Lake Palatlakaha.
Lake Palatlakaha is the lake whose name the entire chain takes. The Palatlakaha River runs through it and through nine other Clermont Chain lakes, and the chain itself is sometimes called the Palatlakaha River system. At roughly 109 acres, it is one of the smaller chain lakes by surface area — but its central position, public access, and connector role make it strategically more important than its size suggests.
If you have ever launched a boat at Palatlakaha River Park & Boat Ramp, fished off the public pier, or motored from Lake Minnehaha north toward Lake Hiawatha, you have been on Palatlakaha. The lake sits between two of the chain’s biggest open-water lakes — Minnehaha to the south and Hiawatha to the north — and the Palatlakaha River canal carries the chain’s water through it. Anglers know Palatlakaha for its cypress-lined shorelines, vegetation-rich edges, and a depth profile that runs about ten to fifteen feet at the deeper holes. Largemouth bass + bluegill + crappie + the occasional shellcracker.
What makes Lake Palatlakaha unusual on the chain is that it has dedicated public access. Most chain lakes require a boat already in the water at Clermont Waterfront Park or a private dock. Palatlakaha has a county-maintained park with a boat ramp, fishing pier, and shoreline access — meaning it is one of the few chain lakes a buyer can experience first-hand before deciding whether they want to live on it. For chain newcomers, that matters.
The waterfront real estate on Palatlakaha is comparatively limited and tends to trade at the lower end of the chain’s per-foot pricing because of the smaller surface area and lower buyer demand pool relative to Minneola or Minnehaha. That makes Palatlakaha frontage one of the more accessible entry points to chain ownership — a smaller lake, a quieter cove, the same Palatlakaha River system flowing under your dock.
Quick Facts
- Surface Area
- Approximately 109 acres. One of the smaller named chain lakes by surface, but pivotal in chain hydrology — the Palatlakaha River runs directly through it.
- Depth
- Average eight to ten feet, with deeper holes around twelve to fifteen feet. Shallow enough for vegetation-rich shoreline, deep enough for boating and bass fishing.
- Chain Position
- Central. Connects Lake Minnehaha (south) to Lake Hiawatha (north). The Palatlakaha River canal — the chain’s water artery — runs directly through.
- Public Access
- Palatlakaha River Park & Boat Ramp (Lake County, 12325 Hull Rd, Clermont) — boat ramp, fishing pier, shoreline fishing, walking trails. One of the few Clermont Chain lakes with dedicated public access infrastructure.
- Fishing
- Largemouth bass, bluegill, crappie, occasional shellcracker. Cypress-lined edges and lily-pad coves are productive cover. Less pressure than Minneola — quiet weekday mornings are particularly good.
- Naming
- The lake (and the river that connects the chain) carries the Palatlakaha name from its original Seminole-language root. The same name is sometimes used for the entire chain — "Palatlakaha River system" is academically interchangeable with "Clermont Chain of Lakes".
What I tell my buyers about Lake Palatlakaha
If you want chain access without paying chain-anchor prices, Palatlakaha is the lake to look at. Frontage here typically trades below Minneola or Minnehaha per foot, and the buyer pool is smaller — meaning more negotiating room and more time to find the right lot.
If you want recreation density, Palatlakaha is not the lake. Minneola is the recreation spine. Minnehaha is the wakesurfing spine. Palatlakaha is the cypress-cove fishing spine — quieter water, narrower riding surface, more wildlife.
For chain newcomers, Palatlakaha is the easiest first read. The public park gives you a place to put a kayak or rent a boat for a Saturday before you commit to ownership anywhere on the chain. Walk the pier. Watch how the water moves through the canal. Listen to how quiet the western shore is at sunrise. Then decide.
Lake Profile
Lake Palatlakaha — the deep read
The 1885 first-steamboat route from Lake Harris, a Creek-language name meaning “crossing over,” and the gateway to Lake County’s longest paddling waterway.
Lake basics
Lake Palatlakaha covers approximately 109 acres in Clermont — one of the smaller, more natural chain lakes. Part of the Palatlakaha River watershed: headwaters of the Ocklawaha River, which ultimately flows to the St. Johns. Tannin-stained, shallow, with limited shoreline development preserving natural character.
