Missisquoi
Sheldon Springs Rapids
| Difficulty | IV |
| Length | 0.85 mi |
| Avg Gradient | n/a |
| Gauge | Missisquoi River at Swanton, Vt |
| Flow Rate as of 1 hour | 914 cfsbelow recommended |
| Reach Info Last Updated | April 21, 2021 |
River Description
If you're looking for a big water run in Vermont, you'll quickly come to realize options are limited to combined week or so of days when runs such as the Mad, North Branch of the Lamoille, Ball Mountain Brook and Wardsboro or Lower New Haven spike big. Enter this stretch of rapids. It may be short, but it provides a rare opportunity to boat class IV big water on a relatively frequent basis.
Water:
Found in the lower reaches of the Missisquoi River, this run has a large drainage. It would run at a good level nearly 100 days of the year. Unfortunately it suffers the same fate as nearly every other stretch of large volume river in Vermont blessed with gradient; a dam. That being said it likely runs at a worthwhile flow a good 50 days of the year. The dam is what they call a run of the river dam, in that aside from the regulated fish flow they are required to spill (75 cfs in this case), the power company will use all the remaining water (up to capacity of nearly 3,000 cfs) to generate power. Therefore, for a good level below the dam, you are going to want at minimum 1,000 cfs spilling. There are two USGS run gauges on this river, one in Swanton about a dozen miles downstream, and the other at East Berkshire somewhere between 15-20 miles upstream. The run I am basing the description on occurred with what I consider to be on the high end of medium. The Swanton and East Berkshire gauges were reading 7,500 and 4,800 cfs respectively. I would imagine you could go down to something like 4500/2500 on the gauges, but the lower and upper limits will have to be worked out.
The run:
Starts off with a dam, this may be runnable at the right levels but certainly something that would necessitate some heavy scouting and safety. Class V+ at the level we saw it at.
After the dam there is some moving water followed by some class III intro rapids. Make your way right for the start of the first rapid.
Rapid 1: Tetanus Schott
Start rig
...River Features
Put In
Take Out
Trip Reports
Log in to add a reportBen threads the line on the first rapid of the stretch, walk the riverbanks and you'll understand the name. Hope you've had your shots.
Ben Runs the hero line on Big Schott, with Tetanus in the background, two more good ones just around the bned
Ben inspects the dam for a line. Not today...