Port au Saumon River
The Port-au-Saumon River is a tributary of the northwest shore of the St. Lawrence River, flowing into the town of La Malbaie, into the Charlevoix-Est Regional County Municipality, in the Capitale-Nationale administrative region, Quebec, Canada. The course of this river flows into the St. Lawrence River in the hamlet of Port-au-Saumon, northeast of the town of La Malbaie.
The lower part of the valley of this watercourse is served by route 138 which runs along the northwest shore of the St. Lawrence River and by the road of the rang Sainte-Anne. The "chemin des érables" and Port-au-Saumon Lake Road serve the upper reaches of this stream.
Forestry is the main economic activity of the sector; recreational and tourism activities, second.
The surface of this stream is generally frozen from mid-December to late-March. Nevertheless, safe ice traffic is generally from late December to mid-March.
Geography
The main hydrographic slopes near the "Port-au-Saumon River" are:- North side: Port au Persil River, Noire River (Charlevoix), Port aux Quilles River, rivière de la Baie des Rochers, Saguenay River;e
- East side: Port-au-Saumon Bay, St. Lawrence River;
- South side: Malbaie River, Comporté River, Pednaud Creek, Loutre River (Rivière du Gouffre), Mailloux River, Jean-Noël River;
- West side: rivière Noire Sud-Ouest, Jacob River, Snigole River, Malbaie River.
From the mouth of Port-au-Saumon Lake, the course of the Port-au-Saumon River descends by traveling according to the following segments:
Upper part of the Port au Saumon River
- easterly along the south side of Port-au-Saumon Lake Road, then south-east, winding to the confluence of the Lake of Port au Saumon ;
- southeast winding to a creek ;
- south winding to a creek ;
- northeasterly under the Sainte-Anne Rang Road Bridge, forming a southerly curve across a series of rapids over this segment to the bridge of the Route 138 ;
- southeasterly crossing a series of rapids to the east shore of Port-au-Saumon Inlet which is interelected in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Sabere and Camarine Islands guard the exit of this bay.
Toponymy
The French toponym "Port-au-Saumon" is linked to the bay, the hamlet, the river and the lake.The toponym "Port-au-Saumon River" was formalized on December 5, 1968, at the Bank of place names of the Commission de toponymie du Quebec.