
North Saskatchewan River : l'escapade pittoresque d'Edmonton, entre pagaie, pêche et vie sauvage.
North Saskatchewan River à Cloverdale, Edmonton, est une attraction touristique populaire et un point d'intérêt offrant la pêche, la pratique de la pagaie et de magnifiques vues sur la rivière. Les visiteurs décrivent la beauté automnale et des balades paisibles sur l'eau, entre Devon et Windermere, avec des castors et la faune tout au long du parcours. Les conseils de sécurité comprennent des gilets de sauvetage, des étuis étanches, de la crème solaire, du répulsif anti-insectes, une glacière et des chaussures de rivière.
Aucune photo disponible
Des sorties en canoë-kayak guidées et en autonomie le long de la rivière, offrant des falaises pittoresques et l'observation de la faune dans les régions de Devon à Edmonton.
Accès à des spots de pêche prisés avec des espèces comme la truite, dans un cadre calme et naturel, idéal pour les pêcheurs de tous niveaux.
Des sentiers le long des berges pour des promenades paisibles, de la réflexion et l'appréciation des sons apaisants de la nature et de la beauté saisonnière.
Opportunités d'apercevoir des castors, des wapitis et d'autres animaux sauvages locaux dans leur habitat naturel, enrichissant l'expérience de plein air immersive.
Informations sur les lieux d'entrée et de sortie pour les pagayeurs, bien que limitées, pour aider à planifier des aventures sur la rivière sûres et agréables.
Revendiquez North Saskatchewan River pour mettre à jour les informations, répondre aux avis et accéder aux statistiques.
Note globale
donald morrison
Unfortunately some of the people I met were very rude and one man in a service station tried to get physical with me so just walked away from
Miss Resources
I have paddled from Devon to Windermere and from downtown to the North side to Hermitage Park. The five hour float from Devon was beyond incredible, the tree filled cliffs reminded me of Jasper and I hardly saw a soul except for beavers that were diving down into the river and re appearing. I highly recommend trying this out as long as you have a life jacket, phone and charger in a water proof case, sunscreen, bug spray and a small cooler with cold drinks and food to sustain you. River shoes are a must to help you walk on the slippery rocks if your paddleboard gets stuck, which happened both times I floated. The water proof speaker helped, as not seeing other humans for hours on end was not my usual experience. I also had to push away thoughts about the potential wildlife that could join me in the river, such as bears, elks, moose and cougars. I did see an elk swim across the river and made sure to keep my distance. I became very aware of my vulnerability in an isolated area and realised that I had no back up plan or form of protection if confronted by a wild animal. That awareness became heightened as it got dark. The beavers circling my blow up board were much larger than I thought they would be, I gave them a wide bearth and paddled past as fast as I could. The first float I took alone and it was five hours of nothing but tree filled cliffs, beavers and absolute quiet. My ride and I couldn't figure out a pick up point because the river valley is truly wild and there are not many locations that lead down into the river valley where you can drive to. Eventually they had to park and go on a hike, find me on my maps, we shared locations. WE finally connected after an hour of searching for each other and packed up the inflatable board, carried it up a cliff where there was luckily a handy rope already on location for us to scale it. The pick up in North Edmonton was only after a three hour paddle, again it was difficult to find a pick up point at the time we needed, because there was lighting and imminent rain. Or we could have continued onwards to an area where there was easier access to the river. I do feel like the City of Edmonton could add a fee more pick up points that are accessible for paddlers, as the banks are slippery to climb up. It would be great to have those exit points on google maps. IF anyone has suggestions for exit points north and south of the city that would be helpful. WE know about Capilano, but that was too close and we wanted to paddle further out. Tourists would enjoy this fantastic opportunity to paddle or kayak on the river.
connor
People drive very far to go fishing and drive there boat, I feel like no one realizes that you can go on the river, it’s around 4-7 feet deep if you follow the correct path. Great fishing and beautiful views!
K P
I very much enjoyed the quietness. It was a bit rough to make it down the hill, but it was a very good challenge. If anyone is looking for a quiet time to just walk and reflect, with noises from nature. Mind you, the river is still defrosting.
Allan NGUYEN
The North Saskatchewan river is amazing and beautiful in autumn. It is winding northeast through the Edmonton City AB