Current River Fun, Information and Links begin here!

Welcome to the River's-Edge Resort portal to everything about the Current River. Below you will find information and/or links to just about anything you could want or need to know about the Current River AND Ozark National Scenic Riverways Park. Like the Jacks Fork the Current River is also a true Missouri "jewel" of a stream. and has been deemed one of the worlds "ten most scenic floating and fishing streams" by Life Magazine. River's Edge is located right on the Jacks Fork in "Missouri's Top Outdoor Outpost" Eminence, MO. The St. Louis Post Dispatch has called River's Edge "the best place to stay in Eminence", and for good reason, it really is "the best seat in the house" in the Ozark National Scenic Riverways area. Just use the quick links below to learn about, plan a trip to, or enjoy a "virtual" experience of this awesome stream and area.


Current River
Summary


Current River
Mile by Mile Map


Current River
Guide


Current River
Floating/Canoeing


Current River Lodging


Current River
Fishing


Quick Links to the
Missouri Department of Conservation
Current River Pages
(this information is not available at this time, we will add it to this site as soon as it is posted by MDC)

Watershed Inventory and Assessment
Watershed Location
Land Use
Water Quality & Use
Biotic Community
Management
Geology
Hydrology
Habitat Conditions
Jacks Fork Angler Guide
MDC Jacks Fork Natural Area



Current River Floating
Difficulty Classifications:
I, occassionally II.





Current River Summary

COMING SOON!

 

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(the following is an electronic reprint excerpt from the
Missouri Department of Conservations "Missouri Nature Viewing Guide")
88 Ozark National Scenic Riverways ­ Current and Jacks Fork Rivers
As the Current River thunders and rolls through southeast Missouri, it picks up volume from many springs along the way. Floaters enjoy its scenery year 'round. From your canoe, explore unusual habitats and observe animals typical of the Ozark riverways. Enjoy the fish of the river, from bass and sunfish, to suckers and darters. Watch for beaver, muskrat and mink along the banks. Scenic bluffs, beautiful trees and a variety of wildflowers give drama to the course of the river. White-tailed deer and herons walk at the river's edge, and songbirds feed and nest in the trees.

A tributary of the Current, the Jacks Fork River is one of the wildest and most scenic of all Missouri Ozark streams. Clear waters roaring down the valley are surrounded by steep walls and massive cliffs. As you float, allow time for snorkeling and to explore some of the caves along the way. Watch for wood ducks and other waterfowl in the calmer backwaters. In fall, the forests are an array of color.


Ozark National Scenic Riverways

Superintendent
Ozark National Scenic Riverways
P.O. Box 490
Van Buren, MO 63965
(573) 323-4236

The Current River

The Current float starts at Montauk State Park off Highway 119. Come with plenty of provisions in case the river grabs your excitement and won't let go!. Its 38 hours down to Gooseneck. There are plenty of takeouts along the way, but if you've got the time, enjoy the whole journey.

Average floating time in hours from INMAN HOLLOW to:

Cedargrove - 3 hours
Akers - 5 hours
PuIltite - 9 hours
Round Spring - 12 hours
Jerktail Landing - 17 hours
Two Rivers - 19 hours

Average floating time in hours from TWO RIVERS to:

Owls Bend - 2 1/2 hours
Beal Landing - 6 hours
Paint Rock Bluff - 7 hours
Van Buren, Mo. - 12 hours
Big Spring - 131/2 hours
Cataract Landing - 17 hours
Gooseneck - 19 hours

MONTAUK STATE PARK - Montauk Springs and Pigeon Creek flow together to form the headwaters of the Current River. Canoe launching is not allowed in the State park.

INMAN HOLLOW - The fastest section of the Current River is from here to Welch Spring. Newcomers to the Ozarks in the early 19th century brought animal hides to this point for processing into leather. The hides were soaked in a "tan-vat" filled with tannic acid derived from tree bark. Then they were submerged in the deep river basin here, still known as Tan Vat Hole.

THE "S" TURN - Just before Cedargrove, the canoeist has to tight through a series of turns and swirls in a river of white water. Look back upriver; aren't you amazed you made it?

CEDARGROVE - In the early days, people mingled about the gristmill exchanging news as they waited for the miller to grind their "turn" of grain into meal. Other services sprang up near the mill and that's how Cedargrove, one of the earliest villages in this part of the Ozarks, got its start. Then, roads built on the ridge tops drew traffic away from the hollows and bottomlands, and most small river communities like Cedargrove were abandoned by the mid 20th century. All boats have to be portaged around the low-water bridge at Cedargrove.

