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Raystown Branch Juniata River Water Trail
Enjoy boating, primitive camping, fishing, wildlife-watching and other
activities on this water trail.
The Raystown Branch is the Juniata River's longest and largest
tributary. It is classified as a high-quality river. Wildlife is
abundant and fish such as trout, smallmouth bass, muskellunge and
panfish provide a variety of angling opportunities. Flowing easterly
from its headwaters on the Allegheny Front in Somerset County, it drains
almost 1,000 square miles of southcentral Pennsylvania and covers a
distance of 118 miles before it joins the main stem of the Juniata River
at Huntingdon.
It's name is rooted in local history. "Juniata" is an Indian word
meaning "standing stone," and "Raystown" derives from Robert MacRay, a
settler who established a traiding post in 1750 at present-day Bedford.
The Bedford County portion of the trail, which includes the best
canoeing waters in the westernmost section of the Branch, begins in the
historic Bedford area and runs 55 tangled miles to Saxton, the county's
northernmost settlement. Saxton was chosen as the eastern terminus for
the trail because it marks the point where powerboats begin to use the
river as it forms Raystown Lake. Boating on the river between the
headwaters and Saxton is almost exclusively reserved for canoes, kayaks
and rowboats. Motor use is limited to deep pool areas and high-water
conditions. Boats with motors of any type must be registered. For more
information:
http://sites.state.pa.us/PA_Exec/Fish_Boat/watertrails/raystown/trailguide.htm
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