Coginchaug River

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Template:Use American English Template:Infobox river

The Coginchaug River in Connecticut, with a watershed including 39 sq mi of forests, pastures, farmland, industrial, and commercial areas, is the main tributary of the Mattabesset River. It is 16.1 mi long, and the river flows northwards from a point approximately 1.8 mi south of the Durham line in Guilford, Connecticut, into Durham and then Middlefield, meeting the Mattabesset in Middletown,<ref name = "a"> Template:Cite news</ref> about Template:Convert upstream<ref>"Google Maps" for lower reaches of Coginchaug & Mattabesset, and adjacent portion of the Connecticut</ref> of the Connecticut River. The name "Coginchaug" comes from a local Native American name for the Durham area and it was the original name for the town. It has been said to mean "The Great Swamp."

In 2006, the Coginchaug was among Connecticut's 85 waterways cited to be of "lower quality", in view of the elevated levels of bacteria, including E. coli. Currently, efforts are being made by the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture to reduce the number of bacteria introduced into the river from untreated sewage, sanitary sewer overflow, agricultural runoff, leaking septic tanks, etc.<ref name = "a"/>

Canoeing

The river has become a popular canoeing route. In 2006, it was considered<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> safe for canoeing, though it is not safe for in-water activities like swimmingTemplate:Verify source. Flowing from Myer Huber Pond, it runs slowly through thick swamps which stretch over Template:Convert and are likely to be impassable except immediately after heavy rains.Template:Verify source The main paddling route starts at Route 147 and continues downstream, north, through additional slow-moving waters and a swamp. There are manyTemplate:Vague portages, including those at six dams and at Wadsworth Falls, the only major waterfall. Class II whitewater is possible before it flows into the tidal marsh of the Mattabesset River.

See also

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References

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