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Posts Tagged ‘Platte’

Exploring the Upper North Platte River in Colorado by SUP

28 May
beginning of the North Platte River

Confluence of two Grizzly Creeks 10 miles SW of Walden, CO – the beginning of the North Platte River

North Platte River is one of my favorite paddling destinations. Usually, I paddle various flatwater river sections in Wyoming above and below Saratoga. However, there is a 45 mile long river stretch in Colorado’s North Park before the North Platte enters the Northgate Canyon.

After some fall and winter scouting and a lot of time spent on Google maps, the exploration of the upper North Platte River finally took place during the Memorial Day weekend. Rob Bean joined me to paddle our inflatable Bordwarks SUPs: Shubu and Badfish.

Upper North Platte River on Google maps with some waypoints for access points and diversion dams.

North Platte River near Walden, Colorado

14 miles of the upper North Platte River near Walden with the river beginning
as a confluence of Grizzly Creek and Little Grizzly Creek

May 24, 2014
Put-in: Grizzly Creek at highway 14, 10 miles south of Walden (not much room for off road parking)
Take-off: Co road 12 W, 8 miles west of Walden (official fishing access, parking near bridge, another fishing access with parking ~0.5 mile below the bridge).
GPS milege: 13.8 miles, time: 2:50 hours.
North Platte River in Colorado near Walden

31 miles of the North Platte River from Walden to the Northgate Canyon put-in

May 25, 2014
Put-in: Co road 12 W
Take-off: put-in for the Northgate Canyon run, 9 miles north of Cowdrey
Alternative put-in for a short 6 miles run: Co Rd 6, 2 miles west of Cowdrey (that run is described in Paddling Colorado book by Dunbar Hardy).
GPS milege: 31 miles, time: 6:49 hours.

River flow was rising from 3000 to 4000 cfs at Northgate during our two days of paddling. A lot of meadows in the river valley were flooded. Paddling speed: up to 9 mph.

The weather was challenging. We had a lot of thunderstorms around us during the first day followed by ~8 hours of heavy rain. We were lucky to finished our paddling before the rain. A beautiful weather on second day lasted till noon, then we experienced a storm with a small hail followed by heavy rain for the rest of the day. Strong afternoon headwinds put us on our knees, especially, during the second day.

Obstacles: diversion dams, fences across the river, low bridges depending a water level. No trees. No rapids (except dams). The river is wide and open, so you can see or hear all incoming obstacles well in advance. We never run into any troubles.

Most of the dams can be seen on satellite pictures. The dam a few miles below Co road 12 W is pretty big and always requires portaging (not comfortable on right). Other dams are primitive rock dams and often can be run. We portaged most of them to avoid big waves, but I would run more of them in a canoe. We managed to paddle around a few of them. It is easier to select a correct river arm on a map than in practice on the river.

We had to portage numerous barbed wire fences crossing the river. Some were in water and could be safely run over in a canoe, but we played safe in out inflatable SUPs. A few fences had only a single wire across the river and was possible to paddle under them. Always watch for these fences! You can notice stronger and taller posts on the shores and, sometimes, stairs over them, before seeing the actual wires over the river.

One or two low farm bridges in the upper section required portaging. All bridges in the lower section have a high clearance.

Wildlife: moose, bighorn, deer, elk (a herd was swimming across the river several times just in front of us), bald and gold eagles, pelicans, geese and other waterfowl, numerous smaller birds, curious cows.

Scenery: a wide valley surrounded by snowy mountains, crazy river meanders in the upper section, cliffs and rock outcroppings, just a few trees (often with eagle nest), higher hills with some forest in the lower section, a lot of water flowing around and flooding meadows, but, usually, not difficult to find a dry place to land.

