
Originally Posted by
kellymoe
Graham,
The character varies from constant gradient gravel bar affairs like the East Fork of the San Gabriel to the pool drop caharacter of the West Fork of the San Gabriel. Sespe Creek is sandstone bedrock drops with sections that have boulder as large as houses. The long and short of it is that there is a little of everything. One run that is about 45 minutes from downtown Los Angeles has a gradient of close to 400 feet per mile. All the runs except for one are runnable only in the Winter and early Spring of a good snow year or after a good rainfall. The exception being lower Piru Creek which gets a scheduled release every October. The typical flows on these creeks are generaly in the 150-400cfs range but some like the lower San Gabriel I have run as high as 10kcfs.
Nobody thinks of kayaking when they think of Los Angeles but there is really some great whitewater. Sespe Creek in is probably the best river I have ever run. It's 35 miles of pure wilderness with not a single road the entire way and only one trail that follows the first 15 miles before the river drops off the edge of the world, as those who have paddled it call the last 17-18 miles.
Here are just a few shots of Piru and Sespe.
Wow, who'd've thunk it! I was expecting LA paddling to be shallow drainage ditches full of stolen cars and dead bodies. 
Cheers,
Graham
Graham Fitter
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