Little Pee Dee River
The Little Pee Dee River is a tributary of the Pee Dee River (which originates in the Appalachian Mountains where it is known as the Yadkin River). The Little Pee Dee technically arises near Laurinburg, North Carolina as Gum Swamp, which flows southward , receiving several small tributaries, across the South Carolina border into Red Bluff Lake, near McCol, South Carolina. The lake is at an elevation of 135 feet, and from the outlet of the lake, the flow is called the Little Pee Dee River.
The Little Pee Dee is a sluggish meandering blackwater river that ranges between ten and about twenty-five feet wide and 6 to 10 feet deep in its upper reaches. It is navigable only by canoe or other small craft. Some parts of the Little Pee Dee River are nearly blocked by low-hanging tree branches. It is bordered by a swamp area that features red gum, cypress, oak, tupelo and other hardwoods. It flows southeastward, roughly paralleling the state border until it receives the somewhat larger Lumber River near Nichols, South Carolina, from which the much larger river flows more nearly southward until it joins with the Pee Dee near Yauhannah, South Carolina. Part of the lower section has been designated a Scenic River by South Carolina. It features deep channels, slow moving water, and white sandy bars and beaches. Wildlife is abundant, including alligators, and bald eagles. The river also offers excellent fishing.
The Little Pee Dee runs its entire length through coastal lands of low relief that are pockmarked with Carolina bays. Downriver from Dillon, South Carolina is Little Pee Dee State Park. Adjacent to this is the Little Pee Dee Heritage Preserve which is a Carolina bay that has been preserved as natural as possible.
External link
Little Pee Dee State Park and Little Pee Dee Bay Heritage Preserve