Main Menu
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flatwater & Canoe Trips in Colorado

 

#1. Colorado River: Kremmling to Pumphouse (Gore Canyon)
If you are looking for an enjoyable raft or kayak run, Gore Canyon is not for you. Through this gorge the Colorado River resembles a cascade. The biggest obstacle in Gore Canyon is not the Colorado'...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Radium, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 11 miles


#2. South Fork of the South Platte River: Deckers to North Fork Confluence
Below Deckers, the South Platte Canyon is a favorite resort and fishing area. Although the rapids are generally light, landowners have thrown up fences and "No Trespassing" signs in several places al...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Deckers, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 14 miles


#3. Colorado River: Pumphouse to State Bridge
Colorado's most popular raft trip is chiefly a commercial operator's mecca, but private rafters, kayakers, and open canoeists can also enjoy the relaxing, intermediate water. The BLM has not slapped ...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Radium, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 14 miles


#4. Arkansas River: Granite to Pueblo Reservoir
The Arkansas in this stretch tumbles through the most difficult whitewater on the river outside the Royal Gorge. An average gradient of 60 feet per mile and a channel filled with granite boulders mak...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Granite, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 129 miles


#5. Lake Fork of the Gunnison: BLM Campground to Blue Mesa Reservoir (Lower Lake Fork Canyon)
Below Gateview the Lake Fork departs from the lava-bed country of its upper reaches and knifes into the region's basement rock, the Black Canyon Schist. The character of the valley shifts abruptly to...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Gateview, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 5 miles


#6. Williams Fork: Horseshoe Campground to Williams Fork Reservoir
The river clips along with a steady gradient of 50 to 75 feet per mile, resulting in swift class II to IV water. Two miles downriver from Horseshoe Campground lies a rugged, three-mile-long canyon wi...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Parshall, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 9 miles


#7. Animas River: Silverton to Rockwood (Upper Run)
The Animas River Canyon is safe only for expert kayakers - and then only at moderate water levels. Attempts to run the canyon in rafts have sometimes been attended with tragic results; the continuous...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Silverton, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 28 miles


#8. Green River: Gates of Lodore To Split Mountain Boat Ramp (Lodore, Whirlpool and Split Mountain Canyons)
The run through Dinosaur National Monument takes two to four days. Although permits can be difficult to get due to heavy demand, there are usually many cancellations, especially late in the summer. ...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Lodore, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 45 miles


#9. Blue River: Dillon Reservoir to Green Mountain
The Blue River occupies a pastoral valley between soaring monarchs of the Gore Range to the west and the Williams Fork Mountains to the east. It is swift and cold but not overbearing, rated class I a...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Dillon, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 20 miles


#10. Gunnison River: Almont to Blue Mesa Reservoir
The first mile below Almont has some class II whitewater. The only significant rapids below this first mile lie nine miles downriver along the flank of the Palisades, a volcanic ridge west of Gunniso...
From the guidebook "Floater's Guide To Colorado"
Running the Rivers of North America
Almont, CO - Whitewater Paddling - 18 miles


View other whitewater paddling in Colorado
Running the Rivers of North America

 

 
Google
 
Web www.hunt-fish-camp.us

 

_

_________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

If you like the outdoors, visit Natural Wonders of the World . This site lists 1000 natural world wonders on all seven continents.

 

North American wonders reach from from the lofty peaks of the Cascade Mountain range to the watery paradise of Florida's Everglades.

The South American natural forces can be witnessed in countless forms--you'll find them cascading over the Devil's Throat of the Iguazu Falls, flooding Llanos grasslands.

The Australian Great Barrier Reef stretches to Papua New Guinea, while New Zealand's Tongariro volcano towers above waves of rugged hills.

The African Congo Basin is a network of swamps and emerald forests as diverse as the four counterpoints it unifies. The European and Middle Eastern natural histories include building castles on its rocky peaks, painting frescoes in its caves, trading through its passes, and perishing at its mercy.

The European and Middle Eastern natural histories include building castles on its rocky peaks, painting frescoes in its caves, trading through its passes, and perishing at its mercy.

The dual Asian power of nature is demonstrated through the elements at play in Asia. Fire-spewing volcanoes raise new lands from their summits.Ocean-worlds house water-kingdoms. Finally earth-bound and sky-stretching mountains--figures of inspiration.

The Polar Regions are an icy wilderness where the frozen fingertips of polar icecaps feel their way across stretches of land and water, the Arctic and Antarctic form the polar regions of our globe.