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Hello again. You are right, the waterfall where the Cloquet flows into Island Lake is spectacular. It is too bad it is covered up most of the time by the reservoir. I had never seen it before a couple years ago, and I was impressed. Or, were you talking about the final rapids, Whitesides? Either way, both are beautiful. Most of the lower Cloquet is still within the Cloquet Valley State Forest and is pretty much permanently protected like the upper Cloquet. I guess the reason I spend more time on the lower Cloquet is that it is closer to Duluth, where I live. The river is generally deeper and wider than the upper sections, especially the calm sections. The rapids above Highway 53, and the last stretch before the St. Louis do, however, get really shallow in low water (below 200 cfs out of Island Lake). The rapids actually get easier in high water, at least the section between the Munger Shaw Road and Highway 53. This is the section I run the most. I have paddled here at all water conditions from flood (about 1400 cfs out of Island Lake, little manuevering, just floating) to 75 cfs out of Island Lake (lots of scraping and wading). It has great fishing, fun easy rapids, some wide placid lake-like stretches, abundant wildlife and established, easy access. There are a few houses at the beginning, but most of the stretch is wild. Below a place we call the Big Pool, there is kind of neat old log cabin. Although I think other stretches of the Cloquet are probably more scenic, this section has always held an appeal to me because it is where my Dad first took me canoeing on a river. On the final section below County Road 8, there are some beautiful spots where the river fans out into boulder fields, gravel bars and sinewy islands. If I remember, there are some eagle's nests in some big white pines and osprey nests on the powerlines that cross the river towards the end. The Cloquet's gradient during the final mile or so to the St. Louis River gets steeper, but at low water levels I don't think these final rapids are much more difficult than the others on the lower Cloquet. At high levels, this might not be true, but I have only paddled this stretch at low and medium levels. If I had to choose the best time to paddle the lower Cloquet, I would say mid June. There should still be enough water to easily negotiate the rapids, but not so much as to wash you down too fast to enjoy the surroundings. I guess the I would say, compared to the lower Cloquet, the upper Cloquet is more intimate, has more distinct rapids and is more remote. The lower Cloquet is larger, is more easily accessed (from Duluth at least) and has less complicated shuttles and has long continuous stretches of easy boulder bed rapids that are can be a lot of fun at the right water level. How often have you paddled the Cloquet?
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