Moose Creek
EddyFlower - Kayaking information for the addicted.EddyFlower - Kayaking information for the addicted.
Moose Creek
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Run Length 6 miles Average Gradient 128 fpm
Difficulty Class III+ Recommended Flow
River Moose Creek Location Palmer, Alaska, United States
Author Todd Kelsey Current Flow & Weather
N/A
Drainage Elevation 1010ft to 380ft
 
Moose Creek (one of at least 30 “Moose Creeks” in Alaska) is a class III+ creek 20 minutes from Palmer. It is a small volume run that is enjoyable at low to high flows. The rapids consist of sections of moderately steep water flowing over and around small granite boulders and a short shale canyon making up several ledge drops, including a relatively safe 10-foot waterfall. There are very few places deep enough to roll a kayak, but single-boat eddies are nearly constant, and everything but the waterfall can be boat scouted. The water is clear and cold, and supports a large run of king and silver salmon, which can make the stretch below the waterfall a bit smelly. The salmon also lead to a fair amount of bear encounters, which can be exciting in such a small creek. There are a few log hazards, and the rapids change often due to fall flooding. Moose Creek flows through Tsadaka Canyon, a U-shaped valley that intersects the Matanuska River Valley. Leaf fossils are common in the Tsadaka Canyon shales.

The whitewater starts immediately from the pool below the bridge. Boulder dodging and boofing are continuous with few discernable drops. After approximately 2 hours on the river, a bridge will be reached which can be ducked under on the left side at low flows. Fifteen minutes below the bridge, a straight section of the creek is bound on the left side by a loose shale bank devoid of vegetation. Shale ledges create river-wide waves, and announce the first major ledge drop, which can be scouted from eddies on river left. This drop is called the Electric Slide, or the Electric Grind at low flows. The usual line is either hard left (recommended) or hard right. The drop is really not all that notable except that it is the drop right above the waterfall. Below the Electric Slide, eddy out on river right to scout the waterfall. A few drops below the waterfall, a river-wide ledge will be seen. This 2’ ledge claims an inordinate amount of good boaters. Either grovel and scrape down it on the far left, or pay up and run it center right. The hole gets stickier at lower water.

Moose Creek has its share of issues.
1. The put-in has been the site of some major vehicle vandalism, Alaska-style. Instead of breaking a window and stealing the stereo, or even putting the ride on blocks, local vandals simply lit the car on fire and enjoyed the rosy burn.
2. The waterfall section is actually not the natural stream course. The river was diverted to expose the riverbed in the early part of the 20th century for placer mining purposes, thus creating the entire shale section. Various environmental groups, native groups, and state agencies have decided to return the stream to its natural course. Survey work began in the fall of 2003. As of June 2004, no further work had taken place.
3. In addition to natural log hazards, Moose Creek has several sections where rails are exposed mid-river from past mining activity. In addition, in the last few years, there has been a 4-wheel ATV that has been slowly migrating downriver with each flood. It is now in the section below the ledgedrop, and looks sharp.
Moose Creek Falls
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