Au Sable River (Michigan)
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates
The Au Sable River (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell) is a Template:Convert<ref name="NHD">U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map Template:Webarchive, accessed November 7, 2011</ref> river in the Lower Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. Rising in the Northern Lower Peninsula, the river flows in a generally southeasterly direction to its mouth at Lake Huron at the communities of Au Sable and Oscoda. Like the nearby Manistee River, it is regarded as a premier brown trout fishery east of the Rockies<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources has designated it a blue ribbon trout stream.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A map from 1795 located in the United States Gazetteer calls it the Beauais River.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In French, the river is called the Template:Lang, literally "Sand River".
History
[edit]Locals, including native Americans used the river for hunting, fishing and as an inland link for trapping, trading, and transiting between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. In the late 1800s, the river was used for transporting logs downstream to sawmills and shipping yards in the towns of AuGres and Oscoda. After logging, hydroelectric dams were built during the 1920s to generate power. Today, recreation is the most popular utilization of the river.<ref name="NWS">Template:Cite web</ref>
Description
[edit]The main stream of the river is formed at Template:Coord<ref name="gnis">Template:Cite gnis</ref> in Frederic Township in Crawford County by the confluence of Kolke<ref>Template:Gnis</ref> and Bradford Creeks,<ref>Template:Cite gnis</ref> which both rise in Otsego County. The river flows south then turns east through Grayling, where it is joined by the East Branch Au Sable River at Template:Coord. The East Branch rises in Lovells Township, Crawford County at Template:Coord.<ref>Template:Cite gnis</ref>
The Au Sable continues eastward and is joined by the South Branch Au Sable River at Template:Coord in South Branch Township. The South Branch rises out of Lake St. Helen in Richfield Township, Roscommon County at Template:Coord<ref>Template:Cite gnis</ref> and flows northwest into Roscommon then northeast to the main branch of the Au Sable. The North Branch Au Sable River joins within approximately Template:Convert in eastern Crawford County at Template:Coord near the boundary with Oscoda County. The North Branch rises in Bagley Township, Otsego County, near Lake Otsego.<ref>Template:Cite gnis</ref>
The Au Sable then flows mostly east through Oscoda County, then south and east through Alcona County and Iosco County. The river's watershed also drains portions of Montmorency County and Ogemaw County.
Most of the main branch of the Au Sable flows through or adjacent to the Huron-Manistee National Forest. Template:Convert of the river, from the Mio Pond downstream to the Alcona Pond, was designated as a National Wild and Scenic River on October 4, 1984. The watershed provides habitat for bald eagle and the endangered Kirtland's warbler. Five percent of the land in the watershed is National Forest and 29% is state forest.
Grayling
[edit]The grayling species of fish was once abundant in the Au Sable River, although the species has been extirpated in Michigan since 1936.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=Goble>Template:Cite journal</ref> Brook trout were released into the river in the 1880s and proved stronger than the grayling. There have been many attempts to bring the grayling back to the area, but none have been successful. The city of Grayling, Michigan was named after the once plentiful fish. Brown trout is the current main catch.
Recreation
[edit]Activities include paddle sports (kayaking and canoeing), fishing, primitive camping, backpacking and hiking. There are several "developed" campgrounds as well as primitive campgrounds. It is a designated trout stream, and many canoe liveries exist along the river, which offer paddling trips from a few hours to as long as a week. Impoundments of five of the six dams on the Au Sable create lakes that are used for power boating, water skiing and sail boating. In addition to brown, rainbow and brook trout in the river, there are perch, muskellunge and walleye, large and smallmouth bass, northern pike and bluegill in the dam ponds. Salmon and steelhead trout are popular during spring and fall spawning migrations.
Holy waters
[edit]The nine-mile section of the Au Sable River main branch from Burtons Landing to Wakeley Bridge is called the Holy Waters<ref name=BOR>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=OLD>Template:Cite web</ref> due to the frequent insect hatches, abundance of trout, and ease of wading.<ref name="HLY">Template:Cite web</ref> The section is regulated year-round as catch and release and limited to fly fishing only (no live bait). The river flows through scenic woodlands where the ecosystem supports dozens of species of birds and other wildlife including deer, rabbit, muskrat, otter, mink, fox, squirrel, chipmonk, skunk and turtle.<ref name="GVB">Template:Cite web</ref>
Lodges
[edit]For serious fly-fishing anglers, several locations offer accommodations on the Au Sable River.
