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Encyclopedia > Molalla River

The Molalla River is a tributary of the Willamette in Oregon.


Its headwaters are in Clackamas County, in the Table Rock Wilderness Area, near Table Rock, in the Cascade Range. After descending from the mountains, it becomes a slow meandering stream, passing through a fertile agricultural region of the lower Willamette Valley.


It is joined by the Pudding shortly before flowing into the Willamette near the town of Canby. The confluence of the Molalla, Pudding, and Willamette form a floodplain that provides one of the most significant habitats for small mammals and waterfowl in the Willamette Valley, including the largest blue heron rookery in the region.


During the early 1800's, the area around the river was populated by the Molalla Indians. During that time, an extensive system of trails along the river allowed trade being the peoples of the Willamette Valley and eastern Oregon. As late as the 1920's, the trails were used by Native Americans from the Warm Springs Indian Reservation to reach huckleberry-picking grounds near Table Rock [1] (http://molallariverwatch.org/themolalla.htm) . One of the original routes, called the "Huckleberry Trail", is currently used for recreational hiking and horseback riding.


Starting in the 1840's, the lower Molalla became an area of intense homesteading by European-Americans because of the fertility of the surrounding land. The upper reaches of the river became an area of widespread logging, as well as gold mining near the head of Ogle Creek.


See also

External sites

  • Molalla River State Park (http://www.oregonstateparks.org/park_111.php)
  • Molalla RiverWatch (http://molallariverwatch.org/)
  • NOAA Advanced Hydrological Prediction Service: Molalla River near Canby (http://ahps.wrh.noaa.gov/cgi-bin/ahps.cgi?pqr&cano3&printable)
  • Molalla River Corridor Trails (http://www.trails.com/explore/Tcatalog_trail.asp?TrailID=BGW059-008)
  • Steelhead Production Plan in Molalla and Pudding Rivers (http://www.streamnet.org/subbasin/Molallasum.pdf)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Molalla River - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (295 words)
The Molalla River is a tributary of the Willamette River in the U.S. state of Oregon.
The confluence of the Molalla, Pudding, and Willamette form a floodplain that provides one of the most significant habitats for small mammals and waterfowl in the Willamette Valley, including the largest blue heron rookery in the region.
During the early 1800s, the area around the river was populated by the Molalla Indians.
Molalla River and Tributaries Whitewater Paddling - Whitewater Kayaking Routes (534 words)
The Molalla is smaller and more technical than the neighboring Clackamas River, but it offers similar variety for kayakers and canoeists.
The river is more interesting and not nearly as flat as it appears from the road...
This scenic and playful run on the Molalla River is mostly class 2, with several class 3 drops near the middle.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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