Legend for Summary of Features Terms
To assist the user of this document, each full spring description begins
with a photograph and a quick summary of important features. The opening,
"encompassing" photograph attempts to capture, as much a possible, the
spring as a whole. Most springs, however, cannot be "captured" in a single
photo or from one perspective. Subsequent thumbnail photographs highlight
other significant, unique, appealing, or revealing spring features and
aspects. Over half of the spring descriptions have photographs.
Standardized terms will be used across most feature categories to rate
important aspects of individual springs. The general feature rating scale
is as follows:
Feature Rating Scale
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Not Applicable (N/A)
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Poor
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Fair
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Good
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Very Good
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Fine
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Excellent
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Outstanding
The features being rated are as follows:
Summary of Features
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Scale—1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th
etc., magnitude—the amount of average flow from the spring, from no longer
flowing to more than one billion gallons per day.
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Scenery—from poor (denuded, cleared, polluted, eroded, badly developed,
etc.) to outstanding (exceptional aesthetic or natural beauty, striking
natural features, diversity of flora and fauna, grandeur, etc.).
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How Pristine?—from completely degraded (covered in concrete, filled
with garbage, flow capped, devoid of life, toxic, clear-cut, badly eroded,
choked in exotics, etc.) to completely pristine (no visual evidence of
the hand of man).
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Swimming—from poor (too shallow, water murky or polluted, trash
in the water, very deep, sharp rocks, water full of vegetation, etc.) to
outstanding (clear water of varying depths, sunny and open swim areas,
beach areas, safe, easy access into and out of water, facilities at site,
etc).
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Wildlife—provided only for certain springs, this is a very inexact
rating based on observations and on potential for seeing wildlife at or
around springs. Many spring environments have rich and abundant wildlife,
but that richness and abundance varies with the seasons, time of day, and
number of people at the site. The are otters and manatees at several
springs, for example, but there is no guarantee a visitor will see them
on any given day. A rating of excellent means not only that there
is abundant wildlife at or around a spring, but that the visitor is likely
to see wildlife.
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Protection—from poor (either no protection or no enforcement to
keep site from being abused/degraded) to outstanding (not just being in
public or well-meaning private hands, but regular and proactive enforcement
to protect the site).
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Crowds—from none (visitor will usually be the only person on the
site) to heavily populated and overused (overcrowded, resulting in diminishment
of everyone’s enjoyment or limited access).
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Access—If on private property with no access, this will be noted.
Otherwise, this feature rates how easy or difficult it is to get to a spring,
from excellent access (off major roads and very easy to find, well sign-posted,
etc.) to poor (arduous, strenuous labor required to reach a very remote
or difficult-to-find spring). For example, some springs are adjacent
to private property, and no landfall may be made. Others can only
be reached after hours of walking or canoeing upriver. A spring might
lie in dense floodplain forest and require extended wading in waist-deep
water and mud. Visitors are advised to respect private property and
not trespass.
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Facilities—from poor or none to outstanding (clean restrooms, changing
rooms, lodging, places to eat, good parking, recreational equipment on
the site, interpretive trails, etc.).
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Safety—a general observation only of safety at/near a spring, from
poor (a very real chance of encountering dangerous conditions, animals,
or people) to outstanding (constant or very regular supervision in the
form of lifeguards, rangers, or police). The authors assume no responsibility
for a mishap that might befall a user of this Guide.
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Scuba—yes or no. This online document is not
a guide for scuba diving. Other publications and web sites provide
excellent information for those who wish to scuba in springs and spring
caverns.
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Cost—the cost of getting access to/into the spring is noted, at
the prices that were current when then authors visited the sites.
Costs are subject to change.