Barton Creek
1. SH 71 to Lost Creek (12 miles)
| Difficulty | II+ |
| Length | 12 mi |
| Avg Gradient | 13 fpm |
| Gauge | Barton Ck at Sh 71 Nr Oak Hill, Tx |
| Flow Rate as of 1 hour | 3 cfsbelow recommended |
| Reach Info Last Updated | May 17, 2016 |
River Description
This section of Barton Creek is very scenic, is surprisingly continuous (very little flat water), and is generally runnable at lower flows than the sections below Lost Creek. With the exception of the dams and other man-made obstacles (all of which are described below), the rapids are all Class II. However, if there has not been a flood recently, the natural rapids will likely become clogged with saplings and strainers and may require some Class II+/III- moves to avoid these. This stretch of the creek is also notorious for downed trees, some of which can create river-wide must-portage hazards, so be vigilant. The banks are all private property, so there is no way to shorten the run.
Distances and gradient measured using GIS tools in 2015.
River Features
State Highway 71 Bridge
Very limited parking is available on the river right downstream (southeast) side of the bridge, by accessing the highway easement via a turnout located near the end of the bridge guardrails. If you are heading toward Bee Cave, this turnout will be on the right before you cross the bridge. Despite being a high bridge, the abutment is gently sloped and can be used as a ramp for accessing the creek below.
Low-Head Dam/Low-Water Crossing
This dam/low-water crossing creates a significant drop, and the downstream side of it is effectively undercut due to the culverts that run through the dam. Thus, it creates a significant recirculating hydraulic when the water is high enough to overtop the dam (which is known to be the case at low runnable flows. Behavior at high flows is unknown.) Can be boofed at river left by experienced whitewater paddlers. Scout & portage on river left.
Foot Bridge/Low-Water Crossing
Cart crossing for the Lost Creek Country Club. The low-water crossing is known to be a must-portage sieve hazard at low runnable flows, and the foot bridge likely creates a hazard at higher flows. Portage river left.
Bend of the River Dr. Low-Water Crossing
This low-water crossing (the former route of Lost Creek Blvd., before they built the high bridge) has numerous narrow pipes, so it is frequently clogged with debris and creates a sieve at low flows, and it creates a deadly recirculating hydraulic at high flows. Portage/take out at river left.
Trip Reports
Log in to add a reportBe sure not to try and put in or take out at Crystal River Dr. The landowners will call the cops.
I love this run of the creek. The most rapids by far. Maybe not as big as the other parts but well worth it. 12miles is perfect for a good day trip. Fastest we ran it and we were not trying was 4.5hrs, lots of breaks. Most senic part too