WELCH SPRING - Thomas Welch, the first pioneer to settle here, built a general store and a gristmill beside this spring. Much later an Illinois doctor built a two-story sanatorium for asthma sufferers on the bluff above Welch Cave. Cool mineral airs wafted up into the rooms from a tunnel connected to the cave. The results of "the cure" are not known, but plans to turn the town into a health resort never materialized.

AKERS - This access point at the Akers ferry crossing is a favorite with floaters. If starting a float trip, read the SAFETY checklist (other side) and check with the ranger for river conditions.

CAVE SPRING - Floaters are halfway between Akers and Pulltite. The cave is big enough to paddle a canoe inside for about 30 meters (100 feet).

ROCK HOUSE CAVE - Right below the cave, the river is very deep and filled with fish. Try dropping a line in Big Solution Hole.

TROUBLESOME HOLLOW - The narrow gauge logging trains crossed Sheney Bridge from the bottomland on the right to the mouth of Troublesome Hollow. The rails were fastened to bedrock in the river. Bushwhackers trouble the settlers in this hollow long enough to give it its name.

PULLTlTE - The spring and cabin are lust downstream from Pulltite campground. In the old days, farmers drove their wagon team/down the steep west bank to get to the mill near the spring. Drawing a fresh load of meal back uphill, the horses stretched their harnesses to the snapping point. It was a "tight pull." The average daily spring flow is 144 million liters (38 million gallons). Just downriver is Fire hydrant spring.

BOYDS CREEK - Floaters should be careful maneuvering- through the old railway bridge pilings across the river at Boyds Creek. The West Eminence lumber mills were once among the largest in the Ozarks.

MERRITT ROCK CAVE - Merritt Rock, or Little Gem, Cave is at the base of the upstream end of a long bluff. Inside is an ebb and flow spring. CAUTION check with a ranger before going inside the cave. Read the SAFETY checklist. Straight ahead downriver on a high hill is the Shannondale fire tower.

WAGON TRACE - After passing Sinking Creek, a major tributary from m the east, floaters should watch the opposite bank for signs of the old wagon trace. It appears as a level, treeshaded lane along the river. The early hill people often traveled this road to towns and mills up and down the river. Beginning at the Current River headwaters near Montauk Springs, the road switched back and forth across the stream all the way to Round Spring. A heavy overgrowth has obliterated most of it.

ROUND SPRING A CAVE - The waters of Round Spring rise into a deep, blue basin, then pass beneath a low natural bridge. The flow disgorges an average of 98 million liters (26 million gallons) daily. The cave, a short way up the valley, is representative of many throughout the Ozarks. Guided tours by lantern light take about 2 hours.

WHITE OAK FOREST - Unusually thick stands of aged burr oaks grow along both sides of the river. These broadly branched trees, characterized by whitish bark, somehow escaped the lumberman's ax. Most trees along the Riverways represent second and third growth mixtures of two forest types--oak and hickory, and oak and pine.

THE CHANGING RIVER - The river meanders, carving a new course across a wider floodplain. The banks are deeply eroded, and "old man's beard," a greenish gray lichen, hangs from redcedar trees on the cliffs near the mouth of Big Creek.

BEE BLUFF - Here the durable qualities of dolomite rock show up in a 60-meter (200-foot) bluff. Eminence dolomite appears frequently along the Current and Jacks Fork Rivers, but you won't find it in other areas of the country.

JERKTAIL LANDING - At lust the right moment, mule-skinners cried "jerk tails" and the mules strained extra hard to pull heavy loads of copper and iron ore across the river and up the slick riverbanks. The wagons were loaded at mines on the east side of the river.

TWIN ROCKS - A swelling and deepening river sweeps past these huge boulders that long ago broke loose from the bluff overhead. Deep potholes in the river bottom provide security for many fish.

WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT TRACT - This open field is cultivated to provide food and cover for wildlife living near the river and in the surrounding hills. Rodents. song birds, birds of prey, and small fur-bearers thrive in "edge" habitats created near small fields. Ultimately more important to the vigor of riverine wildlife, however, are the smaller forms of animal life that cling to the bottoms of pebbles and dart and flutter across the shallows. Here where land and water meet are the visible beginnings of a long, interlocked food chain on which all life depends

TWO RIVERS - The access point is from highway "V," just below the union of Jacks Fork and the Current River. A short way downstream is an old ferry crossing.

COOT CHUTE - The water flows faster in the chute, a narrow course at the foot of Coot Mountain. but novice floaters still find it safe.

MARTIN BLUFF - This high bluff parallels the river on the north all the way to the camp sites at Goose Bay Creek.

GOOSE BAY - Abruptly diverted left by an outcropping of pinkish granite (rhyolite), the river slows into a large pool. Below Blair Creek on the right is good gravel bar camping.

