Quick Facts:
Location: 10 miles SW of Munising, or 30 miles SE of Marquette.
Shuttle Length: 0.8 mile. (See details in "Directions" Tab.)
Character: Possibly runnable dam, boogie water, and two wide, shallow steep slides (unfortunately dewatered, and likely almost never to get boatable flows).
Drainage area at put-in: approximately 80 square miles.
Put-in is approximately 751' elevation (or 777' above the dam).
Take-out is approximately 650' elevation.
Thus total elevation change is approximately 100' (or 127' including the dam).
This makes the 'effective gradient' 166 FPM (100'/0.6 mi), or 212 FPM including the dam.
An astounding pair of wide, steep slides, separated by some boogie water and a few wild waves and holes. Unfortunately, this one is 'constructed backwards' -- the river is fairly narrow though most of the reach, and spreads W-I-D-E as it comes into the two big falls. As a result, with enough water to make the big drops anything more than grungy, it is likely that the lead-in stretches would be wild and fast! However, far more to the point, with the hydro project present, this whole (short) reach is extremely unlikely to ever hold enough water to be boatable. (Best bet is in late April or early May.)
A fine page (with photos of this falls, and many others) is
Go WaterFalling.
Addendum: As of spring, 2009, UPPCO was looking into the possibility of selling or abandoning this project (removing the dam). This is prompted by FERC requirements of improvements to the dam and spillway to withstand a theoretical "1000 year flood", and the assessment that the cost of such upgrades would be in excess of the revenues generated by this small hydro facility.
Update:
_Houghton, MI, July 9, 2010 - Upper Peninsula Power Company (UPPCO), a subsidiary of Integrys Energy Group (NYSE: TEG), has closed its sale of the Au Train dam, power plant, and associated lands, along with the transfer of the corresponding Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) operating license, to U.P. Hydro, LLC., a wholly-owned subsidiary of North American Hydro. North American is the largest independent hydroelectric power producer in the Midwest._