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dewmahn t1_itmrnhl wrote

Going to give my cold water PSA. While the temperature has been nice out in the afternoon the morning and nights have been cold, in the last 30 days the water temperature of the Allegheny has dropped 20 degrees down to 50°. Please wear a life vest and stay close to shore if you do not have proper attire(wetsuit or dry suit). Cold water kills.

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Elouiseotter t1_itoj838 wrote

Don’t forget to tell someone where you are going, and what times you are heading out and planning on returning especially if you’re going alone. Your contact person can alert help if things don’t go as planned and they don’t hear from you. Letting your contact person know what your vessel looks like and your clothing will also be helpful.

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starchyewexbox t1_itm6ile wrote

Shouldn't take more than 4 hours.

I've done it in about 3 hours - but keep in mind the wind is a pretty big factor sometimes.

I've paddled downriver to the point, then been blown back upriver to Millvale.

I've also paddled downriver to the point against the wind, then a storm system started coming and the wind direction switched (so I'm against it both ways) and was paddling upriver at a slower pace than the trail walkers - so I gave up and walked back.

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ButtersHound t1_itqcz0f wrote

This is a great point. It's always better to paddle Into The Wind in the beginning and then when you get tired you can make it back easily rather than doing things the other way around. That can be a real bad time.

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malepitt t1_itm8hv3 wrote

That's 2.8 river miles each way, and on flat water without wind you can probably paddle at roughly a walking pace. Walk about six miles in 2 hours, perhaps. But current is a thing (even modest) and wind can be even worse. Figure on taking longer to get back upstream than it came to come down. When I go upstream there on windy days, I usually hug the right (north) bank to shelter some from the wind, usually from the NW. Note that you have other take-out options downtown if you get in a jam, or just tired. https://friendsoftheriverfront.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/2021-Three-Rivers-Water-Trail-Map-Guide.pdf

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AdmiralMoonshine t1_itmqi0c wrote

That’s plenty of time. I do that trek regularly putting in at the 40th st bridge. Three or four hours is pretty regular, and that’s allowing for a lot of stops to just drift and drink a beer.

Just be warned the upstream leg can be kind of tiresome, especially if the wind’s blowing against you.

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Sensitive-Slide3205 t1_itobk5b wrote

A big leg of that can be taken through the north side of the river. The water moves slightly faster through that back channel beside Washington's landing. Catch that on the trip down. Looks like light wind tomorrow, paddling upstream shouldn't slow you down much. It's only around .8 knots on GPS. Have fun I'm jealous.

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susinpgh t1_itpq2sj wrote

I think that launch by Three Rivers Rowing is private, but I could be wrong. There's a public launch off the first parking lot, though.

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ilikedirt OP t1_itu44lq wrote

Just to update anyone who checks this thread in the future, it took just over two hours, so much faster than I was anticipating. Very very little current or wind. Water was like glass and wind was never over 3mph. River was low-ish. Day was perfect.

As always, one never paddles the same river twice so YMMV.

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