Kings River
About
From the high granite of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, the Kings River drops 132 miles through Fresno and Tulare counties at an average 2,400 CFS — snowmelt-fed Sierra runoff that can push 4,000 CFS in heavy years. Wild & Scenic since 1987, the Kings offers three distinct characters. The main stem from Garnet Dike to Kirch Flat runs Class III and sees the most traffic, while the upper section from Rough Creek to Garnet Dike enters committing Class IV+ gorge water. The Middle Fork through Tehipite Valley demands Class V skills and expedition planning through wilderness granite. Kings River Expeditions guides the accessible sections, but optimal flows of 1,000–4,000 CFS mean timing matters — too low and you're scraping, too high and the technical drops become violent. USGS gauge 11218400 tracks the main stem flows. The Mono and Yokuts peoples knew these waters long before the national park boundaries were drawn.
River conditions are community-verified. CFS ranges, difficulty ratings, and access points may not reflect every flow level or seasonal change. Always check current conditions, scout unfamiliar rapids, and paddle within your skill level.