Boktuklo Creek,
|
|
Weyerhaeuser Rd to Hwy.259 (9 miles)
| Usual Difficulty |
II-III (may vary with level) |
| Length |
9 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
40 fpm |
River Description
Original river description courtesy of Southwest Paddler. Used by permission. Updated by David
McDonald. This page is under construction, check back for updates. - 5/09/2006
Note
This run flows almost entirely through the Three Rivers WMA (450,000 acres) - a cooperative
agreement between the ODWC and Weyerhaeuser, the land owner. An annual permit is required to
access this land. Fees are $16.00 for residents and $25.00 for non-residents. Permits and
free maps are available where hunting and fishing licenses are sold. Three Rivers permit holders
are also allowed to access the nearby Honobia Creek WMA, home to more remote and seldom run
streams.
Narrow ledgy creek, flows into Mountain Fork at "the Narrows".
Flowing northwest to southeast into the Upper Mountain Fork River near "The Narrows" and just
below Smithville is southeastern Oklahoma's Boktuklo Creek, a short but very exciting whitewater
stream with Class II to III ledge drops, a tight, twisting channel, boulder garden rapids and
incredible scenery. The creek is in the very remote and undeveloped McCurtain County near the
Arkansas and Texas state lines. It is also very near the Upper and Lower Mountain Fork, Glover,
Little and Kiamichi Rivers, as well as Big Creek, Eagle Fork Creek and Buffalo Creek. Boktuklo is
hardly a perpetual flow stream, depending entirely upon recent local rainfall in heavy doses to
make it navigable, but its close proximity to so many other great streams makes it another asset
in the treasure of Oklahoma rivers, creeks and streams.
With a gradient of about 40 fpm in the lower sections, this is not the place for novice paddlers
or others without sufficient whitewater skills and the proper boats and gear. In fact, its
remoteness and difficulty demand that boaters be prepared to encounter and overcome any number of
obstacles that include moderate drops, techical maneuvers, tree and boulder dodging and possibly
occasional portages. The creek flows out from a Weyerhauser forest road down to the Upper
Mountain Fork River at "The Narrows" east of US Highway 259, the last practical take-out on the
creek, though paddlers may opt to continue another 1.5 miles to the "Fork", then downstream to
Broken Bow Lake if they so desire.
Boktuklo Creek is an uncrowded, seldom paddled whitewater stream with fantastic Class II to III
rapids, ledge drops, tree-dodging and tight turns around blind corners in the Kiamichi Mountains
of McCurtain County in far southeastern Oklahoma. A lack of sufficient flow most of the time
prevents it from being a popular whitewater run, but those who catch it right after a significant
rain event are fortunate to find a remote wilderness run far removed from signs of civilization
where excitement is almost non-stop simply because you never know what lies around the next
corner unless you have a lot of experience on this stream at various water levels. It is
conveniently located near several other excellent Oklahoma and Arkansas streams including the
Upper and Lower Mountain Fork, Glover, Kiamichi and Little Rivers, Buffalo, and Eagle Fork
Creeks, all in Oklahoma, and the Little, Cossatot and Saline Rivers of southwestern Arkansas. The
creek is located near US Highway 259, the nearest towns being Smithville and Broken Bow, though
Antlers is just a few miles to the west. It is also close to the Texas-Oklahoma and
Arkansas-Oklahoma borders. Boktuklo Creek is best left to experienced whitewater boaters with at
least strong intermediate level skills and (hopefully) swiftwater rescue training. It is a very
scenic run in an area with little development. No river-related services are available along the
creek, but several outfitters offer boat rentals, shuttles and other services in nearby Broken
Bow, Smithville and Antlers.
StreamTeam Status: Not Verified
Last Updated: 2006-05-11 09:13:48
Editors