WaWa Sum Lodge' at Whirlpool Road is owned and operated by Michigan State University as a research facility and conference center. The main lodge was constructed in 1922 and the property includes 251 Acres on the Au Sable. There are seven dorm style bedrooms, each with three or four single beds. You must bring your own bedding or sleeping bags and towels. Sleeping capacity is 28. A great room and fireplace is there for socializing as is a screened-in porch. A separate building has a dining room that seats 16 and kitchen facilities.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
AuSable Riverview Resort at McMasters Bridge has several options. The "Big Cabin" has 8 bedrooms that sleep up to 20 guests, a chef’s kitchen and game room, dry sauna and fire pit. The "Cottage" sleeps 10 and has two separate sleeping quarters that are connected by a kitchen/dining room with a large sliding door patio. Four smaller "Cabins" accommodate 2-4 persons.
Gates Au Sable Lodge, located at Stephan Bridge, has been a local landmark for more than 50 years catering to fly fishing. Their restaurant and Fly Shop is open to the public.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Professional fly fishermen offer instruction and guided fishing trips on all branches of the Au Sable and Manistee Rivers using the unique Au Sable riverboats and wading trips. A daily fishing report is produced for their guests that includes the current insect hatch status.
Organizations
[edit]The Trout Unlimited organization was begun in 1959 by 16 Michigan fishermen on the AuSable River.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Schrems West Michigan Trout Unlimited is the Au Sable chapter of the national organization.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Anglers of the Au Sable, with 1200 members, was founded in 1986 "to preserve, protect and enhance the AuSable River system for future generations of fly fishers."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Au Sable River Property Owners Alliance was organized in the mid-1960s "To preserve, protect and enhance the Au Sable River watershed’s great natural endowments of wilderness scenery, unpolluted cold-water, and stable forest habitat for the enjoyment of future generations."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Average water temperature
[edit]River valley attractions and events
[edit]- The Michigan AuSable Valley Railroad is located in Fairview. It is a 1/4 scale, Template:RailGauge gauge ridable miniature railway, which offers rides on a passenger train through the scenic Northern Michigan landscape. It operates in jack pine country during the summer months. Riders travel through parts of the Huron National Forest and overlook the Comins Creek Valley.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- The Au Sable River Canoe Marathon starts in Grayling and ends in Oscoda Template:Convert down the river. It is one of three annual marathon races that constitute canoe racing's Triple Crown. The race begins at 9:00p.m. on the last Saturday in July and runs through the night into the next day. Winning times have ranged from 14 to 21 hours. The race was first run in 1947.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- First Dam Canoe Race (MCRA - Canoe Race) is a yearly event.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- The Au Sable River Queen is a paddle boat that offers river excursions six miles west of Oscoda on the River Road Scenic Byway.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Within this area is Kirtland's warbler habitat, established to bring the songbird back from near extinction.
- The Lumberman's Monument is adjacent to the river, about 15 miles (24 km) west of Oscoda. The 14-foot bronze monument stands on a high bank with the Au Sable River providing a scenic backdrop since 1932. Lumbering along the river began in the 1860s and was finished by the 1910s.<ref>“Lumberman's Monument Visitor Center.” Huron-Manistee National Forests - Lumberman3As Monument Visitor Center, www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/hmnf/recarea/?recid=18538</ref>
- River Road, on the north bank and running parallel to the river, is a designated National Scenic Byway for the 23 miles that go into Oscoda.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- There are six dams and hydro-electric plants in the basin of the Au Sable, with a total capacity of 41MW and an average annual output of 500 GJ. The six facilities were constructed between 1911 and 1924.<ref name=DAM/>