OWLS BEND - Here the Current River sweeps south in a wide arc Barred owls and screech owls perch in the high bluffs. Owls Bend Bridge, Mo. 106. is just upstream from the access point at the Powder Mill ferry along and the old highway.

MOUNTAIN FOLK-LIFE - Newfangled ideas catch on slowly in the remoteness of the hills and hollows. It was not too long ago when you could see the blacksmith hard at work fitting and fashioning everything from horseshoes to kitchenware. Sorghum molasses was made right on the farms where the cane was grown. It and cornbread were staples in the Ozark diet. Demonstrations are held on the west side of Booming Shoal Ford-sorghum making from mid-September to the end of October; and backsmithing on weekends throughout summer and fall.

BLUE SPRING - The spring waters, shielded from bright sun and skylight by trees and overhanging cliffs, take on a deep blue tint. The unruffled surface conceal daily outpouring of me than 272 million liters (72 million gallons). Follow a short trail to the spring, one of the four largest along the Riverways. 20.

BUTTIN ROCK SCHOOL Children used to go off to one-room schoolhouses like this one only when they could be spared at home. The school .1 kilometer (0.6 mile) from the river is being saved for future restoration.

ROCKY FALLS AREA - This popular day-use area off the river can be reached by highway.

ANT HOLE

CARDAREVA BLUFF - The Current River Valley was the ancestral home of loosely knit bands of Indians. known to settlers as the Osage It is said that a certain Osage chief, Cardareva, is buried atop this mountain

LOG YARD - Timber from the top of Log Yard Mountain used to come sliding down a long chute to the "yard," a deep-water hole in the river by the time it reached the water, much of it had already been hewn by broad-ax into railroad ties. "Tie drives" started here and as far upstream as Montauk, growing to massive proportions before the ties reached the shipping point near Van Buren, Mo

BEAL LANDING - The small town of Beal, Mo ,once spread in the flat along the river.

PAINT ROCK BLUFF - Streaks of color from oxidized iron have stained the rocky face of this bluff At the bluff's downstream end is Gravel Spring

A QUIET POOL - The banks of the Current grow further apart here and pot-holes in the bottom support a teeming world of underwater life only hinted at on the surface Smallmouth bass, goggle eye, and a variety of small pan fish make sporting targets for the patient angler in late winter, walleye or "Jack Salmon" an be lured from deep holes where they come to rest in the quiet water.

WATERMELON SHOAL - floaters should watch for a short section of rough water.

CHILTON CREEK

WAYMEYE CHUTE - This narrow stretch of rough water is also called Rabbit Chute.

MILL CREEK

EASY STREET - Despite the fast, choppy water, the 'tie-rafters" named this stretch for the brief rest they could take while the river ran straight The men rode rafts made up of thousands of floating railroad ties lashed together so they could be controlled as they floated downstream with the current. Heard no more on the river are the whoops of these hearty men as they passed the word hack to the tail end, "Snub-er-down" If the rafts were not snubbed to slow them before a sharp turn or eddy in the river, the front end would plunge underwater and begin breaking up under the weight of the tie rafts rushing down from behind The result was a log lam that could take days to entangle "Tie-rafting" was no easy occupation

WATERCRESS PARK - Opposite the U S Forest Service campground is the place loggers called Tie Broom Stretch Cables were strung across the river to stop the floating railroad ties, which were hauled out and loaded on railroad cars

VAN BUREN, MO - . U S 60 BRIDGE BIG SPRING No other spring in the Ozarks can match Rig Spring's flow of nearly 1 billion liters (about 277 million gallons) a day Here a vast network of underground streams disgorge their cool, crystal-clear load at a single outlet.

COLEMAN'S FAILURE CHUTE

CATARACT LANDING

HICKORY LANDING CAVE SPRING - This cold water spring, where old-timers operated a whisky still, is about 1 6 kilometer (1 mile) up the branch.

PANTHER SPRING - The spring Issues from a cave near the river's edge Fishing in the rough water is excellent.

KELLEY BLUFF - Below the bluff, an early settler named Kelley ran a trading post.

PHILLIPS BAY - Cold water from Twin Spring keeps the water temperature in the below normal

GOOSENECK - Those continuing downstream 39 kilometers (24 miles) to Doniphan should plan on a floating time of 10-12 hours.

Glass containers are illegal on the river and within 50ft of the bank in the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Citations have been issued.

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This page brought to you by:

River's Edge Resort

"Best Place to Stay in Eminence"
-Post Dispatch, May 21, 2000-

The INN Resort
HCR 1, Box 11
Emine
nce, MO 65466

For reservations and availability
please call (573) 226-3233.

Offering the Finest in Lodging on the
Ozark National Scenic Riverways
Jacks Fork & Current Rivers.