This 83-foot-wide drift hunters and 25-foot-deep spring may be found in Florida's Madison Blue Spring State Park, and its pure waters trickle over limestone rocks before joining the river.
Enjoy water activities like scuba diving, tubing, and paddling, and don't forget to schedule time for a picnic in the park's picturesque setting of hardwoods and pines, where you may see a variety of avian species. North of Brevard, in North Carolina's Pisgah National Forest, you'll find this natural waterslide. Water flows at a rate of about 11,000 gallons per minute down the mountain waterslide, which drops riders from a height of 60 feet into a pool at the bottom.
Despite being at its busiest between noon and 4 p.m., the Sliding Rock Recreation Area is open every day from Memorial Day to Labor Day and is guarded by lifeguards.
You should wear worn shorts and shoes for safety since the natural slide is slick. Bridal Veil Falls at Georgia's Tallulah Gorge State Park attracts a lot of tourists every summer because of the natural rock slides that erupt there.
Water pours over several rocks near the falls, creating a natural slide in a swimming hole that is eight feet deep.
If you wish to visit the region, you'll need a permission, and you should get there early since there are only 100 issued each day. The gorge is two miles long and drops to a depth of about a thousand feet. A 1.4-mile path follows the south branch of the Tuolumne River to Carlon Falls in California.
The walk ends in a waterfall with a swimming hole that is accessible all year round (barring drought). The falls empty into a calm swimming pool framed by towering ponderosa pines and fields of purple lupine and yellow sunflowers.