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Meaher State Park is a public recreation area located on Big Island, [1] an island at the north end of Mobile Bay that lies within the city limits of Spanish Fort, Alabama. The state park occupies 1,327 acres (537 ha) along the shoreline of Ducker Bay, [2] at the junction of Mobile Bay and the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta. [3]
Chambers County Lake has a courtesy pier by the boat ramp. Lee County Lake is a 130 acres (0.5 km 2) lake located 6 miles (10 km) southeast of Opelika. Take Alabama Highway 169 south from I-85 then 1 mile (2 km) west on Lee County Road 146. Lee County Lake is the only lake with fishermen cabins and has a courtesy pier by the boat ramp.
Pickwick Lake is the reservoir created by Pickwick Landing Dam as part of the Tennessee Valley Authority.The lake stretches from Pickwick Landing Dam in Counce, Tennessee, to Wilson Dam in Florence, Alabama, and is one of the few lakes in the United States to be located in 3 different states.
Port San Luis, California (near Avila Beach) Redondo Beach pier: Redondo Beach: San Clemente: Crystal Pier San Diego: Ocean Beach Municipal Pier: San Diego: Piers in San Francisco: San Francisco: San Mateo: San Simeon: Stearns Wharf: Santa Barbara: Santa Cruz: Santa Monica Pier: Santa Monica: Seal Beach Pier: Seal Beach: Venice Fishing Pier ...
Created by Wheeler Dam along the Tennessee River, it stretches 60 miles (97 km) from Wheeler Dam to Guntersville Dam. It is Alabama's second largest lake at 68,300 acres (276 km 2 ), only a few hundred acres smaller than Alabama's Guntersville Lake , which is 69,100 acres (280 km 2 ) and is separated by the Guntersville dam from the lake.
Alabama River: Lewis Smith Dam: Lewis Smith Lake: Black Warrior River [2] [3] Yates Dam: Lake Yates: Tallapoosa River: Thurlow Dam: Lake Thurlow: Tallapoosa River: Tom Bevill Lock and Dam: Aliceville Lake: Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway: Upper Bear Creek Dam: Upper Bear Creek Reservoir: Bear Creek: Walter Bouldin Dam: Jordan Lake: Coosa River ...
On August 28–29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina pushed a massive storm surge into Mobile Bay; it measured 16 feet (4.9 m) high at Bayou La Batre (Alabama), with higher waves on top, and 12 feet (3.7 m) high at Mobile, at the far northern end of the 31-mile-long Mobile Bay. Thousands of boats, piers, and beach houses were damaged by waves exceeding ...
Big Creek Lake was a source of controversy regarding the equitable apportionment of limited fresh water resources between the states of Mississippi and Alabama in the early eighties. The City of Mobile utilizes waters from Big Creek Lake for their municipal drinking water supply, decreasing available flow for downstream uses in Mississippi. [4]