Grizzly Creek near Walden

Grizzly Creek looking upstream from highway 14

Grizzly Creek near Walden, CO

Grizzly Creek looking downstream from highway 14 – start of our adventure

North Platte River near Walden

North Platte River meandering near Walden

North Platte River

One of high cliffs

North Platte River - portage

Going over a low farm bridge

North Platte RIver near Walden

One of diversion dams

North Platte River at Co Rd 12 W near Walden

North Platte River at Co Rd 12 W near Walden – the finish of day 1 and the start of day 2

North Platte River below Walden

Barbed wire fence across the river

Another fence across the  river

Another fence across the river

North Platte River below Walden

And another cattle fence to portage

SUPs on North Platte River

Lunch break – last minutes of nice weather

North Platte River diversion dam

Hail storm over diversion dam

North Platte RIver above Northgate

The last river section between Cowdrey and Northgate

North Platte River - Northgate Canyon

Finishing in rain at the Northgate

North Platte River - Northgate Canyon

The last look at the river – still raining

North Platte River - Northgate Canyon

Ready to go home …

All pictures were shot with my current paddling camera on duty – Pentax Optio WG-2. I have been using waterproof Pentax Optio cameras for paddling and other outdoor activities since their first original model was released in 2005. The newest model from that series is available now as Ricoh WG-4.

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Related posts:
– North Platte River in Colorado above Northgate Canyon
– Sun, Snow and Wind on the North Platte River in Wyoming
– Bennett Peak to Pick Bridge on the North Platte River, Wyoming


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Confluence of Wildlife and Man – A Story from the South Platte River

23 Feb

I was looking at paintings by Nancy Rynes, a Colorado artist. I like her texture series and, especially, the picture called “Confluence”. Two red hawks sitting on a wall covered by graffiti. For me the confluence means here the coming together of wildlife and man made objects. It reminds me an old story from the South Platte River paddling – encounter of a young eagle sitting on old trashed car.

I really hated those cars from 1950s and 1960s when I started to paddle the South Platte River years ago. Then, having no choice, I accepted them and started to photograph them. At least they were put into the river for a reason – to protect river banks. It seems that wildlife is accepting them too.

Car Photography Session on the South Platte River
South Platte River – Another View or How to Photograph the River?

Here is my eagle story originally posted in 2007.

October 15 was my first day on the South Platte River in the fall/winter paddling season of 2007. I paddled upstream from Kersey in the Thunderbolt kayak. After exploring the Lone Tree Creek I paddled back down river to Kersey. It was just before sunset when I decided to shoot some pictures of old cars dumped there to protect river banks.

I squeezed my kayak into some standing backwater and started shooting. I didn’t notice anything unusual, but I did sense somebody’s presence …


bald eagle South Platte River

eaglet bald eagle south platte river kayak Colorado

Not farther from me than a length of my kayak there was an old truck and a young eagle was sitting on the top of it. I kept shooting my pictures. However, looking at a beak and powerful talons, I didn’t feel very comfortable balancing my tippy kayak in the front of that chick. Judging from the time stamps in my pictures I spent 12 minutes there. During that time the eaglet did not make the slightest movement.

I wished I had a better camera than my Pentax Optio W10. It was getting dark, so I backed up leaving the eagle on his truck.

I have seen adult bald eagles many times during my paddling on the South Platte, but it was the closest and most exciting encounter. As a first guess I assumed that I saw a juvenile bald eagle. After searching internet it seems that it is quite difficult to distinguish between immature bald and golden eagles. Some comments I got indicate that it was the golden eagle. So, who is that chick?

Breeding Bald Eagles in Colorado

… from the Center for Biological Diversity:

Bald eagles commonly nested in and around Rocky Mountain National Park as late as the 1950s (117). By 1974, just one pair remained in the state (93). The population remained perilously low through the 1970s and 1980s, began growing in 1986 and reached a peak of approximately 65 pairs in 2006 (2, 69, 93, 96). One-third of Colorado’s nesting bald eagles occur east of the Continental Divide in the South Platte River watershed (115). Other breeding concentrations include the Yampa River upstream of Craig, the White River in the vicinity of Meeker, the Colorado River upstream of Kremmling, and La Plata and Montezuma counties.

Bald Eagle – Nesting & Young from American Bald Eagle Information.

Other bird stories and pictures:

Do Wild Turkey Swim? A Photo Story of White Water Turkey Hen for Thanksgiving
Are My Paddlings Days Over?
Blue Heron – Bird Photography from a Racing Kayak with Pentax Optio W10 Camera?
From the Love Life of Canada Goose in My Paddling Pond: Rivals or Mates?


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Scouting and Paddling the South Platte River after 2013 Flooding

18 Feb
I paddled the South Platte River twice this year in the upstream/downstream mode covering just a couple of miles above Kersey on January 21 and above Kuner on February 16.

The river is the same as before 2013 flooding, wide open, without any unusual obstacles. More changes you can see on shores including river access.

