
National Park Campsite to Kiora

Published by: The Paddle NSW Inc. PO Box 6971 Silverwater NSW 2128 First published as a book "Canoeing Guide to New South Wales" in 1990 by NSW Canoe Association Incorporated Original Copyright NSW Canoe Association Incorporated 1990 Copyright PaddleNSW Inc. PO Box 6971 Silverwater NSW 2128 Email: admin@paddleNSW.org.au The information on this page and the printed book "Canoeing Guide to New South Wales" is copyright. Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this page may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of Paddle NSW Inc. All correspondence concerning the content of this guide should be addressed to the Paddle NSW Inc. ISBN O 646 00264 3 The "Canoeing Guide to New South Wales" was printed in Hong Kong by: United League Printing (Hong Kong) Ltd. , Film Separations by: D & S Brandish Print Consultants Typography by: Deblaere Typesetting Pty Ltd., Dee Why, NSW 2099
The Canoeing Guide to NSW Rivers
The first few kilometres provide interesting but easy canoeing. Just after the start the river splits around an island, with the right-hand channel providing an easy race, while the left-hand side leads to a more enjoyable small chute. Just around the next left-hand bend (3km) there is a rock shelf across the river which forms a small (1/2m) fall. From here to McGregors Creek (8km) there are some nice rocky runs and longer gravel races. In this section the pools are quite shallow, and these become longer and more prevalent in the second half of the trip. The river becomes a series of sandy gravel flats with small races around them. Some of these races have tree obstructions or blockages, particularly a long one around a left-hand bend about 9km from the start, where care should be taken, especially in high water.