Reynolds Landing
42° 0.777' N 70° 59.573' W See this location in: Google Maps Map Server Acme Maps
This is a site for launching hand-carried boats such as canoes or kayaks.
Description & Overview:
The High Street Dam, 1.2 miles downriver from this put-in, has been removed. We are still gathering information on the new river conditions and welcome your feedback. It may be possible to paddle downstream through the area where the dam used to be but this is far from certain.
Reynolds Landing, "dedicated to the memory of George I Reynolds," provides good access to the Town River below West Bridgewater for hand-carried boats. The Landing is in the middle of a pretty section of the Town River, where it winds through an open wetland with abundant bird life. The river throughout this area is usually slow moving.
There is a short, level path leading from the parking area through the woods to a short side channel off the main river but you may have to walk through some mud to get to the river. Coming from the parking lot, follow the path that starts next to the white "regulations" sign.
Coming downriver to Reynolds Landing from West Bridgewater it is easy to miss the side channel leading to the landing. It is on the right on the outside of a left bend in the river and by the time you can see up it to the landing it is almost behind you. Once you can see up the side channel it is easy to tell that it is the right place because you can see the dirt path leading to the water.
From Reynolds Landing you can go either upriver or downriver. Going upriver will take you towards West Bridgewater. If the river is low it is reportedly still no problem getting to MA 28, 1.2 miles above Reynolds Landing. Going downriver you can go 1.2 miles downriver to High Street. With the dam removed, it is probably still possible to paddle back upriver from High Street. It's not yet clear if it is viable to continue down to the next take-out, 3.4 miles downriver at Hayward Street. Previous to the dam removal, the 2 miles of river below the dam was littered with garbage and blocked with numerous blow-downs.
This site provides access to the following water bodies in the Taunton River watershed: Town River.
Location:
Alternate Site Name: Ash Street
Town: West Bridgewater
Nearest Town Center: West Bridgewater and Bridgewater Center
Driving Landmarks: From Route 24 north or south take Exit 16A for MA 106 East - W Bridgewater. This will put you on MA 106 (West Center Street) heading east. Go 2 miles and at the five-way intersection in the center of West Bridgewater, bear right onto MA 28. Go 0.4 miles on MA 28 (South Main Street) and turn left onto Ash Street. Go 0.6 miles east and south on Ash Street and look for a gravel drive on the left with a wooden sign for "Reynolds Landing."
Access & Waters:
Water 'Features' At Site: flatwater/slow moving river
Note: Because one boat launch can access, say, both a lake and a river or both the upstream and downstream portions of a river, not all paddling trips at a given site will necessarily encounter all of the features listed.
Type of Access: Boat launch for hand carried boats
ADA Accessible Boat Launch? no
Shoreline: Mud and some grass
Float/Dock: no
Approximate Length of Carry between Car Access and Water: 200 feet
Hours of Operation: closed at dusk
Parking:
Parking: yes: 8 spaces
ADA Accessible Parking Spaces? no
Nearby Amenities:
Public Restrooms: No
Sources for More Information:
AMC River Guide: 4th Edition, page 155
Photographs:
The Side Channel Leading to Reynolds Landing
Photography by: Bruce G. Hooke
Date of Photograph: July 15, 2010
Looking back up the side channel that leads to Reynolds Landing.
Renolds Landing
Photography by: Bruce G. Hooke
Date of Photograph: July 15, 2010
The side channel leading to Reynolds Landing is short. The water in the middle distance in this photograph is the main river channel.
The High Street Bridge
Photography by: Bruce G. Hooke
Date of Photograph: July 15, 2010
Looking downriver at the High Street bridge, just over a mile downriver from Reynolds Landing. At this water level it might be just possible to squeeze under the bridge in a canoe but there is little point because just downriver from the bridge is a dam that is hard to get past and below the dam the river is blocked by many downed trees all the way through Bridgewater.
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This site report was last updated on April 22, 2024