Pembina River
About
Through Cavalier and Pembina counties, the Pembina River cuts a wooded canyon that breaks the prairie monotony for 25 miles of the state's most distinctive paddling. The Pembina Gorge section offers Class I water at 340 CFS average through hardwood forest — unusual terrain for North Dakota — while the lower 40 miles flatten into typical prairie river character before joining the Red River. Flows between 100–800 CFS keep the river navigable most seasons, monitored at USGS gauge 05099600. The gorge served as borderland between Ojibwe and Dakota peoples before European settlement reached Pembina in 1812, establishing what became North Dakota's first permanent settlement. Pembina Gorge State Recreation Area manages access and outfitting for the canyon section, which remains the river's primary draw for paddlers seeking wooded water in an otherwise open landscape.
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.