Welcome to the ExploreRI Mapper

This mapper will help you locate boat launches and other points of interest to for small boat recreation throughout the state of Rhode Island. To get started, click anywhere on the map to zoom in on that area. To zoom out use the zoom control to the left of the map. Once you have zoomed in, boat launches and other points of interest will show up on the map as clickable red icons (see the key below the map). Click on an icon to get more information about that location. If you prefer to search by criteria or simply look up a site by name, try the boat launch search page. If you have a high-speed Internet connection (e.g., DSL or Cable), you may want to try our Google-based mapping system which also includes sites in the Narragansett Bay Watershed in Massachusetts.

Gilbert Stuart
Potter Cove
Jamestown Harbor
Fort Adams
Fort Getty
Fort Wetherill
South Ferry Road - URI Bay Campus
Narrow River at 1A (Sprague Bridge)
Narrow River at Indian Lake Shores
Kings Beach
King Park
State Pier #5
Washington Street Boat Ramp
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The location you clicked on is a site for launching boats from trailers. Boat ramps can normally be used to launch canoes and kayaks but please do your best to keep the boat ramp clear for boat trailers.

Site Name: Narrow River at Indian Lake Shores

Alternate Site Name: Pettaquamscutt River

Town: Narragansett

Driving Landmarks: From Route 1 head east on Bridgetown Road (Route 138) at Tower Hill. In 0.6 miles turn right on Middlebridge Road. Go 1.4 miles and turn left on Mitchell Avenue, which is a small residential street. The parking lot and boat ramp are a few hundred feet ahead at the end of Mitchell Avenue.

ADA Accessible Boat Launch? no

Shoreline: Gravel beach and concrete plank boat ramp

Float/Dock: no

Parking: parking lot, 20 spaces

ADA Accessible Parking Spaces? no

Water 'Features' At Site: estuary

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.

Comments & Overview:The cement plank boat ramp at this site provides good access to the middle section of the Pettaquamscutt or Narrow River. The Narrow River has several bridges along its length which could pose an obstacle to boats with high superstructures, towers, or masts, but it is very popular with paddlers as well as smaller motorboats and jetskis. In fact paddlers may be happier in the upper reaches (and very shallow areas) where motorboats are less common. The wetlands along the sides of the river are also very popular with birds, which makes this a good area for bird watching.

Heading north from this access site, the Narrow River alternates between narrows and more open areas for 3.75 miles, past the Bridgetown Road Bridge and on up to Gilbert Stuart Road where the river abruptly becomes a small brook. You can take out here or turn around and paddle back to where you started. Heading south, the Middlebridge Road Bridge is 0.6 miles away and the Sprague Bridge, where Route 1A crosses the outlet to the ocean is 1.25 miles away. From the Sprague Bridge the ocean is another 0.75 miles downstream.

The wide parts of the Narrow River and open enough for wind and waves to be a potentially serious issue for paddlers. Watch the forecast and watch the weather once you are on the water.

Where the Narrow River flows into the ocean heavy surf often develops. Very experienced kayakers sometimes play in this surf, but all less experienced paddlers should avoid this area.

South of this access site the tides start to have more and more of an influence and the tidal currents can be hard to paddle against, so pay attention to what the tide is doing. At the mouth, the high and low tides are at about the same time as in Newport, but as you head up river the times are delayed more and more, up to a couple of hours.

In the many areas where low tide uncovers broad mud flats be careful not to ground out on a falling tide. Even in a canoe or kayak you can find yourself stuck in mud too sticky to paddle off of and too soft to stand on.

For more details on the Narrow River below Indian Lake Shores, see the description for the put-in on the Narrow River at 1A (Sprague Bridge).

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For more details see the full site report

The data on this website comes from many sources, including volunteers and organizations across the state of Rhode Island and nearby parts of Massachusetts. We have done our best to make sure the data are accurate and up to date, but any information critical to the success of your trip should be confirmed before you start. The maps and information on this website should not be substituted for nautical charts, topographic maps, or other more detailed maps and guides. We welcome corrections and additions. To send a correction or provide other feedback, please use our feedback form.

Credits: The data for the base maps was provided by the Rhode Island Geographic Information System (RIGIS) and the Office of Geographic and Environmental Information (MassGIS), Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive Office of Environmental Affairs. The site data came from numerous sources and organizations. Much of it was collected through the hard work of volunteers for various conservation, watershed and outdoor recreation groups around the state of Rhode Island.

Rhode Island Blueways Alliance • c/o WPWA • 203 Arcadia Road • Hope Valley, RI 02832