Grave Creek (Oregon)


Grave Creek is a tributary, about long, of the Rogue River in southwestern Oregon in the United States.

Course

The creek begins near Cedar Springs Mountain just north of the Douglas CountyJackson County border and flows generally southwest through Jackson County and Josephine County to its confluence with the Rogue. It passes through the communities of Placer, Sunny Valley, and Leland.
Named tributaries from source to mouth are Panther, Swamp, Last Chance, Big Boulder, Little Boulder, Slate, and Baker, Boulder, and Clark creeks followed by Eastman and Quartz Mill gulches. Then comes Tom East Creek followed by Benjamin Gulch, Shanks Creek, Schoolhouse Gulch, and Salmon Creek.
Further downstream are Rat Creek, Mackin Gulch, and Dog Creek, then Flume, Brimstone, and Brushy gulches. Another Tom East Creek is next, followed by Wolf, Butte, Panther, Reservoir, Fall, Poorman, and McNabe creeks. The final three tributaries are McNair, Rock, and Reuben creeks.

Watershed

The Grave Creek watershed is about north of Grants Pass in the Klamath Mountains. It covers about of which the federal Bureau of Land Management administers about . Federal and non-federal lands are intermingled in a checkerboard pattern. Annual precipitation averages about. Drought is common in summer.

Recreation

Hiking trails and river runs converge at the confluence of Grave Creek and the Rogue River. Boaters sometimes run the lower of Grave Creek when its flow is. The run, rated class 3 on the International Scale of River Difficulty, has "short twisting blind drops on the section not visible from the road" and possible hazards that include low-hanging footbridges as well as brush along the stream banks. A handy stopping place for this run is the boat ramp near the Grave Creek Bridge over the Rogue River, which is the intersection of at Galice Road and Lower Graves Creek Road.
The boat ramp is also popular with rafters and kayakers running the "wild" stretch of the Wild and Scenic lower Rogue, which begins at the mouth of Grave Creek. It is "one of the best-known whitewater runs in the United States." Parallel to the wild stretch of the river, the Lower Rogue River Trail winds through the Wild Rogue Wilderness between the mouth of Grave Creek and Illahe.

Works cited