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Caesar’s Creek

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Nov 14, 2018
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Location
Heart of the Shawnee Nation
Two forks of Caesar’s Creek join and flow into the reservoir. With water still running high, I decided to see how far upstream I can get on the main fork without lifting/portaging over drops and low areas.

Caesar’s Creek is named after an escaped slave from Virginia. Caesar came into the Little Miami valley, ran a gauntlet, became a member of the Shawnee tribe around 1770. He married an Indian woman, started a farm along the stream that bears his name. His home was near the primary trail to the Ohio river and Kentucky frontier (sacred hunting grounds), not far from the principal Shawnee village of Chillicothe (near modern day Xenia, OH).

For my paddle, I launched 1/2 mile east of the confluence on Anderson’s Fork at the former New Burlington town site, which was razed/flooded when the reservoir was created. At the intersection, I turned north on the primary fork and proceeded another 1/2 mile or so until the canoe would not float over rocky drops. Turning back southward, I passed through the intersection and continued to the mouth of the stream opening into the reservoir. Backtracking, I turned back up the Anderson fork, returning to the landing at the old settlement.

Total loop was just over 4 miles. I paddled above the confluence on both forks with a single blade paddle, from the confluence to the lake and back I used a 260cm double blade canoe paddle.

My rate was about 12 minutes per mile faster using the double blade. I was paddling about 33 minutes per mile with the single blade with a steady, yet unhurried pace.

The NS Phoenix was a delight to paddle. I enjoy going dogless with a nimble boat on small steams. Weather was just gorgeous with temperatures in the 60s, minimal wind.
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I managed to pause my GPS app for a spell on the south end of the loop. I did not portage across the land as shown.
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Nice day trip report. The water looks so green in that one photo. Is that just a reflection of the green trees or is there algae in the water?
 
Nice day trip report. The water looks so green in that one photo. Is that just a reflection of the green trees or is there algae in the water?
All I know is there are sewage plants everywhere. Leachate from septic and farm fields is massive. Ohio isn’t called the nation’s toilet bowl without reason. I imagine the gray/green water is a function of bacteria, oxygen, algae. On the plus side, it’s not the Ohio river, which is the continent’s most polluted river.
 
When I was stationed in the Air Force in Ohio I bought my first canoe, a 17' lightweight Grumman. My wife and I, both having grown up in the Adirondack region, were surprised at the color of Ohio's waterways. Not to mention our first encounters with numbers of ticks in the region. Especially as you get into the coal mine regions in the southern parts of the state, the streams, small rivers, and lakes run pea-green or rusty orange-brown, depending on the runoff and level of very artificial looking attempts at reclamation. We tried paddlong in the larger reservoirs, but, as is true everywhere, large motor boat traffic in extensive numbers was a dangerous factor keeping us away from those waters. We discovered that, unlike the Adirondacks, it was illegal to primitive camp unless you were at a for-pay campground. I couldn't wait to put my PCS papers in and get transferred back to the kind of conditions I love in the Northeast woods.
 
Thanks for the TR. seems like you had a pleasant trip.
The trees and wildlife are nice. During the week, fishing boats are few in the backwater. The herons and occasional bald eagle are pleasant distractions. Just getting outside when the wind and weather permit is good. Easier to enjoy the scenery without a needy herd dog in the boat.
 
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