Big Kimshew Creek Explained

Big Kimshew Creek
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:California
Source1 Location:Table Mountain
Mouth Location:West Branch Feather River
Length:11miles
Basin Size:27mi2
Discharge1 Avg:200cuft/s

Big Kimshew Creek is a stream in Butte county northern California. It originates in the Lassen National Forest of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and flows some 11miles in a generally south-southwesterly direction to join the West Branch Feather River, a tributary of the Feather River, a major northern California river system.

The creek is known for its whitewater rapids and waterfalls. Its discharge fluctuates dramatically between spring, when it carries snowmelt, and autumn, ranging from 10cuft/s1000cuft/s.

Geography

The creek rises in a meadow 1 mile (1.6 km) northwest of Table Mountain in the southern extreme of the national forest. It flows south into a gorge, receiving Keyser Creek from the right, and Little Kimshew Creek from the left shortly after. At the Little Kimshew confluence it turns west, then again southwest, through a valley over 1200feet deep. It is joined by Little Rock Creek just above the confluence with the West Branch Feather River. The creek's mouth is situated about 2.5miles south of Stirling City.

External links

39.8796°N -121.5072°W