Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Rice City Pond with the BVPC – June 28, 2022

Hartford Avenue Bridge
For the past two weeks I was
out for weeknight whitewater trips with the CTAMC at Tville. This week, I led a flatwater trip with the Blackstone Valley Paddle Club at River Bend Farm.

The Blackstone Valley Paddle Club was established in 2000 by the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor (now Park and Corridor) as a way to get folks out on waterways of the Blackstone River Valley. Over the years, the club has continued weekday trips (usually on Tuesday evenings) throughout the summer, getting thousands of people out on the water. We had a good turn-out for this trip with 25 boats including 5 canoes. 

Up the Blackstone Canal
River Bend Farm
is part of the Blackstone River Canal and Heritage Park – a 1.000-acre state park in Uxbridge, MA with hiking trails, paddling on the Blackstone River and Canal and historical sites like the Blackstone Canal’s Goat Hill Lock, King Philip’s Lookout and the Stanley Woolen Mill.

Usually, we offer the opportunity for paddlers to do either the River/Canal Loop, or Rice City Pond. I scouted the River/Canal Loop over the weekend, and found it low and tricky in spots. The current often takes you into strainers that can be difficult to avoid. The bottom of the canal was also green with duckweed. We decided to skip the River/Canal Loop and just do the trip to Rice City Pond. Even with Monday’s rain the water level was still low – 2.5 feet on the Northbridge Gage

Bob poling up the shallows
We put-in at the Tri-River Medical Center and paddled upstream under the Stone Arch Bridge at Hartford Avenue. After paddling under the bridge there are great views of Rice City Pond with the rolling hills upstream. We paddled up an old section of the Blackstone Canal to the Goat Hill Lock - one of only two remaining locks. The other is the Millville Lock above the Blackstone Gorge
Unfortunately, it was too shallow to get such a big group up to see the lock itself.

The Blackstone Canal opened in 1828 and utilized a series of 49 locks to move the barges up and down the 450-foot difference in elevation from Providence to Worcester. The canal operated until 1847 when it was replaced by the Providence & Worcester Railroad. 

Heading up the Blackstone River
Following the demise of the Blackstone Canal, the section through what is now River Bend Farm was purchased by the Taft family who converted it to a mill race for their Central Woolen Mill. They built the dam that created Rice City Pond, and constructed new headgates to control the flow of water down to the mill. The Central Woolen Mill, later known as the Stanley Woolen Mill, would become one of the most successful woolen manufacturers in the country.

We paddled across the top of Rice City Pond and up a section of the Blackstone River before shallow water forced us to turn around and head back to the put-in – nice night.

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