Rio Chama
About
Through Rio Arriba County's high desert, the Rio Chama cuts 33 miles of Wild & Scenic canyon between sandstone walls that rise from cottonwood bosques to rimrock. El Vado Ranch to Skull Bridge opens the run with 11 miles of Class II water as the river enters red canyon walls. The middle section from Skull Bridge to Christ in the Desert Monastery drops through the deepest canyon — 11 miles of Class II–III water where the walls close in and the gradient picks up. The final stretch from Christ in the Desert to Big Eddy covers another 11 miles of Class II as the canyon widens toward the takeout. At 580 CFS average, the Chama runs best between 300–1500 CFS, with USGS gauge 08284100 providing reliable readings. Commercial outfitters including Far Flung Adventures and New Wave Rafting guide the full canyon, typically as multi-day trips through the Santa Fe National Forest corridor.
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.