (NGO) offers an exclusive private launch on Mickler Rd at A1A in Ponte Vedra Beach. There is no other place with access to the fresh water marshes at the most northern  part of the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR). 

NGO has a high end retail store to get you geared up in style for the beach, fishing, stand up paddle boarding, or just your next adventure.

 SUP, Kayak, Beach Gear, Fishing Package, and Bike Rentals

With direct access to the Guana Preserve, NGO is your destination location for wildlife viewing, fishing, and exploring with ease.