- The Grayling Fish Hatchery on the Au Sable was founded in 1914 by timber baron Rasmus Hanson with assistance from Henry & Edsel Ford. Although unsuccessful in restoring the grayling, the hatchery raised and released millions of rainbow and brown trout. The State of Michigan purchased it in 1926, then the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, finally to the non-profit Grayling Hatchery Incorporated in 2017.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Canoer's Memorial: The inscription on the memorial says "The crossed paddles are a canoeist’s salute. These paddles are erected as a tribute to those professional members of the Michigan Canoe Racing Association who were once active in the promotion and participation of canoe racing in Michigan. As you view the waters of the AuSable or watch canoes racing on our Michigan streams, remember these departed members and their dedication to the sport of canoe racing.” The first casualty happened in 1953 claiming the life of 17-year-old Jerry Curley. The Curley family spearheaded the efforts to erect the monument, and it is now maintained by Oscoda Township on U.S. Forest Service property.<ref>“Canoer's Memorial Monument.” AuSable River Canoe Marathon, www.ausablecanoemarathon.org/race-history-items/canoers-memorial-monument/</ref>
- The Wolf Creek Trail system is a beautiful trail and boardwalk along the Au Sable River and around Wolf Creek. This trail does not have any mandatory fees for use making it free for everyone. The non-motorized trail is open to all hikers, mountain bikers, cross country skiers, snowshoers, with loops designed as long as 4.2 miles and as short as 1.8 miles. The Wolf Creek Trail, part of the Huron National Forest, has four separate loops with a total of 4.8 miles of walking paths with 3 of these miles running adjacent to the Au Sable River. This trail system is a popular hiking, walking, and cross-country skiing spot for locals and tourists alike. Many hikers will use the main trailhead at the bustling Department of Natural Resources canoe launch and park, right off of M-72/33 on the east side of the bridge that crosses the Au Sable River. The park also has toilets, picnic tables, grills, a source for drinking water, and plenty of parking. Most cross-country skiers will use the trailhead off of South River Road approximately 2 miles east of Mio. Skiers will encounter a few downhill slopes, but nothing too difficult, making for an overall easy ski trail.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Iargo Springs are natural springs near Oscoda that flow for nearly 1000 feet to the Au Sable River. Boardwalks provide scenic views of waterfalls and ponds.
- The River Road National Scenic Byway runs Template:Convert parallel to the Au Sable River.
Docuseries
[edit]A three-part documentary entitled, Au Sable was released in 2024 on YouTube and aired on local public-access TV stations.<ref name=EMMY/> It was subtitled, "The River. The Race. The Legends." Narrated by George Blaha, voice of the Detroit Pistons and Michigan State Spartans, it was created by Justin Garant and Darren Cleavenger-Grimsley, two employees of Consumers Energy, primary sponsor of the ARCM since 2012.<ref name="DOC">Template:Cite web</ref> The Production Team from Consumers Energy provided assistance, as did the volunteers from the AuSable River Canoe Marathon staff.
On June 15, 2024, the project won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Documentary from the Michigan chapter of the organization.<ref name=EMMY>Template:Cite web</ref>
Drainage basin
[edit]The Au Sable has a drainage basin of Template:Convert<ref name=DNR>Au Sable River, Michigan Department of Natural Resources</ref> and an average flow of 1,100 ft3/s (31 m3/s) at its mouth.<ref name=ASRNRP>Au Sable River Natural River Plan, Fisheries Division, Michigan Department of Natural Resources</ref> The river drops Template:Convert from its source at the junction of the Bradford and Kolka Creeks<ref name=ASRNRP /> and drains land in the following counties:<ref name="WAT">Template:Cite web</ref>
Towns along river
[edit]River dams
[edit]Ordered from upriver to downriver, all belonging to the power company Consumers Energy:<ref name=DAM>Template:Cite web</ref>
Historical markers
[edit]The river has five historical markers on it:
- Cooke Hydroelectric Plant
- Five Channels Dam Workers Camp
- The Louis Chevalier Claim
- Mio Hydroelectric Plant<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Chief Shoppenagon
River access
[edit]A Michigan Recreation Passport is required for motor vehicles to access state parks, recreation areas, boating access, campgrounds and trails. Parks and recreation areas are mostly self-supporting, and the Recreation Passport is separate from camping, lodging, harbor and shelter fees.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) maintains over 20 Public Access Sites on the Au Sable River for fishing and boating egress and ingress. Many have vault toilets and Hand pumps for potable water. Some allow camping but all require a current Recreation Passport.<ref name="MIC">Template:Cite web</ref> The United States Forest Service (USFS) maintains numerous camping and public access sites in the Huron-Manistee National Forests. All dams on the AuSable River are owned and operated by Consumers Energy (CE).
