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<blockquote data-quote="jojo" data-source="post: 457435" data-attributes="member: 2788"><p>I agree that the best way to learn a river is to just run it a lot. A big thing that I have learned is to check water.weather.gov to see the river stage every time before I head out. You get to learn where you should and shouldn't go at different levels. You will gain the experience needed when you know how the river is at a certain stage. I run the Mississippi, where there is gauges on each pool, so I'm not sure if this info will be relevant or not in your area.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jojo, post: 457435, member: 2788"] I agree that the best way to learn a river is to just run it a lot. A big thing that I have learned is to check water.weather.gov to see the river stage every time before I head out. You get to learn where you should and shouldn't go at different levels. You will gain the experience needed when you know how the river is at a certain stage. I run the Mississippi, where there is gauges on each pool, so I'm not sure if this info will be relevant or not in your area. [/QUOTE]
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