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Devil's, WI

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Pleasant Road to Hwy.147 (3.9 miles)

Class II-III
3.9 Miles
Avg Gradient 35 fpm
Max Gradient 65 fpm

Gauge Information

low
0
8/20 3:15

Min Sug. Level:  75 cfs* Max Sug. Level:  200 cfs*

River Description

General Overview
For a river set in east-central Wisconsin, this run boasts a rather surprising drop and mini-gorge. The broken walls of a long-gone dam signal a set of ledges which will catch any midwest boater's attention. Water sheets across smooth bedrock and into rubble fields in the next half-mile to create a busy run-out.

Run Detail
The brief access paddle for this reach consists of flat but flowing water, with occasional riffles and rips. One should expect numerous snags which will require threading over, under, through, or around. After passing under Interstate 43 (and leaving the worst of the snags behind) you will see a trailer-campground river-right. Gradient increases slightly to provide a tame boulder-garden rapids, leading to a pool and a sharp left-hand turn. You will hear the falls downstream. Proceed cautiously, taking out on the right before you even see the horizon-line. The drop consists of a couple ledges in quick succession (of approximately two feet height each) landing on shallow bedrock. At high water, this will be a steep flume, dropping into a dynamic surging hole. A brief flowing pool leads to another short ledge which (at higher levels) will form a potentially sticky hole.

Immediately downstream, overhanging trees and shrubs add to the potential hazard as one begins the next 0.5 mile of mixed rubble field rapids and shallow sloping bedrock rapids, some of which could offer some play (were it not for the fact that water quality is generally terrible due to the multitude of cattle farms in the watershed). After passing under CTH.R, a few more good waves, short ledges, and rubble field rapids lead to the confluence of the Devil's River with Neshota River, where together they form the West Twin River. (Half of stated run length is on the West Twin, as that is the most convenient egress.)

Paddlers may be interested in ferrying across to the east (river-left) bank and carrying upstream about a hundred yards here. (Be very careful while walking through the woods-- there is old barbed wire low to the ground in a number of spots here.) A sweet series of ledge/waves on the Neshota River lie just upstream of the confluence, and can provide some sweet 'bigger water' action (not 'big water', just 'bigger' water than on Devil's).

Heading downstream, you will encounter little more than swiftwater and a few riffles and rips. It is possible to take out at Maribel Caves County Park, eliminating about 1.5 miles of mostly flat-but-flowing water. This, however, necessitates an arduous climb up stairs at the bluff to get to the parking area. Therefore it is generally preferable to continue downstream to the listed take-out on Hwy.147. Whichever take-out is used, I highly recommend a hike in the park to explore the bluffs and caves and view the stone ruins of the Maribel Hotel.

Note: You may notice (on topo maps and other sources) some marked "falls" on the stretch of the West Twin (or nearby East Twin). Without exception, these are really just gentle rapids, much more tame than the action on the Devil's River! Each of the "Twins" could make very pleasant canoe trips, and have reaches which would be floatable during most of the year. At lower water, many shoals would require dragging over, but much of these streams are deep pools with sufficient beauty to merit a float trip.

Additional Resources:

Midwest River Inventory
has more details and photos of this reach.
Click here for an interesting website about the Maribel Hotel. (Make certain to read not just the myths, but also the facts debunking them.)


StreamTeam Status: verified
Last Updated: 2008-07-09 13:31:41

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Photos/Videos 1- of 1

Devil's River Campground Falls


Devil's River Campground Falls  Devil's River WI
(1.92MB .avi)

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Gauge

Gauge Description:

* Gauge listed is for the Bower Creek, which is 11.5 miles NorthWest, and has a the drainage area about half that of the Devil's River. Correlation is not assured, but should be fairly good. However, this is a small and 'flashy' watershed. The 'window of opportunity' may be literally only hours long and the online gauge may not update at a time to catch the flow. Minimum and maximum are completely untested guesses. (Anyone running this stream is encouraged to provide feedback regarding gauge reading and runnability of this reach by using the "Comments" tab to "Add a Comment".)

The best gauge is 'gut feel', based on weather radar and rainfall totals. If the area gets a couple inches of rain in a day, you may want to head there to check it out, knowing that you could get skunked (or suffer a low-water run).

The 'boaters gauge' is just to look at the bedrock riverbed and mini-ledges at CTH.R bridge. If this area looks sufficiently covered to float your boat, go for it. (It's likely that you'll grunge through here even at decent levels for the run!)

Another gauge is at the put-in, where the upstream-left bridge support has an inside corner/bend. A large rock nestled here should be at least covered for a relatively minimum water-level. For higher water runs, feel down for it and measure the depth. The run is awesome when the rock is 15-18" down (I.E., "one cubit" -- with fingers extended, forearm vertical, water will be near or over your elbow).

 

Bower Creek @ County Trnk Highway Mm nr De Pere [ WI ]

Current Conditions

Stage Flow Updated
5.09 8/20 3:15

Station Graphs


Linked Reaches

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Level Legend: Running Below Minimum Recommended Flow Above Maximum Recommended Flow Unknown
Descriptions of reaches with River Name in bold have been verified by a regional StreamTeam member.

State River Name/Section Class Level Rel. Level Updated
WI Bower Creek— Fonferek Falls to Hwy.V (4.3 miles) II-III(IV) 0 cfs   low 8/20 3:15
WI Devil's— Pleasant Road to Hwy.147 (3.9 miles) II-III 0 cfs*   low 8/20 3:15

Station Description

AW Gauge ID:10375
USGS Station:04085119
HUC:04030204
Latitude:
Longitude:
Class:

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Rapid Summary

Mile Rapid Name Class Features (Legend)
1.0Devil's River Campground FallsIII+Waterfall Video

Rapid Descriptions

Devil's River Campground Falls (Class III+, Mile 1.0)
Click Here For Video

Remnants of a former dam flank the river at the brink of this 'falls'. The river spills down a stairstep of bedrock ledges into a hole (at higher flows, anyway), sheeting across a short (flowing) pool before dropping off another short ledge (into a potentially sticky-looking hole). Downstream you will find a busy stretch of boulder dodge dells before the banks open up and the river widens a bit. As you head toward the County Road R, you will probably 'grunge out' on the shallow bedrock. Passing the bridge, the river heads to the right, and a fine series of ledges will form some decent waves (right in the back yard of a nice home). A bit more boulder-bed scrambling will bring you to the confluence with the Neshota River, where the combined flow is now the West Twin River.




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Disclaimer Data Sources

EPA Surf This Watershed

USGS Page for This Station

NPS WI Rivers Inventory


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