Evans. Riverside Park, a popular launching place, is closed. I am not sure if it is related to the flooding or just temporary closure due to winter/muddy conditions. No information on their website.

37th street bridge in Evans (left shore, upstream) may be an alternative launching spot with off road parking. It is just below the Riverside Park. Right now, the place is very muddy with a lot of fresh dirt after the bridge repairs. SWA below the bridge is closed.

Kersey access remains the same (not too easy for larger groups).

Kuner access remains the same.

The river flow is good, above 1000cfs, all the way to Fort Morgan. Most dams below Kuner were upgraded with gates during recent years. They may be paddleable if not diverting water. The dam below Kuner (Empire Reservoir inlet) was closed yesterday.

Only a little bit of snow was left on sandbars. Turkey were very talkative and loud. I saw a whitetail deer crossing the river – it had to swim across the main channel.

Sea Wind canoe

Pixel, the “water” Corgi in Sea Wind canoe

winter paddling on South Platte River

South Platte River above Kuner, February 2014

South Platte River above Kuner

South Platte River above Kuner, February 2014

South Platte River above Kuner

South Platte River above Kuner, February 2014

Related posts:
South Platte River below Denver – GPS/photo river guide
12th Annual South Platte River All Club Paddle
Opening 2014 Paddling Season on the South Platte River


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Opening 2014 Paddling Season on the South Platte River

27 Jan

January 21, 2014. Finally, I started my paddling season for the year 2014. I took the Sea Wind canoe to Kersey and paddled upstream to the confluence with the Poudre River and back. It was my first paddling on the South Platte after last year flooding. There are a lot of signs of that flooding on shores, but the river remains the same – wide open without any new obstacles.

The river flow was ~950cfs at Kersey. There is a new station near Greeley – PLAGRECO. I don’t know its exact location yet, but it may be pretty useful for planning paddling trips since it shows the river flow not affected by subtraction and addition of water between Greeley and Kersey (2 diversion dams and the Poudre River).

I will be doing more training runs at different locations on the South Platte during winter time if anybody would like to join me. Most of the time I will paddle the Sea Wind canoe which is my first choice boat for this year Missouri River 340 race. I am hoping also for some downriver SUP runs. You can expect updates to my South Platte River guide.

south-platte-river-kersey-012114-3

paddling upstream the South Platte River above Kersey, Colorado

paddling South Platte River near Kersey, Colorado

Sea Wind canoe on the South Platte River

south-platte-river-kersey-012114-2

looking downstream the South Platte River

south-platte-river-kersey-012114-1

launching/landing spot on the downstream side of Kersey bridge

Related posts:
South Platte River below Denver – GPS/photo river guide
12th Annual South Platte River All Club Paddle
Opening 2013 Paddling Season with Badfish SUP on the South Platte River


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North Platte River in Colorado above Northgate Canyon

19 Oct

North Platte River is one of my favorite paddling destinations. Usually, I paddle various flatwater river sections in Wyoming, but, recently, I scouted access points to the upper North Platte River in Colorado above Northgate Canyon.

That river section in mentioned as “Upper Valley” in Paddling Colorado book by Dunbar Hardy. It is just 6 miles starting from put-in on county road 6 west of Cowdrey and ends in the Routt launch site (put-in for the Northgate Canyon run). The river is meandering in a wide valley with some beaver swamps.

North Platte River above North Gate Canyon

North Platte River in Colorado

beaver dam on North Platte River near Cowdrey - Colorado

I took these three pictures from the Routt launch site looking upstream on October 16, 2003 with the river flow about 250 cfs which is much higher than usual for autumn. Recommended flow for paddling is 500-1500 cfs. I believe that 250 cfs may be sufficient for downriver run, perhaps, with some occasional shallow spots. A packraft trip with a bike shuttle? A bike leg would include some hill climbing and would be longer than a river one.

I added North Platte River pictures to my stock photography portfolio. There are available for download and licensing as royalty free pictures starting from $ 2 for a small size perfect for blogging or web publication.

