Devil's Den
An underground prehistoric spring in a dry cave. Florida said why not.
Devil's Den is a dry cave. Inside the cave is a spring. The spring is 72 degrees and 33 million years old and has fossilized animal bones from the Pleistocene era on the bottom. You go inside the cave, down a staircase, and snorkel or scuba dive in ancient water with mastodon and giant ground sloth fossils below your fins. That is the real description. It is all correct.
The opening in the cave ceiling creates a shaft of natural light that hits the water at certain times of day and produces the kind of photograph that makes people think you used a filter. You didn't. It just looks like that. Devil's Den produces her own lighting. She knows what she's doing.
This is a privately operated site in Williston — small, intimate, nothing like a state park experience. It's a ladder down into the earth, a prehistoric underground spring, and some of the most unusual snorkeling you can do in the state. Fossils are protected and cannot be removed. The fish living down here have never seen sunlight and they're thriving anyway.
AT A GLANCE
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Location |
Williston, FL (Levy County) |
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Water Temp |
72°F year-round (underground — stays constant) |
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Best For |
Snorkeling, scuba diving, photography, fossil viewing |
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Entry Fee |
$15/person snorkel; $35/person scuba; RV/camping extra |
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Hours |
9am–5pm weekdays; 8am–6pm weekends |
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Vibe Rating |
10/10 Prehistoric Chaos With Mood Lighting |
Underground, ancient, and completely unlike anything else on this list. Devil's Den is the spring you bring up at dinner to make everyone immediately want to go to Florida. She's a conversation that starts with 'so there's this cave...'
WHAT TO BRING
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Snorkel gear (rentals available on site)
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Wetsuit recommended — the cave stays at 72 but the air is damp and cool
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Underwater camera — the light shaft photographs are worth the trip alone
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Scuba certification cards if you're diving
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Curiosity — there's a lot to look at down there
BEST TIME TO VISIT
Late morning (10am–noon) on sunny days for the best light shaft through the cave opening. Weekday visits are less crowded. Avoid overcast days if photography is your main goal.
INSIDER TIPS
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The light shaft through the cave ceiling is best between 10am and noon on clear days — worth timing your visit around this.
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Fossils are visible on the bottom — mostly fish bones and remains from Pleistocene megafauna. They're protected; look but don't touch.
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The cave has a capacity limit — small groups only. Call ahead or arrive early.
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Devil's Den is 25 minutes from Ichetucknee Springs — pair them for a full North Florida springs day that covers both ends of the geological spectrum.
CONSERVATION NOTE
LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER // Devil's Den is a prehistoric site. The fossils on the floor are irreplaceable and federally protected — collecting or disturbing them is illegal. The cave ecosystem is fragile and unusual; please follow all posted rules. This is a privately maintained site and those rules exist because previous visitors have damaged things that cannot be undone.
Ready to add her to the list? Download the Florida Springs Bucket List — free, no excuses.
Florida Springs Bucket List - Free Download
15 Florida springs. Every one worth it.
This isn't a generic travel list pulled from a Google search. These are the springs that actually matter — the iconic ones everyone talks about, the hidden gems that separate the people who really know Florida, and the underdogs that make you text your friends on the drive home.
What's inside:
- All 15 springs organized by tier: The Icons, Hidden Gems, and The Underdogs
- Each spring with its name and the one-line reason it made the cut
- Checkboxes to track your progress
- Trip notes section for the details that matter
- Conservation reminder because these springs need us as much as we need them
Printable. One page. Yours free.
Drop your email, grab the PDF, and start planning. The springs are 72°F year-round. There is no bad time to go.
Free. No catch. Just vibes and conservation.