dryfj.com / drycyclist.com (kevin cook)

27/30
[ stop the slideshow ]

Clark Spring looks like a slice of key-lime pie. Is it stagnant?

05576-clark-spring-800px.jpg Walking down to Clark Spring, I pass pristine Jackrabbit Lake and take a closer look.ThumbnailsClark Spring does not appear to be stagnant after all.Walking down to Clark Spring, I pass pristine Jackrabbit Lake and take a closer look.ThumbnailsClark Spring does not appear to be stagnant after all.Walking down to Clark Spring, I pass pristine Jackrabbit Lake and take a closer look.ThumbnailsClark Spring does not appear to be stagnant after all.Walking down to Clark Spring, I pass pristine Jackrabbit Lake and take a closer look.ThumbnailsClark Spring does not appear to be stagnant after all.Walking down to Clark Spring, I pass pristine Jackrabbit Lake and take a closer look.ThumbnailsClark Spring does not appear to be stagnant after all.

With the help of my map, I locate Clark Spring in a gulley along the dry creek not far from the junction of Long Ridge Road and Jackrabbit Lake Road.

This spring is really, really green; is it stagnant? Maybe I'd be better off getting some water from Jackrabbit Lake instead.

A number of yellowjackets buzz around to the left of the spring basin where a trickle of water is seeping out from underneath. For a moment I consider trying to filter water from that little underflow, which looks cleaner than the spring.