
The Pearl River forms the boundary between Louisiana and Mississippi, and the maze of channels where it splits near the coast holds the wildest paddling within an hour of New Orleans. This is the system that feeds the Honey Island Swamp, but the river itself deserves its own write-up, because it’s a different kind of trip.
River paddling, not pond paddling
Unlike the dead-flat water at Manchac, the Pearl moves. The main channels carry real current, especially in spring, and the braided side channels can take you in circles if you don’t know the system. The payoff is variety: sandbars, white cypress forest, oxbow lakes, and stretches where you won’t see another human for hours.
Know before you go
- Check the Pearl River gauge before any trip; high water changes everything
- The West Pearl and the sloughs off it are calmer than the main channel
- This is serious alligator habitat; give them distance, especially in spring nesting season
- Self-guided trips here are for experienced paddlers with offline maps; everyone else should book a guide
Guided options
Several New Orleans outfitters run trips into the Pearl River system, mostly on the calmer Honey Island side. Our Honey Island guide covers what those trips look like, and the best swamp tours roundup compares the operators.
Related reading
The Honey Island Swamp Monster: Louisiana’s Bigfoot, explained