Where is roseberry creek on lake guntersville




















There are some good golf courses nearby, and they have a handsome historic downtown. The scene is based on a photo of a sunset that I captured at one of the boat ramps near Scottsboro. Top things to do: Fishing; golfing; walking, jogging or biking on the paved lakeside path; swimming; birdwatching; launching a boat; camping; dining; lakescape photography Dimensions of resort: acres the golf course is about half of the acreage.

I hit a couple of balls into Guntersville Lake that day, and several more into the trees, streams and ponds along the fairways of the beautiful, hilly course.

The lake comes into play on seven holes and, in my case, the scenery makes up for all the double and triple bogies. The golf course is certainly a dominant feature of the peninsula where the resort sits about 6. On an island just south of the golf course, the marina with its five covered docks is another dominant feature.

The wide boat ramp can handle five or six trailers at a time. They added a new dock recently, and now offer over wet and over dry slips, plus a repair facility. They have 11 cottages and a 6-bedroom lodge available for overnight accommodations. The restaurant, cottages and lodge all enjoy lake views as does many of the plus campsites in the RV campground. Sighting a bald eagle would not be a big surprise for a patient sky gazer.

This article would not be complete if the waterfront portions of Lake Guntersville State Park were not included. And three areas of the park are certainly among the best spots for enjoying the water. Picnic tables are scattered about in a couple of areas.

A big RV campground is also along the banks of the water, and it offers more amenities for the campers. Location: 24 State Campground Rd. Dimensions: Approx. The boat ramp and piers stay busy. The mountain side of the causeway at this location is one of the best spots in northeast Alabama for renting a kayak or canoe. Top things to do: Launch a fishing or skiing boat, kayak or canoe, fishing, walking, birding, picnicking, lakescape photography.

It would be difficult to find a better setting for enjoying the lake than a hook shaped peninsula with two fishing piers, a two-lane boat ramp with a dock, a paved walking path and lots of shade.

This narrow tree-filled strip of land offers some unique views in all directions that other spots on the lake are not able to provide.

This park, along with the other spots in Scottsboro listed above, the excellent golf courses and other quality of life amenities, help make the city one of the best small cities for relocating retirees.

Location: Hwy. For hikers, a trailhead for the Lower Cutchenmine Trail has recently been reopened here. So, you can park in the lot here and make your way to the main trail without having to park in the small parking space on the side of the road at the main trailhead. The state park offers much more than the three lakeshore areas above. Learn more at alapark. South Sauty Creek is the boundary separating Marshall and Jackson County, and you pass from one county to the other about halfway across the causeway.

You need to be a registered guest of the resort to visit the spots where some of the best views would be found. But anyone can access the Langston boat ramp or enjoy simply driving through. Location: South Sauty Rd. Location: Morgan Cove Rd.

Top things to do: A fantastic spot to enjoy fall foliage, launch any small boat, to kayak or canoe on the smooth section of the creek, hike or birdwatch. Canada Geese, mallards and herons are fairly common.

Seeing a kingfisher would not be a surprise. The trail travels up the side of Montague Mountain and culminates at Russell Cave. Although this is the 50th anniversary for this National Monument, over 10, years of Native American habitation and history are documented here. Goose Pond Colony is a municipally owned resort that will take your breath away.

With two beautiful 18 hole championship golf courses, comfortable lakeside cottages, lodge, relaxing waterfront campground, walking trail, full service marina, meeting facilities, The Docks Restaurant, swimming pool, beach area and Lake Guntersville, we are all you need for a relaxing vacation or one day outing. Read more: Goose Pond. A acre complex offering a central location on Roseberry Creek right on Lake Guntersville.

Alabama has a new museum dedicated to events that many consider the seeds of the civil rights movement in America, the Scottsboro Boys Trials. In nine young black defendants faced charges of attacking two white women on a train. The juries in their trials were entirely white, and the defense attorneys had little experience in criminal law and no time to prepare their cases. Alabama and Norris v. Decisions from the two Supreme Court cases established for all Americans the principles that criminal defendants are entitled to effective assistance of counsel and that people may not be excluded from juries because of their race.

Willow Street in Scottsboro, however tax deductable donations are welcome. Museum hours are 2nd and 3rd Saturdays from am until pm. For large groups or educational groups call for an appointment at It was created in when the Tennessee Valley Authority dammed portions of the Tennessee River to control flooding and provide low cost hydroelectric power. Skiing, boating, and personal water craft are great ways to spend a day on the water.

Fishing, boating, camping, hunting and eagle watching are popular sports in the area. Eagle watching centers throughout the entire lake to the dam during the winter, though some bald eagles stay all year. Guntersville Lake fish habitat includes milfoil and hydrilla weed beds from which big bass explode on top water baits. Though most noted nationally for large bass, Lake Guntersville is home to quality angling for a variety of fish.

Historically, about two-thirds of the anglers on Guntersville target largemouth bass, although bream bluegill, redear sunfish, and longear sunfish , crappie, sauger and catfish attract their fair share of anglers. The first thing you notice about Cathedral Caverns is the massive entrance.

The huge opening measures feet wide and 25 feet high. And it gets even better. Inside the cavern, you will find Big Rock Canyon, Mystery River and some of the most beautiful formations Mother Nature has ever created. Among them, you will see Stalagmite Mountain, The Frozen Waterfall and Goliath, a huge stalagmite column that reaches the ceiling of the cave some 45 feet above! Cathedral Caverns is the perfect field trip for your school, church or other group. You can visit anytime, as the cave maintains a comfortable degree temperature year round.

But this area, all within minutes of the launch ramp at Goose Pond, consistently produces tournament-winning catches for everything from weekend club anglers to top national competitors in the B. Elite and FLW Major tournaments.

The rest of Guntersville's many miles--a total of some 69, acres--offers lots of good fishing, but a whole lot of winning anglers never leave the waters close to Goose Pond. The waters here look just like the rest of this big river-lake; lots of hydrilla, milfoil, water primrose and "Guntersville Cheese" anywhere the water depth is less than 8 feet, and deep cuts and channels on the creek beds and main river; the cover is good, but nothing unique to this area of the vast lake.

The river channel makes a moderate "S" bend out in front of Goose Pond, but not enough to make the fishing here any better than down at Brown's Creek, where the channel makes a "U" before heading to the dam. Runoff current from the creek channels might be a factor in the rainy season--but that doesn't explain the year-round production of this area, where it frequently takes a pound catch of five bass to place high in a large tournament.

My guess--and that of many expert observers--is that it's because the area is constantly "restocked" with the thousands of bass that are caught all over the lake, then hauled back to the Goose Pond docks for weigh-in. A single boat tourney can put quality bass back in the water right at that dock, and there are dozens and dozens of them, some much larger, going on there year around. Obviously, the bass don't stay right at the release site--otherwise it would be bass soup there.



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