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March 28 - 30

Little River Weekend Paddle
Reed Bingham State Park


Join the Georgia Conservancy on March 28 - 30 for our weekend paddling adventure on south Georgia’s Little River at Reed Bingham State Park.

The beautiful Reed Bingham State Park near Adel will be our base camp for the weekend. And it’s a convenient location, as the Little River winds its way through the park, before continuing its journey south past the park’s spillway dam. Paddlers during our adventure weekend will be treated to an 8-mile-long paddle on the Little River north of Reed Bingham with our takeout at the park.

This is a Friday afternoon - Sunday afternoon camping and paddling weekend, though we do have a day paddle pass option for those just looking for a Saturday out on the water.


About Reed Bingham State Park:
Visitors to this pretty park usually see abundant wildlife, including species such as gopher tortoises, yellow bellied sliders and indigo snakes. Nesting bald eagles are often seen in winter. American alligators are often seen sunning along the lake’s edge. During winter, thousands of “buzzards,” actually black vultures and turkey vultures, roost in the trees and soar overhead. Nearly 80 percent of the Coastal Plain’s plant community can be found along the park’s Coastal Plain Nature Trail, making this park’s habitat some of the most diverse in the country.”

Join us on a Georgia Conservancy Stewardship Trip to learn more about important location-specific conservation issues, as well as statewide advocacy opportunities. Our goal is simple: Create a connection between some of Georgia’s most precious places and the people needed to protect them.


Register Below

*Registration opens to current Georgia Conservancy donors (last 12 months) on December 12 at 5 PM and the General Public on December 13 at 5 PM


The Little River Paddle is one of our Heartland Rivers of Georgia Paddle Series trips featuring camping, day paddling, weekend paddling, and stewardship on rivers in Georgia. The series brings to light conservation efforts, economic development and recreational opportunities on Georgia’s Heartland Rivers, including the Broad, Etowah, Flint, Ochlockonee, Oconee, Ocmulgee, Ogeechee, Chattahoochee, Altamaha, Satilla, Savannah and Yellow rivers, as well as Spring Creek near Bainbridge.

Learn more about the Georgia Conservancy's Stewardship Trips Program


If you have any questions about our Stewardship Trips Program or about any upcoming trip, please contact Georgia Conservancy Stewardship Trips Director Clark Harrison at charrison@gaconservancy.org.