Name | Template:Vertical header | Template:Vertical header | GPS Coord | Template:Vertical header | Template:Vertical header | Template:Vertical header | Template:Vertical header | Owner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grayling Public Access | 0:00 | 0.0 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Grayling | ||
AuSable River State Forest Campground and Canoe Camp | 2:00 | 7.0 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR |
Burtons Landing | 2:30 | 6.3 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR |
Louies Landing | 2:45 | Template:Coord | Y | MDNR | ||||
Keystone Landing | 3:00 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | MDNR | ||
Thendara Road<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 3:30 | 11.0 | Template:Coord | MDNR | ||||
Whirlpool Angler Access | 3:45 | 12.0 | Template:Coord | Y | USFS | |||
Stephan Landing | 4:00 | 13.0 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | MDNR | ||
Wakeley Landing<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 5:30 | 15.8 | Template:Coord | Crawford Co. | ||||
White Pine Campground (no vehicles)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 6:30 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR | |
Conners Flats Access<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 7:00 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | MDNR | |||
Rainbow Bend State Forest<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 7:30 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR | |
McMaster Bridge Landing<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 8:30 | 24.2 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | MDNR | ||
Parmalee Bridge Landing and State Forest<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 11:00 | 33.7 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR |
Camp 10 Bridge Landing<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 15:00 | 42.9 | Template:Coord | Y | USFS | |||
Mio Dam landing and State Forest<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 17:00 | 45.7 | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | MDNR |
Pine Acres Campground & Cabins Boat Launch<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | USFS | ||
Rollways Campground and Picnic Area<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | Template:Coord | Y | Y | Y | Y | USFS | ||
Thompsons Landing<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | Template:Coord | Y | Y | USFS | ||||
Sawmill Point recreation area | Template:Coord | Y | Y | USFS | ||||
McKinley Bridge<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 61.7 | Template:Coord | MDNR | |||||
4001 Bridge<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 69.5 | Template:Coord | USFS | |||||
Alcona Dam | 74.2 | Template:Coord | CE | |||||
Loud Dam | 89.9 | Template:Coord | CE | |||||
5 Channels Dam | 92.8 | Template:Coord | CE | |||||
Cooke Dam | 100.1 | Template:Coord | CE | |||||
Foote Dam | 108.6 | Template:Coord | CE | |||||
Finish line | 119.5 | Template:Coord | Oscoda |
- Au Sable River Primitive Camping has 102 single family campsites from the 4001 Bridge to Oscoda
Bridges
[edit]Route | Type | Municipality | County | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Template:Jct Au Sable River Bridge | City Street | Grayling | Crawford | Template:Coord |
Stephan Bridge | Stephan Bridge County Road | Grayling Township | Template:Coord | |
Wakeley Bridge | Wakeley Bridge County Road | Template:Coord | ||
McMasters Bridge | McMasters Bridge County Road | Luzerne | Oscoda | Template:Coord |
Parmalee Bridge | Parmalee Bridge County Road | Template:Coord | ||
Camp 10 Bridge | County Road 609 | Big Creek Township | Template:Coord | |
Template:Jct Mio Dam | Michigan Highway | Template:Coord | ||
McKinley Bridge | Evans County Road | Mentor Township | Template:Coord | |
Federal Route 4001 | Federal Road | Mitchell Township | Alcona | Template:Coord |
Alcona Dam | Bamfield County Road | Curtis Township | Template:Coord | |
Loud Dam | Loud Dam County Road | Oscoda Township | Iosco | Template:Coord |
Template:Jct Five Channels Dam | Michigan Highway | Template:Coord | ||
Cooke Dam | Rea County Road | Template:Coord | ||
Foote Dam | West River County Road | Template:Coord | ||
East Mill Street | City Street | Oscoda | Template:Coord | |
Template:Jct Huron Road | U.S. Highway | Template:Coord |
See also
[edit]- Ausable River (Lake Huron), an Ontario tributary of Lake Huron
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Map of Au Sable River watershed
- Anglers of the Au Sable
- AuSable River Property Owners Alliance
- Schrems West Michigan Trout Unlimited
- Au Sable Canoe Marathon
- Huron-Manistee National Forest
- Lumberman's Monument
- Lumberman's Monument at the U.S. Forest Service
- River Road Scenic Byway at America's Byways.
Template:Protected areas of Michigan Template:Authority control
- Pages with broken file links
- Rivers of Michigan
- Rivers of Roscommon County, Michigan
- Rivers of Otsego County, Michigan
- Rivers of Oscoda County, Michigan
- Rivers of Alcona County, Michigan
- Rivers of Iosco County, Michigan
- Rivers of Crawford County, Michigan
- Huron-Manistee National Forests
- Tributaries of Lake Huron
- Wild and Scenic Rivers of the United States