- average 7.75 m/s (274 cu ft/s) Discharge 7.75 m³/s | - min 0.28 m/s (10 cu ft/s) | |
- max 114 m/s (4,026 cu ft/s) |
Crossing the middle fork pasayten river
The Pasayten River is a tributary of the Similkameen River, in the Canadian province of British Columbia and the U.S. state of Washington. The Pasayten River is part of the Columbia River drainage basin, being a tributary of the Similkameen River, which flows into the Okanagan River, which flows into the Columbia River.
Contents
- Crossing the middle fork pasayten river
- Map of Pasayten River Okanagan Similkameen H BC Canada
- CourseEdit
- West ForkEdit
- Middle ForkEdit
- East ForkEdit
- MainstreamEdit
- Tributaries in CanadaEdit
- References
Map of Pasayten River, Okanagan-Similkameen H, BC, Canada
CourseEdit
The Pasayten River originates in the North Cascades part of the Cascade Range. It flows generally north through the Pasayten Wilderness and across the international boundary.
West ForkEdit
The West Fork Pasayten River originates on the north slopes of Slate Peak and flows north until it reaches Three Forks, where it and the Middle Fork converge to form the Pasayten River Proper. Rock Creek also joins here, which makes the name "Three Forks" very appealing to not only the three way confluence, but to the nearby cabin.
Middle ForkEdit
The Middle Fork Pasayten River originates in Slate Pass and flows north until it reaches Three Forks, where it and the West Fork converge to form the Pasayten River Proper.
East ForkEdit
The East Fork Pasayten River originates at Dollar Watch Pass and flows west, picking up the outlet stream from Big Hidden Lake just over halfway to its eventual meeting with the mainstream of the Pasayten just upstream from the Canada/United States border.
MainstreamEdit
The Pasayten River Proper begins at Three Forks, where the West and Middle Forks converge to form the mainstream. The Pasayten, prior to crossing the border, is joined by the East Fork. The river, after crossing the border, continues to flow north. The Pasayten River flows just east of E. C. Manning Provincial Park before joining the Similkameen River.