Chain connections: a narrow natural neck to Lake Minnehaha (south) plus a short canal (Minnehaha/Palatlakaha Canal, ~0.1 mile), and a canal to Lake Hiawatha (east/southeast). Full chain access from here.
Name origin
“Palatlakaha” derives from a Creek Indian word roughly translating to “crossing over” — reflecting the lake’s role as a connector in the interconnected river and lake system used historically for travel and transport.
History — 1885 first steamboat & the renaming
In 1885, the first steamboat — the “Cocoa”, operated by Hebert Bailey — navigated the 17-mile trek south from Lake Harris through the Palatlakaha River, cutting through thick growth and logs to reach Lake Minneola. The voyage highlighted the river’s commercial importance pre-railroad. A historic bridge crossed the Palatlakaha River in Clermont as early as 1911.
Around 1884, George W. Hull (founder of Minneola) renamed what was sometimes called “Palatlakaha Lake” to Lake Minneola — but the Palatlakaha designation persisted for this specific smaller lake and the river. Like the rest of the chain, citrus dominated until the 1980s freezes; the lake itself has remained largely undeveloped.
The broader Palatlakaha River system includes six water-control dams (some dating to the 1950s) to manage levels.
Parks & recreation
- Palatlakaha River Park
- The primary public boat ramp and launch for paddlers and kayakers entering the Palatlakaha River corridor and Clermont Chain. Two fishing piers, playground, pavilion with grill, and a 0.8-mile loop hiking trail through 18 acres of managed habitat — including Florida scrub-jay areas, live oak / bald cypress hammock, and wetlands. Educational signage; excellent for birding, butterflies, wildlife viewing (especially spring/fall). Key entry point to the 26-mile Palatlakaha Run blueway trail — Lake County’s longest designated paddling waterway.
- Palatlakaha Park
- Community recreation hub managed by Lake County Parks & Trails. 4 ball fields (home of South Lake Little League), soccer fields, tennis/volleyball/basketball/racquetball courts, fitness trail, state-of-the-art playgrounds, pavilions, picnic areas, concession stands, fishing pier and nature walk. Sunrise to sunset.
Waterfront restaurants
None directly on Lake Palatlakaha. The natural, undeveloped shoreline has no commercial dining. Visitors travel a short distance (by boat via the chain or by car) to Lake Minneola spots: Tiki Bar & Grill or Salt Shack on the Lake.
Waterfront communities
- Emerald Lakes
- Lakefront mobile home / co-op community directly on the eastern shore. Direct chain access via community boat ramp/marina, clubhouse (poker, bingo, billiards), heated swimming pool, and recreational facilities. Pet-friendly, serene setting; no lot rent in some cases. HOA fees apply. Popular with retirees seeking affordable waterfront living.
- Other
- Individual lakefront / canal-front homes with chain navigation rights. Real estate is limited-supply — listings occasionally show direct lakefront with docks. Overall development is minimal, preserving peaceful natural character.
Sources: Lake County Water Atlas, City of Clermont, Wikipedia Clermont Chain, Lake County Parks, verified community records.
Common questions about Lake Palatlakaha
Is Lake Palatlakaha part of the Clermont Chain of Lakes?
Yes — and it is centrally important. The Palatlakaha River runs through the lake and through nine other chain lakes. Some sources call the entire chain "the Palatlakaha River system," using Palatlakaha as the chain’s hydrological name.
Can I boat from Lake Palatlakaha to Lake Minneola?
Yes. Going north from Palatlakaha, the river canal opens into Lake Hiawatha and then Lake Minneola. Going south, the canal connects to Lake Minnehaha. From Minneola or Minnehaha, the rest of the chain — Susan, Louisa, Williamee, Hattie, Crescent, Cherry — opens up.
Where is the public boat ramp on Lake Palatlakaha?
Palatlakaha River Park & Boat Ramp, maintained by Lake County. It includes a boat ramp, fishing pier, and shoreline access. It is one of the few Clermont Chain lakes with dedicated public access infrastructure beyond Clermont Waterfront Park.
How does Lake Palatlakaha pricing compare to Lake Minneola or Minnehaha?
Palatlakaha frontage typically trades at a meaningful discount per foot to the chain’s recreation-anchor lakes. The smaller surface area, lower transaction velocity, and quieter character produce more buyer-friendly pricing. For a current per-lake comparison, request the Clermont Chain of Lakes Waterfront Brief.
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