There are about 5-6 sets of shoals on this run including Big Rapid, a cranking Class II and Florida's second-biggest rapid. All of these are easily navigated, though inexperienced boaters should scout Big Rapid. The rapid is commonly known as Lost Dog Rapid (because of the tendancy of lost hunting dogs to show up here). It is possible to drive to Lost Dog Rapids.
The gauge station (indicated at the take-out) is long gone. This take-out is called the Burnt-Bridge take-out, and is about 150 yards upstream from the remains of an old bridge, though all that is left of the bridge are the abutments.
Use the USGS gauge at Lamont:
Aucilla at Lamont
Lost Dog Rapids is best near flood level. It's an easy rapid with little maneuvering needed. It's easily scouted/portaged from the left bank where a well-maintained section of the Florida Trail runs along the river. At higher levels surfable waves will be present, but resist the temptation to surf without a helmet, as a couple of 'got ya' rocks of sharp, fractured limestone are concealed in the right of the wave train. (In a normal run down Lost Dog Rapid, you'll be well to the left of the sharp rocks.)
Less experienced paddlers will be more challenged by an S-turn about four miles into the trip than they will be by Lost Dog Rapids, which is easily portaged, while the S-turn is not. Every few years, the remains of a boat will be found wrapped around a cypress tree at the bottom of the S-turn. To avoid mishap, paddlers should hug the inside of last turn. At flood levels, water flows over the middle and lower part of the S-turn through trees and brush, creating potential entrapment hazards.
It is not clear if trot-line fishing remains legal on this section of river; it has been in past years. Regardless, lines tied to tree limbs should be left alone as you will find fishhooks at the end of them.
Access to this section of the river is not as easy as it once was because many of the access roads have been closed by a hunting club that has leased the adjacent woodlands. The land right next to the river is pubic property and in theory the Burnt-Bridge take-out or Lost Dog Rapids can be accessed by driving southwest to the road leading to Goose Pature and then north on low-quality, unmaintained dirt roads.
However, it's easier to lenghten the trip and take out near the road leading to Goose Pasture, where the river goes under ground, making the trip about 10 miles from the Walker Springs Bridge where Jefferson County Road 257 becomes Taylor County Road 14. (CR 14 becomes a dirt road about two miles south of the bridge.)
The turn to Goose Pasture has a road sign reading 'Powerline Road', and it's the first sign found as you drive southwest from Cabbage Grove. (While marked on maps as a community, the only evidence of Cabbage Grove is a fire tower.) The access to the Aucilla Sink is narrow, unmaintained and hard to find. It's about 50 yards east of a metal grate spanning the road.