Whitewater Run CO Class II-III

02. Pagosa Springs to Trujillo Rd

San Juan

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Runnable: 400.0 – 2,500.0 CFS
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Description
Josh Stone reports: Alright, I've only done this run about 4 times, so this is what I have to offer. First, let me say this is probably one of the prettiest non-permited runs in Southern Colorado/Northern New Mexico that offers 'easy' whitewater. I wouldnt exactly call this a beginner run due to the fact that the water is very, very cold and once you are in the canyon, trespassing signs restrict you from getting out of the canyon. I have done this stretch from 900 cfs to 1800 cfs, and I find that the more water the better. I would imagine that around 2500, things start to get a little flushy and hairy. The put in for this stretch is at the malt shop (good ice cream!) after you cross over the bridge that crosses the river on the left. Once you put in, you are on the man made course through town. This course is pretty continuous II+ waves and holes which offer some play at good water levels. If you dont feel like doing the whole run, take out at Yamaguchi Park (only about a 30-40 minute paddle). Past this bridge, the river meanders over some easy shoals and you start to recognize some canyon walls shooting up as you leave civilization. Make sure you take a look back at all the 13,000-14,000ft peaks popping up out of the Weminuche Wilderness. Soon you will go through some man made U shaped ledges which offer some decent play... there are something like 30 of them on this run. As the river bends to an extreme right, then cuts back left, you will see a small bridge over the river. This is the biggest rapid on the run. It is a solid class III at 1500 cfs. To run it, go from river right to left puching through the big wave/hole. If you flip, roll quickly because the water takes you into one of the bridge pilons. Afterwards, there is a lot of class two action as you take in some beautiful, remote scenery and the man made ledges. About three miles down from the bridge rapid there is a great landing area that Alpine Cascade company has allowed rafters/kayakers to stop for lunch on. Be respectful and pick up your trash so that we can keep using it. After this lunch break, the action picks up and as soon as the river bends to the right, you encounter the best set of class III waves on the whole river. They are about 4-6 ft high and give rafters a great ride. The action continues for the next 4-5 miles with more class II-III waves, man made ledges, and the occasional play spot. The scenery is still unbeatable. When you begin to notice the gradient lessening and more cabins appearing, this signifies that the take out is close by. You will go under one more bridge by a small cabin and go over some shoals, then the takeout is on river right. To get to the takeout, drive down the road that the commercial hot springs is on and after the community center where the road forks (yield sign) take a right and cross over the bridge. Keep going straight on that road for a long time (road turns to gravel). You will pass the trash dump, and eventually you will come to a parking spot on the left with great access (look for other cars). Park here and shuttle, which takes about 45 minutes. For all you easterners, I say this run is about as hard as the Nantahala, but offers more rapids that are bigger than quarry but not harder than the falls. For camping I usually camp over at the Piedra campgrounds (20 minutes away) because they have free hot springs. You can find campgrounds close by in the Weminuche Wilderness if you want to be closer. Pagosa bar does have PBR on tap, but this town lacks a mirco brewery. The town of Pagosa Springs itself is a beautiful eclectic place that signifies what a mountain town should be. Josh  Stone             2004-08-26
Difficulty
Class II-III
Length
32.0 mi
Gradient
32 ft/mi
Rapids
1
Difficulty Classes
I Easy II Novice III Intermediate IV Advanced V Expert/Extreme VI Unrunnable
Current Conditions
5-Day Forecast
Whitewater data from
American Whitewater