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Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??

 
Anonymous Coward
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08/02/2018 08:03 PM
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Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
Anonymous Coward
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08/02/2018 08:16 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Did that unintentionally with a river we were canoeing on.

We came to a blockage so went inland a bit and caught it when it was much narrower, then decided to do the same thing.

Broke into many smaller tributaries, some which just started from a moist patch of dirt/grass.

Followed one to a bunch of rocks that had this tiny trickle comming out.

Made us wonder how all that water down stream started from such tiny origins.

Certainly didnt come from any majestic glacial lake! LOL.
83toy

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08/02/2018 08:23 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Jasper Alberta is close to me, did a trip up the glacier there. On the tour we walked right on the glacier andcould drink the water.

It was so dam cold and so dam tasty.

Anyways from this glacier at one point you get to witness the Continental Divide, which was really interesting

"Continental Divide, fairly continuous ridge of north-south–trending mountain summits in western North America which divides the continent’s principal drainage into that flowing eastward (either to Hudson Bay in Canada or, chiefly, to the Mississippi and Rio Grande rivers in the United States) and that flowing westward (into the Pacific Ocean). Most of the divide runs along the crest of the Rocky Mountains, through British Columbia and along the British Columbia–Alberta border in Canada, and through the states of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico in the United States. It continues southward into Mexico and Central America, roughly paralleling the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Sierra Madre del Sur, with their associated ranges in Central America. In general usage the name continental divide is applied to the main water parting in any continent"
Apep

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08/02/2018 08:33 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
No, but I once followed a trail of breadcrumbs back to the beginning... or the end. I'm not exactly sure which.
Lautermilch

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08/02/2018 08:35 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
When I was a kid I hiked a section of the Appalachian trail. I saw the spot where the water that forms the Chattahoochee river first comes out of a mountain. I could block it with my foot.
Billy82269

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08/02/2018 08:36 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I been up Shit creek before, that thing goes all the way to Uranus.
Billy82269
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08/02/2018 08:40 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
No, but I once followed a trail of breadcrumbs back to the beginning... or the end. I'm not exactly sure which.
 Quoting: Apep


chuckle
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08/02/2018 08:48 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
 Quoting: Righteous1AtHeart


Doesn't have to be a cave, most often if it's not surface runoff it's a layer of semi porous rock that allows ground water from above to flow through it (an aquifer) until it intersects the surface again- that's where my tap water comes from.

And yes, I've followed many creeks and streams to their source though usually there's more than one.
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TlvmmCpoft

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08/02/2018 08:56 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
That's where you have to go to find a spring when SHTF.
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Enchanter

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08/02/2018 08:56 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I been up Shit creek before, that thing goes all the way to Uranus.
 Quoting: Billy82269


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08/02/2018 08:58 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Usually they start with an underground spring that only gives off a trickel of water.

The rest of the water is run-off from rain and snow-melt. All that water runs down hill until it hits the creek/river.

In the fall, creeks and rivers are usually getting pretty low...then winter starts the whole cycle over again.
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08/02/2018 09:03 PM

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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Metolius Springs

Metolius Springs are located just north of Black Butte near the small unincorporated town of Camp Sherman in central Oregon, United States. The springs are the source of the Metolius River, which flows 29 miles (47 km) through the Deschutes National Forest emptying into Lake Billy Chinook. The flow from Metolius Springs is sufficient to create a full-flowing river, making the Metolius River one of the largest spring-fed rivers in the United States. The name of the springs comes from the Warm Springs or Sahaptin word mitula, meaning white salmon and referring to a light colored Chinook salmon and not a whitefish. 50%<

[link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)]



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08/02/2018 09:06 PM

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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
 Quoting: Righteous1AtHeart


I figure it pressure similar to a volcano, only instead of lava it water. No, friction need for a water volcano. A lake under the mountain area.
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08/02/2018 09:12 PM

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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I been up Shit creek before, that thing goes all the way to Uranus.
 Quoting: Billy82269



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ChamesGamron

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08/02/2018 09:18 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Jasper Alberta is close to me, did a trip up the glacier there. On the tour we walked right on the glacier andcould drink the water.

It was so dam cold and so dam tasty.

Anyways from this glacier at one point you get to witness the Continental Divide, which was really interesting

"Continental Divide, fairly continuous ridge of north-south–trending mountain summits in western North America which divides the continent’s principal drainage into that flowing eastward (either to Hudson Bay in Canada or, chiefly, to the Mississippi and Rio Grande rivers in the United States) and that flowing westward (into the Pacific Ocean). Most of the divide runs along the crest of the Rocky Mountains, through British Columbia and along the British Columbia–Alberta border in Canada, and through the states of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico in the United States. It continues southward into Mexico and Central America, roughly paralleling the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Sierra Madre del Sur, with their associated ranges in Central America. In general usage the name continental divide is applied to the main water parting in any continent"
 Quoting: 83toy

Everyone knows that the earth is flat and this continental drainage you speak of is nothing more than an elaborate system of sump pumps.

Last Edited by ChamesGamron on 08/02/2018 09:18 PM
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There is a 50% chance the above post should be taken sarcastically.
Anonymous Coward
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08/02/2018 09:18 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Not an infinite supply but we have water, and that sometimes runs as it please
Yuga Sage (The Red Pill)

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08/02/2018 09:20 PM

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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I call it river hiking and have done many times. It really gets fun when you have to find your way up and around large waterfalls.
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Cosmologica

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08/02/2018 09:22 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I used to do this all the time as a kid, not as much these days.
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08/02/2018 09:28 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I have a broken thumb
Jungleboogie

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08/02/2018 09:37 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
 Quoting: Righteous1AtHeart


I was a wanderer as a child...7 years old blazing trails with my dad's machete and following creeks, climbing hillsides.

