Monocacy River
About
From the piedmont hills through Frederick County, the Monocacy runs 58 miles of Class I water at 480 CFS average, with optimal flows between 200–800 CFS. The upper 15 miles from Ceresville to Buckeystown follow tight meanders through farmland and forest. A 10-mile corridor through Monocacy National Battlefield preserves the site where Confederate forces delayed Union advances toward Washington in 1864. Below Buckeystown, the river widens for its final 12 miles to the Potomac confluence. Maryland's Scenic River designation protects much of the corridor from development pressure. The Monocacy Canoe Club maintains access and organizes trips on water that stays paddleable through most of the year. USGS gauge 01643000 tracks flows that can spike dramatically after storms but typically settle back to manageable levels within days.
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.