Paria

01. Highway bridge to Lee's Ferry

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River Description

Overview: The Paria is the ultimate ephemeral desert river.  Boatable flows on the Paria are so fickle that some groups have had to hike out after the water dropped on them overnight.  While hard to catch, the Paria is worth the effort rewarding any paddler with 20 miles of beautiful, committing slot canyon paddling followed by another 20 miles of class III-IV boulder gardens (V at high flows).  This is one of those runs where calling in sick or driving through the night will be worth your time or you might wait years for your next shot.

What Boat?: At high flows this run would be great in a hard shell.  There would be a few scrapy sections near the beginning and end of the run but in general it would chanalize quite well.  Packrafting this run has become the popular option with the primary upside being an easier hike out if you were to wake up to a de-watered river (very possible). For a strong group you could catch the surge and just paddle the 42 miles in a day to avoid that possibility.  That said, I can’t see any reason why you wouldn’t want to linger in such a jaw-dropping canyon and doing the run as an overnighter is worthwhile. There will likely be some scouting to do on your first trip so factor that in as well. The primary downside of this run is the water quality. If there is water it will be a thick mud slurry.  This run will be hard on your packraft stowfly zipper and this is enough of a reason to paddle a hardshell if flows permit.

Flow: The most challenging part of this run is catching it with water. There is a USGS gauge on the Paria at Lee's Ferry. This is about 12 hours downstram of where you put in so keep in mind flows could be wildly different than what you will be paddling. A heavy rain on snowmelt mixture is what will be most effetive at bringing the Paria to a runnable level. During a good snowpackyear between February and April keep your eyes on the forecast and just wait at the put-in for the surge. People have paddled this r

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River Features

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Distance: 0 mi

Take Out

Distance: 42 mi
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Nov 19, 2007


I just spent a week hiking down the Paria. It looked very possible to creek it if you could catch the water levels right. I hiked in through Buckskin Gulch, no way to take a kayak in that way. I don't know what it looks like if you go in through White House. The upper part of the canyon would not have much in the way of rapids and would be extremely dangerous if rain was a possibility. The flash floods are deadly. The lower part of the canyon opens up more and has some areas that would make for some good creek boating. I will be posting a lot of photos from my trip to my Flickr account, look for Paria Canyon and Boilerblues.

TK
Timothy Kelley

Jan 1, 1900


A ledge typical of the second half of the run.

TK
Timothy Kelley

Jan 1, 1900


Fast flowing class two with stunning canyon scenery characterize the first 20 miles.

TK
Timothy Kelley

Jan 1, 1900


Swift water and sheer wall in the first half of the run.

TK
Timothy Kelley

Jan 1, 1900


There are a few bigger ledge hole to punch at higher flows.

TK
Timothy Kelley

Jan 1, 1900


As the canyon opens up the gradient steepens.