Narrow River Fishing Area

About this Location

The cement plank boat ramp at this site provides good access to the middle section of the Pettaquamscutt or Narrow River. The wetlands along the sides of the river are also very popular with birds, which makes this a good area for bird watching.

About Narrow River

See all hotspots at Narrow River

Narrow River, also known as the Pettaquamscutt River, forms a natural boundary between the towns of Narragansett, South Kingstown, and North Kingstown. Not truly a river, it is an approximately seven-mile-long tidal inlet connected by a narrow channel to a series of kettle basins fed by a small stream. Although mostly shallow, it does have two unusually steep-sided ponds, one of which plunges to a maximum depth of approximately 60 feet. 

Making up the Narrow River estuary are the two ice block basins, Upper and Lower Ponds, the central narrow channel between Lacey Bridge and Middle Bridge, a southern shallow basin, Pettaquamscutt Cove, and a narrow tidal inlet, The Narrows.

Looking at this shallow trickle of water, you’d never guess that the Narrow River supports one of the largest runs of river herring in the state (although the number of returning fish has declined significantly in the last decade). Each spring, thousands of adult herring and alewives manage to struggle up the fish ladder alongside the mill dam and into Carr Pond, where they spawn on the sand-and-gravel bottom. In the fall, juvenile herring leave the pond and make their way back to the ocean.

Many visitors are able to view the periphery of the John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge at Pettaquamscutt Cove as they canoe or kayak the Narrow River. Although the Refuge can be elusive to many human visitors, it is, however, well-known to the migratory waterfowl that rely on it, including the largest population of black ducks in Rhode Island. 

Content from Narrow River at Pollock Avenue, Narrow River Official Website, Narrow River - New England Boating and Fishing, and John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge webpage