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Wow, what a story! Sounds quite aberrant to me. Then again, river
runners like to summarize a river with the historical worst-case scenario. If you've run the Juan (another river I've canoed about 20 times), then nothing on the Rio Grande will be a problem. The style (drop pool) and difficulty level are quite similar, with the exception that the RG has some mandatory portages and the Juan doesn't. And the portage trails are easy to find and follow. And there are very few powerful eddys like on some stretches of the Juan. The water levels on the RG are controlled by two inputs: the Rio Grande draining out of east New Mexico, and the Rio Conchos draining out of Mexico. Each of these rivers has a different yearly cycle: the Conchos traditionally ran high in the fall and winter (from rainfall), and the RG ran highest in the spring (from snowmelt). However, both rivers are heavily dam-controlled now, and baseline water levels are more a result of litigation than climate, as there is a court battle going on between the US and Mexico about the water levels. The peak levels in the late summer/fall are from seasonal contributions (rainfall, controlled dam releases, flash floods). But because of an ongoing drought in northern Mexico, the baseline water level is quite low. The best canoeing water is after the flash flood (fall) and before the baseline (summer). So that leaves the best season from November or so, until it gets too low in May. I prefer the later part of that window, because it avoids late season thunderstorms and the possibility of flash floods. With your wife as twitchy as she sounds about it, I would run it during the spring (Feb, March) when the water levels are most consistent, the weather is very nice (highs in the high 80s, low 90s) and the wildflowers are going nuts. About 4 feet is primo. Have you seen this website? Its a good resource. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/pa...ditions/texas/ The water is completely undrinkable. Its full of farm runoff, industrial wastes, dead cows and is almost like mud. Bring your water with you, and plan on refilling at two natural springs along the way (you will need to pump the spring water, but its clear and won't plug up the filters). If you swim, keep your mouth and eyes closed. --riverman |
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