Big Otter Creek, Richmond

Big Otter Creek, Richmond

I’d been looking for something different—something in Southwestern Ontario that still felt remote. That’s not an easy box to tick. After digging through old canoe-club logs, asking around, and getting a few vague “try here” suggestions, I landed on Big Otter Creek.

Trip Rating: 5/5

Getting ready to launch.

Big Otter Creek is a tributary of the Thames River system. It winds from the farmland near Norwich, through Tillsonburg, before emptying into Lake Erie at Port Burwell. For this trip, I ran the 27 km stretch between Richmond and Vienna—a quiet, dramatic section defined by tall sand bluffs, Carolinian forest, and long, uninterrupted bends.

The scenery on the trip.

Mid-route, a river otter popped out of the bank, looked mildly irritated that I existed, and went straight back to whatever river otter business looks like.

A river otter doing his thing.

Launch Site

Small roadside put-in.

The put-in is just a small pull-off on the side of the road. You leave your vehicle here, then shuttle to Vienna for the take-out.

Take-out under the bridge in Vienna.

Cost: $0 — parking is free at both ends.

Wide, fast-moving current.

Trip Length / Difficulty
This is a long, committed 27 km run with no exits. When levels are high enough to paddle, the current is fast and continuous. We hit around 15 strainers—some minor, some serious, and a few that demanded full attention.

This isn’t a casual spring float. You need solid rescue skills, good judgment, throw ropes, and a plan for staying warm if you go for a swim.

Obstacles everywhere.

At one point we met a log jam the size of a building and had to climb the whole thing with boats in hand. Classic spring paddling.

A monstrous log jam we had to liftover.

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