Clarion River,
|
|
Portland Mills to Cooksburg (Middle Clarion)
| Usual Difficulty |
I(II) (may vary with level) |
| Length |
28 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
6 fpm |
| Max Gradient |
10 fpm |
Fall on the Clarion
Fall on the ClarionPhoto by Michael Spanjer taken 10/15/96 @ unknown
Gauge Information
River Description
The Clarion River is a beautiful place to paddle, with long stretches of calm water interspersed
with rapids that can reach easy class II. This reach starts at Portland Mills, goes along the
southern boundary of the Allegheny National Forest, past Clear Creek State Park and Cooks Forest
State Park. The section between Arroyo bridge and the Irwin Run canoe launch is in the National
Forest and has the best legal riverside wilderness camping that I've found in western PA, as well
as three of the best rapids, called 'X', 'Y', and 'Z'. There are other rapids between Hallton and
Belltown, as well as a few smaller ones downstream. These rapids are small at 300 cfs, but at 2000
cfs at the Cooksburg gauge they get a little more interesting. Just upstream from the bridge at
Belltown there is a parking lot on river left that gives access to an interesting play spot for
beginners - there is an old abandoned gas pipeline across the bed of the river that gives a river
wide wave ( about 40 feet wide) up to nearly a foot tall. This wave is buried when water levels get
up a little - say above 2000 cfs.
There is camping at Cooks Forest State Park, Clear Creek State Park, and several campgrounds in
the National Forest. Primitive camping is allowed in most of the National Forest and there are a
few sites right beside the river between Clarington and Irwin Run.
Access is good, with a road running on river right from Cooksburg to Irwin Run. There are dozens
of spots to park and put in, as well as several canoe launches. At Arroyo bridge there is a
parking area and put in where the road crosses the river. There is another canoe launch area just
east of Portland Mills on route 949.
There are four or five canoe liveries on the Clarion, mostly down towards Cooksburg (the shallow
end of this reach), with one upstream at Clarington. On summer weekends the river near Cooksburg
is crowded with paddlers dragging heavy aluminum rental canoes through the shallows, so stick to
the upper half. My favorite part would be from Portland Mills to Irwin Run canoe launch - about 8
miles with 5 fun little rapids to play in.
If you want to paddle the downstream section from the end of the reservoir to the Allegheny
you'll have to rely on releases from the Piney Dam. It's a scenic, isolated valley with small
rapids that isn't paddled often because of the unpredictable releases. Call the dam at (814)
226-8630 to find out when they release, or watch the USGS guage and try to guess from the pattern
what's going to happen.
StreamTeam Status: Verified
Last Updated: 2007-04-17 21:37:53
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