Lochsa,
|
|
3 - Wilderness Gateway bridge to Split Creek Pack Bridge (Fish Creek to Split Creek)
| Usual Difficulty |
III-IV (may vary with level) |
| Length |
9 Miles |
Backsurfing Pipeline
Backsurfing PipelinePhoto by Kevin Pickens @ 7,500 cfs USGS Gauge
Gauge Information
River Description
The Lochsa is truly an Idaho Classic, offering paddlers miles and miles of big beautiful
whitewater. The most commonly run section is from Fish Creek to Split Creek, and features over a
dozen big named rapids and some great playboating.
At low water the Lochsa is an enjoyable paddling trip with some technical moves, some nice small
play features, and pools between each of the rapids. At medium water the rapids link up with
swift water and become big fun rollercoasters with few technical moves. The play waves grow in
size, with Pipeline as the centerpiece. Most rapids are run right of center as a general rule of
thumb and can be scouted from highwater 12 (beware, though, of the Idaho Sandbag: many Idaho
rivers look easy from the road and are actually confusing and stompy on the water). At high water
the Lochsa is a wild ride of towering waves and thundering holes that is ridicuously fun (if you
stay in your boat).
The camping and hiking around the Lochsa are great. Superb water quality and scenery, along with
booming and relatively straightforward whitewater, make the Lochsa a true Idaho treasure.
An excellent Guide to
Floating the Lochsa is published by the US Forest Services, which includes rapid names with
mile markers, camping information and much more (.pdf 1.2 MB).
Idaho Whitewater by Greg Moore and Don McClaran (Class VI; 1989); Idaho: The Whitewater
State by Grant Amaral (Watershed Books, 1990).
StreamTeam Status: Not Verified
Last Updated: 2008-12-28 17:38:02
Editors