Related posts:
Sun, Snow and Wind on the North Platte River in Wyoming
Bennett Peak to Pick Bridge on the North Platte River, Wyoming
44 Miles of the North Platte River in 2 Minutes
57 Miles of Paddling on North Platte River from Treasure Island to Fort Steele, Wyoming


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12th Annual South Platte River All Club Paddle

16 Apr

The annual spring kickoff paddling trip on the South Platte River took place this year with two weeks delay on April 6, 2013, due to a winter weather. Typically, this trip is organized on the third Saturday of March. It starts in Evans Riverside Park and goes 9 miles downriver to Kersey or 14 miles to Kuner wuth a lunch break at the second dam portage. Several Colorado paddling clubs participate (Rocky Mountain Canoe Club, Poudre Paddlers Club, Rocky Mountain Sea Kayak Club, High Country River Rafters, and Colorado White Water Association), but no membership is required to paddle.

Kayaks and canoes on South Platte River portaging kayaks and canoes over diversion dam on South Platte River
Kayaks and canoes on South Platte River Kayaks and canoes on South Platte River
lunch break on South Platte River portaging kayaks and canoes on South Platte River

We had a good weather this year with some signs of spring, but pretty low water, ~550 cfs at Kersey. I took the pictures above with my Canon 5D Mark II DSLR camera. They can be licensed for editorial use from my stock photography portfolio

This year I paddled Badfish inflatable SUP in a longer version of this trip to Kuner. It was not a first time of this paddleboard on the South Platte since I started my SUP season in early February this year with upstream and downstream paddling at Kersey.

I had a nice paddling with some problems on several shallow spots. I paddled a couple of miles without the center 10″ fin, but tracking of Badfish was pretty bad. I will try a shorter fin in my next paddling.

Badfish SUP on South Platte River

Related posts:
Opening 2013 Paddling Season with Badfish SUP on the South Platte River
SUP on the South Platte River – Opening Winter Paddling Season
South Platte River below Denver, Colorado – GPS/photo river guide. Links to flow data.


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South Platte River at Fort Lupton – Northern Colorado Paddling

12 Mar
Subaru Outback and JKK Supernova kayak><br />
I haven’t paddled my JKK Supernova kayak since 2012 Missouri River 340 race. I decided that to rinse some Missouri mud off.</p>
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Paddling upstream with GoPro camera mounted in the front deck.

paddling South Platte River

About 2 miles upstream of Fort Lupton. The river was shallow, fast, twisty, stinky … Near perfect! I had a great workout.

South Platte River at Fort Lupton
Back to Fort Lupton.

I have paddled JKK Supernova starting at Fort Lupton several times this winter. It seems that my driving time from Fort Collins is about 45 minutes and is not longer than driving to Kersey below Greeley. I didn’t try to paddle my SUP since some spots were too shallow for a fin.


This is a diversion dam just below Fort Lupton. I’ve paddled the river between Fort Lupton and the confluence wit St Vrain Creek. There are 7 dams in this short section. Maybe, it’s a time to run it just for documentary purposes, certainly, not for recreation. It feels like a packrafting project.

Related posts:
South Platte River below Denver, Colorado – GPS/photo river guide


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Stand Up Paddling the South Platte River below Denver

14 Nov


SUP on South Platte River

November 3, 2012. Paddling Bark Expedition SUP on the South Platte River near Kersey, Colorado. Camera: GoPro Hero.

It was my first time with SUP on a river – a short, but intense upstream / downstream workout starting at the Kersey bridge. A nice weather and good river flow. You can find more picture from that paddling in Fitness Paddling blog.

I will be back on the South Platte with SUP or other boat. The winter paddling season is open.

Related posts:
SUP on the South Platte River – Opening Winter Paddling Season
South Platte River below Denver, Colorado GPS/photo river guide
Daily Paddling Picture Gallery


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Catching High Water on the South Platte River

16 Oct


s-platte-packraft

September 13, 2012. Alpacka Yukon packraft on the South Platte River between Kersey and Kuner. Camera: Pentax Optio WG2

A couple days of rain increased water level in the South Platte River from around 100 cfs during dry summer to 2000 cfs at Kersey. I managed to catch the high water wave in this late afternoon bike-packraft trip: Kuner-Kersey-Kuner.

Related posts and more pictures:
Wildcat Mound Run – the South Platte River by Bike and Packraft
Biking and Packrafting – A Selfsupported Classic Run on the South Platte River near Greeley
Inline Skating and Packrafting – Road and River Test on the South Platte
South Platte River below Denver, Colorado
GPS/photo river guide


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