Wednesday, May 13, 2026

North Branch of the Pawtuxet with the BVPC – May 12, 2026

Heading out from the put-in
I paddled tandem with Cheryl at the traditional Blackstone Valley Paddle Club season opener with the Southern New England Paddlers on the North Branch of the Pawtuxet. Even with the recent rain, the river was shallow in spots. There is no gage on this section of the river, but the gage downstream at Fiskeville was at 0.5-feet, 63 cfs.

The North Branch of the Pawtuxet River, also known as the Upper Pawtuxet, originally arose at the confluence of the Ponaganset and Moswansicut Rivers in what is now the Scituate Reservoir. Today, the river emerges from the bottom of the massive Scituate Reservoir Dam and flows south for approximately 9-miles to West Warwick where it joins the South Branch of the Pawtuxet River to form the main stem of the Pawtuxet River.

Me and Cheryl in my Spirit II
The main stem then flows east for approximately 12-miles to empty into Narragansett Bay at the Pawtuxet Cove. Collectively, all three branches played an important role in the development of the textile industry in Rhode Island, and numerous dams still block their course.

We put-in at the Pawtuxet River Boat Launch above the Hope Furnace Dam (15 Hope Furnace Road in Scituate). We had 17 paddlers and 3 canoes for the 2-mile paddle upstream to the base of the massive earthen dam that creates Scituate Reservoir. The first part of the paddle took us through the winding marshland created by backwater from the Hope Dam. Eventually the river narrowed and we followed its tree-lined course with strainers and tricky currents up to the Scituate Reservoir Dam.

From the bottom of the dam
The Scituate Reservoir was formed by the construction of this large earthen dam in 1925. The Scituate Reservoir is now the largest artificial body of water in the state and provides water to more than 60-percent of the state’s population.

With last weekend’s rain, there was water flowing down the spillway from the top of the dam. There were trees down in the channel, but we still paddled up the short section from the spillway up to the dam. From there, it was a quick trip back down to the put-in.

Links:
My Pictures
Fiskeville Gage
Hope Landing from Rhode Island Blueways

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