Middle Loup River
About
Spring-fed flows from the Nebraska Sandhills create 220 miles of crystal-clear meadow stream through Blaine and Custer counties, averaging 480 CFS with an optimal range from 200 to 1,000. The Middle Loup cuts through native grassland where Pawnee and Lakota peoples once traveled the Sandhills corridor, and today holds candidate status for Nebraska Scenic River designation. The upper stretch from Dunning to Milburn runs 40 miles of the clearest water, narrow and cold from direct spring input. Below Milburn to Sargent, the channel widens across 50 miles of sandbars and gentle riffles as tributary springs add volume. All Class I water, the Middle Loup rewards paddlers looking for solitude and sight-fishing in gin-clear conditions. USGS gauge 06775500 tracks flows that can swing wide in this groundwater-fed system. The 1905 USGS Sandhills Groundwater Survey documented the spring systems that still drive the river's hydrology today. Sandhills River Trips provides guided access to this remote drainage.
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.