Wenatchee

1. Lake Wenatchee State Park to Tumwater Campground

Reach banner
DifficultyII
Length18.2 mi
Avg Gradientn/a
GaugeWenatchee River at Plain, Wa
Flow Rate as of 52 minutes
3480 cfsrunnable
Reach Info Last UpdatedFebruary 27, 2026

Projects

Protecting Rivers on the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest (WA)

The Okanogan and Wenatchee National Forests encompass more than four million acres and are jointly managed with headquarters in Wenatchee, Washington. The rivers flowing through these forests are essential to the whitewater paddling community—both as close-to-home runs for Washington residents and as classic objectives for paddlers traveling from across [...]Read More


River Description

Starting at Lake Wenatchee, most of the river is class I but you will encounter a few class II rapids in the rock gardens upstream of the bridge in Plain, an intermediate access point. A little ways downstream of Plain and after you pass the railroad bridge, you leave the vacation cabins behind and the river flows through a more remote setting as you encounter some sandstone ledges and high cliffs. The Highway 2 bridge marks the start of Tumwater Canyon and the end of this run. The river is high in the spring but can be enjoyed throughout the summer and into fall when the vine maples make for a beautiful fall colors trip.


River Features

Lake Wenatchee State Park Boat Ramp

Distance: 0 mi

To reach the put-in, turn off Highway 2 at Cole's Corner (Highway 2 mile 84.7) and head north on Highway 207, the Lake Wenatchee Highway. In 3.5 miles you will reach Cedar Brae Road that turns off to the left and continues 1 mile to the boat ramp in South Lake Wenatchee State Park. The boat ramp is at the outlet of Lake Wenatchee where the river starts.

Brae Burn Road Put-In

Distance: 0.02 mi
Access Point
Brae Burn Road Put-In

An alternative put-in can be reached by heading north on Highway 207 for 4.2 miles from Highway 2 at Cole's Corner (Highway 2 mile 84.7), and then turning right onto Brae Burn Road just before crossing the Wenatchee River. A short drive parallel to the Lake Wenatchee Highway goes between Brae Burn Road and the river, just downstream of the bridge on river right. The issue with this access is no parking is available at the site so you can only use it as a drop off point if you have a shuttle driver. Please be sure not to block access of the Brae Burn Rd. residents.

Chumstick Highway Access

Class: IIDistance: 3.44 mi
Access Point
Chumstick Highway Access

This access point can be used as a take-out for floats limited to the Class 1 sections upstream, or as a put-in to skip the Class 1 sections and begin directly above the Class 2 rapids upstream of Plain. From the junction of Highway 207 and Chumstick Highway near the headwaters, travel about 2.5 miles down Chumstick Highway; the site is on the north side of the road. Look for a green electrical box on the north side of the highway and park along the shoulder. The informal path to the river can be located by standing near the electrical box. From the river, the site is on river right, just before the river turns left away from the road and just upstream of a sandy wall on the right bank. The access is often obscured by shrubbery and is difficult to spot without the pink tape typically tied to bank vegetation. This is an informal access point with no amenities and no cell coverage for about a mile in either direction.

Plain Access

Distance: 7.38 mi
Access Point
Plain Access

An intermediate access point can be reached by heading north on Highway 207 for 3.8 miles from Highway 2 at Cole’s Corner (Highway 2 mile 84.7), then turning right onto Highway 209 (Chumstick Highway). Continue 4.5 miles east to the bridge across the Wenatchee River. Chelan PUD developed a new access point on the downstream river right side of the bridge, funded by the Public Power Benefit Program. The lot holds roughly a dozen vehicles; parking on the left side first helps keep space available for vans with trailers to turn around. A short gravel path leads from the lot to steep, four-foot-wide concrete stairs that descend to the river and can be difficult to use with large rafts. During high flows above 5,000 cfs, the base of the steps will be submerged, and shoreline vegetation makes the access hard to see from the river and easy to float past. From the river, this access point is on river right, about 20 feet downstream of the Chumstick Highway Bridge. Although the location is predictable, it is still easy to miss because no natural eddy marks the landing. For floats from the headwaters to Tumwater with small children, this site can serve as a useful way station, as a portable toilet is available in the parking area.

Highway 2 Bridge Take-Out

Distance: 16.5 mi
Take Out
Highway 2 Bridge Take-Out

The take-out is on the downstream river right side of the Highway 2 bridge across the Wenatchee River just downstream of Tumwater Campground and before the river begins its descent into Tumwater Canyon. It is located at Highway 2 mile 90.3 where you turn onto Hatchery Creek Road and a short drive that provides access adjacent to the bridge. It is a bit of a scramble up the bank here.


Drive by site visit to access sites on the Wenatchee River.

