Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Blue River is a popular destination for canoeing and kayaking. Adventurers may enter the river at one of several public access points. Additionally, Cave Country Canoes in Milltown [5] and Old Mill Canoe Rental in Fredericksburg [6] rent equipment and provide lodging to visitors. [7]
Mill Creek is an unincorporated community in northern Lincoln Township, LaPorte County, Indiana, United States. It lies along CR875E, east of the city of La Porte, the county seat of LaPorte County. [1] Although Mill Creek is unincorporated, it has a post office, with the ZIP code of 46365. [2]
Mill Creek is a stream in Jackson County, Indiana, in the United States. [1] It is a tributary to the White River. Mill Creek was named from the mills built along its banks. [2] Mill Creek has a mean annual discharge of 324 cubic feet per second at Manhattan, Indiana (based on data from 1940 to 2003). [3]
Along with that project, the county has asked the Tecumseh City Council if it would fund a $161,000 project to create a proper kayak and canoe portage around the south end of the dam.
The Eel River is a 52.8-mile-long (85.0 km) [1] tributary of the White River in southwestern Indiana. Via the White, Wabash, and Ohio rivers, its waters flow to the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. The Eel River flows through Greene, Owen, Clay, and Putnam counties. It is the southern of the two rivers named Eel River within Indiana.
Fast forward to 2017 and ice canoeing is a popular sport. In Quebec they even have their own association: the Association de Canot a Glace de Quebec, also known as ACCGQ.
Mill Creek (Jackson County, Indiana) Mississinewa River; Muscatatuck River; Ohio River; ... Indiana) Youngs Creek (Orange County, Indiana) 1 Nominally in Illinois ...
Located in the eastern end of the state park, the 470-acre (190 ha) Pine Hills Nature Preserve protects the deep canyons formed by Indian Creek before it enters Sugar Creek. The primary feature in the preserve is the "Devils Backbone," a 100-foot-high stone ridge barely wide enough for the trail to cross.