Red,
|
|
B) Lower Red Lake Dam to CTH.A (4.3 miles) (Lower Red)
| Usual Difficulty |
I-II(III) (may vary with level) |
| Length |
4.3 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
11 fpm |
| Max Gradient |
20 fpm |
Monastery Falls (Monastery in Background)
Monastery Falls (Monastery in Background)Photo by Tom O'Keefe taken -68400
Gauge Information
River Description
(Our thanks to Mark Mastalski for his fine description of this run.)
This is one of the classic beginner/intermediate rivers in Wisconsin.
About 1/4 mile below the put-in at the dam, the river will swing hard to the left and you will see
a house on the river right. This is the
first drop. Typically there is no need to
scout; Simply stay slightly left-of-center and punch through a frothy hole. This ledge pourover is
infamous for being sticky at lower levels and I've see many a paddler get windowshaded while trying
to sidesurf. Outflow current is strong and the water is deep enough to allow for some vertical
moves (tail squirts, bow stalls, etc).
The next mile or so contains a bit of additional class I-II fun water. One thing to check out is a
large rock wall on river left, which is a great place to seal launch into the river at higher
flows. You will come to a narrowing which is actually a rocky island splitting the flow, with the
majority of the flow straight ahead (the left of the island). This is the site of a sweet
double-drop. Depending on the release levels, there can be good front surfs,
side-surfs, and spins possible on each of the waves. (You must have good control to keep in the
area of the upper wave, however.) The lower wave has a deep pool, and good eddies, as it is backed
up by a ring of rock diverting most of the flow to the left.
Below these two ledge/waves the river twists left and then back to the right and you have come to
Monastery Falls, class III(IV). (Note: on the topos, this is marked as
Freeman
Falls, though I've never heard anyone use that name. Some refer to it as 'Alexian' or
'Novitiate', all referring to the former Alexian Novitiate (Monastery) on river left.) Scout on
river right. (Avoid going ashore anywhere on the left bank, as it is private property, and has been
the site of many skirmishes over trespass through the years.)
This is a terrific drop which may be intimidating to first-timers. The river gets squeezed down to
a five foot slot with a 'launch rock' in the center. A meaty hole develops at nearly all levels, so
a good 'punch' is required. (I once witnessed a buddy in a WaveSport 'Z' get sucked backwards into
it and disappear in the hole, only to be spit out for a swim; quite exciting!) Some gnarly water
follows as it drops down to another squeeze and powerful hole develops. Best route is left center
and punch through the hole. There is pretty much no consequence as it ends in a humongous pool
(virtually a lake). The bottom hole can provide great play, though it may be intimidating to novice
boaters. One paddler was windowshaded five times before finally exiting upside-down, still in his
boat. A common change-of-pace 'game' during warm weather releases is to bring inflatable 'pool
toys' to run this drop and/or play the bottom hole.
Leaving the pool below Monastery, there are a few good rocky outcroppings and boulderbed rock-dodge
rapids before the river returns to flatwater again. The next exciting drop is
Ziemer's
Falls, class II+(III). (Note: on the topos, this is marked as
Gilmer Falls,
though I've never heard anyone use that name.) The river will turn left, then right, down a small
sloping ledge. Many families swim in this area, bodily sliding down the first falls, or taking a
'hydro-massage' in its base. You may wish to get out in the huge river-left eddy to scout, though
confident boaters can eddy-hop and boat-scout their way (don't hit any kids!). At good release
levels, this initial ledge/hole is fine for surfs and spins, though it can get steep and
'squirrely'. A short pool leads to the right and spills across shallow bedrock. A few minor
wave/holes may exist here. The flow then necks-down between walls of rock, and heads straight
toward a large hump of rock which divides the bottom of the drop, providing two routes to finish
this drop. Boaters may catch an eddy on river left, then paddle into the current and follow the
flow down a jumbled chute river-left. Or, you can ferry across current and hit the flow of water on
river-right. At low levels rocks may be an issue -- stay as close to the right wall as possible. I
once had the excitement of watching my brother attempt this route. He flipped and I heard his
helmet bouncing off the rocks.
While most boaters take out at Ziemer's, there are a couple additional worthwhile rapids
downstream. There is (or at least was . . . it's years since I've been there) a boater's landing
about a half-mile further down which adds a simple drop (
'Little Bull Falls' on
the topos) with some good depth for squirt moves.
You can also continue about another 1.5 miles to the little burg of Red River, where three drops in
quick succession can provide some interesting entertainment. (These are not marked on the topos.)
This area may be somewhat problematic for legal access, since it may be posted and fenced. (Again,
it's been years since I've been there, but it is worth checking out at least once if you have time
and have never seen these drops.) The second of these is rather like a smaller, narrower version of
second drop on the Peshtigo, while the last drop (just above the bridge) offers playboaters
vertical rock smears and cartwheels down a ledge parallel to the current.
For additional description, see
Upper
Midwest PaddleGuide
StreamTeam Status: Not Verified
Last Updated: 2009-04-03 10:19:41