JR
Jordan Rasure

Jun 14, 2022


A great stretch of river for beginner boaters when most other stretches are blown out and nearly eddy-less. A flow of 10900 cfs on the gauge at Plain makes for a very quick-moving main current with a handful of smaller wave trains, a couple mid-stream eddies behind islands, and some stronger eddy lines alongside cliffs.

A couple of isolated log jams that could be in play for unaware swimmers, but otherwise minimal hazards. The first notable logjam exists river left past the first wave train as the river bends to the left and back right. It is not in play unless someone is in the water and unable to swim away on their own. The second notable jam is slightly downstream of this, approximately .25 mile. It is on river right and composed of two large, old growth logs situated in an upstream V near the right bank. Again, not in play for paddlers in their boats. However, if one is towing a swimmer to avoid the jam on the left, keep heads up and plan on catching an eddy well below the jam on the right.

If you put in at the lake, you’ll have about an hour of flatwater until you reach the intermediate access point that we’ve christened “Mosquito Eddy”. From there, you have about half a mile before it starts to pick up slightly. The surf wave that develops river left below the Railroad Bridge is large, but can be skirted far left to set up to avoid the swirling eddies on the right bank. The wave could also be avoided to the right, but then be aware of stronger eddy lines and swirling eddies that we have affectionately dubbed “Toilet Bowl”. Nothing of major note, just gentle Class Fun read and run.

            As the river’s speed picks up on its way to Plain, there are increasingly difficult eddies to practice catching and gentle currents to work on ferry angles.

CC
Chris Carlson

Jun 26, 2021


June 25, 2021
Flow: 7,350
We put in at the headwaters, with a Raven II inflatable kayak, a Sea Eagle Raft, and a Body Glove inflatable SUP. We drifted down to the Plain access, where we took out. Upstream of the confluence with the Chiwawa was flat and fast, with a few strainers here and there, but all easily avoidable. After the confluence things picked up, and it was a proper class 2 most of the rest of the way. A couple downed trees straining the river at corners were easily avoided, as long as you were paying attention. The best series of rapids was just upstream of the bridge.

Literally the most difficult part of today's float was the takeout. We pulled out at the halfway point, just past the bridge to Plain. We had used the same takeout last year, and knew exactly where it was. But we had used it at substantially lower water, and even though we knew the concrete stairs are just twenty or so feet downstream from the big bridge, they weren't visible until we were right on top of them. And there wasn't a clean eddy next to the takeout right now: there was a decent current flowing right past it. Consequently, two out of our three boats actually missed the exit. The teen on the SUP wound up holding onto his SUP and some bushes about thirty feet downstream, and the raft wound up clinging to an overhead branch about ten feet past the takeout. With a little scrambling we got everyone back up to the takeout, with all the gear intact, but I can't say that it was fun, and I will be in the doghouse with my wife (she was in the raft with me) for several weeks.

At the current flow, I would strongly advise against trying to float this stretch unless you honestly know what you're doing. I've canoed/rafted dozens of rivers over the years, with and without guides, and I was pretty confident that we could handle it, but we still managed to get into a scrape at the takeout.

AL
Ariel Leigh

Jul 22, 2020


We took SUPs from Lake Wenatchee (Discover Pass req'd) to Plain on 7/17/2020. Flow was 2600cfs. Mostly Class I, with some class II near the takeout. Watch out for the generally strong winds, might make inner-tubing difficult. There was some wood, but it was easily avoided. Chelan PUD's new take out had a good-sized parking at the southwest side of the bridge, there's 90 stairsteps to the river. 2 hours on the river, 30 minute bike shuttle (narrow shoulder w/ fast but minimal traffic).

Thomas O'Keefe
Thomas O'Keefe

Nov 30, 2017


Access at the Beaver Valley Road Bridge developed by Chelan PUD.

KS
Kathryn Spencer

Aug 21, 2012


Most people put-in at the South Lake Wenatchee State Park - either the beach or the boat launch. Be sure to have your Discover Pass and pay the launch fee if you use the boat launch area.

It is a good fall colors trip if you don't mind low water. Taking two days to go from lake to Tumwater Campground is a good idea if not doing it in the spring.

KS
Kathryn Spencer

Aug 14, 2012


On 8/12/12, we stopped at the Tumwater Campground and talked with a lady who works for the company contracted to manage the USFS campground. Our question was where to take out since the WA DOT construction has the usual take out blocked. She said folks can park in the picnic area of the campground (to the right as you enter) and take out on river left before the bridge. Landing there looked very feasible, but entering the short gravel road by vehicle, down to the take out, looked hazardous from the west side, due to the sharp turn required on the narrow, curving Tumwater Canyon highway. You might want to drive toward Leavenworth until you reach a place where you can turn around and then approach it from that direction. There was a porta potty between the highway and the take out when we were there.