Camp Indian Trails

Camp Indian Trails is a dam located in Rock County, Wisconsin, built in 2016. It carries a Low hazard potential classification and has a satisfactory condition assessment.

About Camp Indian Trails

The primary purpose of Camp Indian Trails is recreation. The dam creates a reservoir used for recreational activities such as fishing, boating, and swimming. The dam is owned by Boy Scouts Of America Glacier's Edge Council (private). It impounds the Unnamed Trib To Rock River.

The dam stands 38 feet tall and stretches 310 feet across, creates a reservoir covering 4 acres, has a maximum storage capacity of 49 acre-feet, and collects water from a drainage area of 0 square miles. Completed in 2016, the structure is relatively new.

This dam has a low hazard potential classification, meaning that failure would cause minimal damage, limited primarily to the dam owner's property, with no expected loss of life. Its condition is rated satisfactory, indicating no existing or potential dam safety deficiencies are recognized. An emergency action plan is in place for this dam. The most recent inspection on record was 11/03/2021.

At 38 feet, this dam is taller than 85% of dams nationwide.

Search for dams near your address to see all dams in your area with hazard classifications and safety data.

Low HazardSatisfactory ConditionEmergency Action Plan: Yes

Location

StateWisconsin
CountyRock
River/StreamUnnamed Trib To Rock River
Coordinates42.75620, -89.10628

Physical Characteristics

NID Height38 ft
Dam Height38 ft
Dam Length310 ft
Year Completed2016 (10 years old)

Storage & Hydraulics

NID Storage49 acre-ft
Max Storage49 acre-ft
Normal Storage32 acre-ft
Surface Area4 acres
Drainage Area0 sq mi
Max Discharge83 cfs
Spillway TypeControlled

Ownership & Safety

PurposeRecreation
OwnerBoy Scouts of America Glacier's Edge Council
Owner TypePrivate
Hazard ClassificationLow
Condition AssessmentSatisfactory
Last Inspection11/03/2021
Emergency Action PlanYes

Identifiers

NID IDWI20052
Federal IDWI20052
More InfoState Dam Safety Program

Nearby Dams