A tree completely across the spring run where it meets the river, meant we swam and walked in the water to get to the cave. Actually, one of us swam he whole way and one of us walked. You might want to note the date of this report to inquire and plan accordingly. We pulled our canoe onto the mud of the river bottom at the right side of the tree, off-loaded tanks over and under the tree to the spring side, donned drysuits in the boat on the river-side of the tree, and geared up in just a couple of feet of water on the spring-side. The river trip itself included only 2 logs that scraped the canoe bottom with the river at about 9.5'. The dock at the boat ramp was submerged a few inches.
We had about 40' viz and the water was clear to the 2nd T where we turned. Flow was a bit less than the Gallery or the Lips at Ginnie, but would definitely push you back in the first part of the cave. This was my first dive here, so I have no historical comparison.
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