I'd forgotten all about that, simple beautiful times. Thanks for bringing me back, the water up in those places tastes like nothing else!
Embrace the cognitive dissonance.
bugkiller

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08/02/2018 09:44 PM

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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I used to go here at rock springs fl. Were guy went opened into a big room with a ledge to sit on. We used to bring weed beer etc
everyNameIsTaken

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08/02/2018 09:46 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
 Quoting: Righteous1AtHeart


If you go inside the mountain there's a midget version of Jim Acosta crying.
Anonymous Hero
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08/02/2018 09:46 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
No, but I once followed a trail of breadcrumbs back to the beginning... or the end. I'm not exactly sure which.
 Quoting: Apep


The end is the beginning is the end
Anonymous Coward
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08/02/2018 09:59 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??


hf
Anonymous Coward (OP)
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08/02/2018 11:21 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I followed the rattling creek as far as i could up the side of a mountain.
It is a beautiful freshwater source , crystal clear ice cold water .

I started at a resevoir, the creek is about 30 feet wide, it gets more narrow as you go up the mountain . I followed it for a good 2 or 3 miles up, it got so small it turned into a tiny stream of water . The last part I could get to , leads to a small passage that comes from out of the mountain ..

It had me thinking hard. What does all this water come from , its essentially infinitely flowing . how does so much water come from the top of a mountain .
The only logical thing i can think of is that there is a cave,in the mountain that filled up with water and now it runneth over.
 Quoting: Righteous1AtHeart


I figure it pressure similar to a volcano, only instead of lava it water. No, friction need for a water volcano. A lake under the mountain area.
 Quoting: hankie


Of course . that does make sense.
Fred Garvin

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08/02/2018 11:44 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I’ve been to the beginning of the Colorado river, it’s a small pond fed by tiny little runoff’s from the mountainside. I was also dumbfounded how it grows so large it supplies a large portion of western US with water and power.
83toy

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08/02/2018 11:52 PM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Jasper Alberta is close to me, did a trip up the glacier there. On the tour we walked right on the glacier andcould drink the water.

It was so dam cold and so dam tasty.

Anyways from this glacier at one point you get to witness the Continental Divide, which was really interesting

"Continental Divide, fairly continuous ridge of north-south–trending mountain summits in western North America which divides the continent’s principal drainage into that flowing eastward (either to Hudson Bay in Canada or, chiefly, to the Mississippi and Rio Grande rivers in the United States) and that flowing westward (into the Pacific Ocean). Most of the divide runs along the crest of the Rocky Mountains, through British Columbia and along the British Columbia–Alberta border in Canada, and through the states of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico in the United States. It continues southward into Mexico and Central America, roughly paralleling the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Sierra Madre del Sur, with their associated ranges in Central America. In general usage the name continental divide is applied to the main water parting in any continent"
 Quoting: 83toy

Everyone knows that the earth is flat and this continental drainage you speak of is nothing more than an elaborate system of sump pumps.
 Quoting: ChamesGamron


dasbier
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08/03/2018 02:53 AM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
I have a broken thumb
 Quoting: F+2.0


What happened?
SilverPatriot

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08/03/2018 03:45 AM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Jasper Alberta is close to me, did a trip up the glacier there. On the tour we walked right on the glacier andcould drink the water.

It was so dam cold and so dam tasty.

Anyways from this glacier at one point you get to witness the Continental Divide, which was really interesting

"Continental Divide, fairly continuous ridge of north-south–trending mountain summits in western North America which divides the continent’s principal drainage into that flowing eastward (either to Hudson Bay in Canada or, chiefly, to the Mississippi and Rio Grande rivers in the United States) and that flowing westward (into the Pacific Ocean). Most of the divide runs along the crest of the Rocky Mountains, through British Columbia and along the British Columbia–Alberta border in Canada, and through the states of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico in the United States. It continues southward into Mexico and Central America, roughly paralleling the Sierra Madre Occidental and the Sierra Madre del Sur, with their associated ranges in Central America. In general usage the name continental divide is applied to the main water parting in any continent"
 Quoting: 83toy


Some Continental Divides do not flow in any direction instead, they are called an endorheic basin meaning they are a closed water basin where the waters to not flow towards either ocean bodies towards either coast.

Take the Great Divide Basin in Wyoming the water stays locally in the area once dominated by the ancient Lake Gosiute in the desert region near the Red Desert and the Killpecker Sand Dunes.
Anonymous Coward (OP)
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08/03/2018 10:29 AM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Rattling creek is on the side of the Appalachian in dauphin county PA . .

Im just trying to figure out where the very start of the creek is .

Is it just a trickle in a cave somewhere that expands into an awesome freshwater source. How does the water get up the moubtain in the firstplace ?

I cant find nothing about it and I'm positive i was never taught anything in school about it . why wouldn't we learn where our most precious element comes from?
tkwasny

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08/03/2018 10:33 AM
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Re: Has anyone ever followed a creek to its source??
Usually a swamp, pond or lake. If it's deep from routine access by humans the fishing is usually incredible.





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