Snake

A) Silver Star Rd to Township Rd (22.3 miles)

DifficultyI-III
Length22.1 mi
Avg Gradientn/a
GaugeSnake River Near Pine City, Mn
Flow Rate as of 1 hour
3.10 ftbelow recommended
Reach Info Last UpdatedDecember 11, 2019

River Description

(Description thanks to jetmanjake, davefriend, and JeffB from RapidsRiders message board.)

Some grade I-ish paddling can be cut if you put in at Aitkin County Park, about 5 mi north of the jct of highways 65 & 27. The park entrance is a clearly marked dirt road that runs east off Hwy 65. Stay left when on the dirt road to eventually get to the park. It is 2 to 2.5 miles off the highway.

The take-out is found by going east on 360th Ave and then turn left when 360th ends in a T intersection (approx 5 mi). After the left turn, go until you reach a bridge crossing the snake (less than a mile). 360th Ave is the dirt road that runs east from the junction of Hwys 65 & 27. (Hwy 27 runs west and is paved.) This junction is the village of Woodland - a bar and couple of buildings on the west side of Hwy 65.

All wheel drive may be an asset at times since the unpaved roads can be rather mushy.

The two significant rapids (Upper and Lower Snake River Falls) are both signposted, scout both river left. The term 'falls' is a definite over-statement. Still they are fun sections with the river at about 3' or so. The first is a ninety-degree left hand turn against a wall, the second is a gorge-y bit that forms a couple holes, maybe III- at medium flows. While you'll paddle some fairly long stretches of flat water, Lower Falls is a fairly continuous rapid, maybe 900 yards worth. Since this stretch is paddled often in open canoes, both rapids are well posted with portage trails for those not inclined to run it. The rest is a good beginner/canoe run with I-II riffles.

Minnesota DNR has a web page with pdf maps at DNR Canoeing - Snake River. The 'top left' pdf shows the section of the river we are talking about in a scaled up inset. Note that the pdf calls 360th ave 'County Road 82' and/or 'State Forest Road'. I've never seen signs in the area with those designations. Likewise, t

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River Features

Put In

Distance: 0 mi
Access Point

Drainage: 145 sq.mi.

Distance: 0 mi
Other
Drainage: 145 sq.mi.

Drainage area at our listed put-in is approximately 145 sq.mi. (as calculated via USGS StreamStats Beta software).

Marked rapids

Distance: 2.29 mi
Other
Marked rapids

Aitkin County Park

Distance: 2.5 mi
Access Point
Aitkin County Park

This is an alternate (AND RECOMMENDED) put-in.

Upper Snake River Falls

Distance: 5.73 mi
Other
Upper Snake River Falls

This is approximately 0.25 miles of rapids, with twists and turns. The crux comes at a sharp (90-degree) left-hand bend.

Lower Snake River Falls

Distance: 7.15 mi
Other
Lower Snake River Falls

This lower 'falls' (rapids) continues (more or less) nearly 0.6 mile. There are two main crux areas, both fairly early in the rapid (at ~0.1 mile and ~0.2 mile into the drop).

Olympic Street

Distance: 8.15 mi
Access Point
Olympic Street

This is an alternate (and recommended) take-out.

If you use the alternate put-in (from the county park) and this take-out, you have a run of ~5.6 miles, and catch the best rapids and omit a lot of flatwater.

Marked rapids

Distance: 8.98 mi
Other
Marked rapids

Marked rapids

Distance: 12.34 mi
Other
Marked rapids

Take Out

Distance: 22.3 mi
Access Point

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Untitled

May 17, 2010


Paddled May 17, 2010 at 5.4 ft. Interesting river w/ a fair amount of flat water paddling. As description states, only two real rapids series; Upper and Lower Falls. Both are sign posted with portage trails on river left (good for scouting too). Wouldn't recommend a short boat for this paddle because of all the flat water. Shallow river but at this level it was easy to avoid/go over the rocks. Paddle took us a little more than 1.5 hours (doesn't include shuttle time) but we were hustling.