A three-week 3,500+ mile journey from New York to Florida and back, focusing on exploration in Northern Florida around the panhandle, the Ocala National Forest and the Atlantic coast near St. Augustine. We took the coastal route down, via the Cape May Ferry with a pause to check out Assateague Island before turning inland and making a bee-line south to the Okefenokee Swamp on the Georgia-Florida border where we slowed down and began the overland camping segment of this adventure. The journey was made in our 2019 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon and focused on exploring the more pristine wilderness areas of this section of Florida. Follow the links below for field notes from each day of the journey.



























The Okefenokee National Wildlife Refugee conserves the unique qualities of the swamp, protecting and enhancing the wildlife and its habitat to ensure the integrity of the ecological system. The Refuge also sees part of its mission as embracing the grandeur, mystery, and cultural heritage of the area. Native Americans inhabited the swamp for centuries and coined the term “Okefenokee” which means “land that trembles when you walk on it.” The swamp is thought to be 6,000-8,000 years old. It is contained in a saucer-shaped depression that drains toward the south and southwest. Drainage from the swamp forms the headwaters for the St. Marys River and the Suwannee River. Habitats provide for threatened and endangered species, such as red-cockaded woodpecker, wood storks, indigo snakes, and a wide variety of other wildlife species. It is world renowned for its amphibian populations that are bio-indicators of global health. More than 600 plant species have been identified on refuge lands. The Swamp survived an attempt at draining in the late 1800’s and was logged extensively in the early 1900’s before becoming a refuge in 1937 by declaration of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The refuge has 353,981 acres of National Wilderness Area within its boundaries and is a Wetland of International Importance (RAMSAR Convention – 1971) because it is one of the world’s largest intact freshwater ecosystems…



