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Coordinates: 38°58′34″N 77°14′06″W / 38.97611°N 77.23500°W / 38.97611; -77.23500
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Difficult Run
The Difficult Run/Cross County Trail crossing the stream
Location
CountryUnited States
LocationNorthern Virginia
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • location
Potomac River
Basin size57.7 sq mi (149 km2)

Difficult Run is a 15.9-mile-long (25.6 km)[1] tributary stream tributary stream of the Potomac River in northern Virginia in the United States.[2] Difficult Run drains directly to the Potomac River.[3]

Difficult Run flows through Fairfax County to Great Falls Park, on the Virginia side of the Potomac River. The portion of the run through the park has been characterized as "a miniature Mather Gorge and Great Falls."[4] In the Great Falls area the run is relatively flat and wide at the top of the trail with calm waters, like the Potomac River above Great Falls. The stream picks up speed as it narrows into a steep gorge with waterfalls and quickly reaches the same level as the Potomac. At the mouth of Difficult Run, one can see a panoramic view of the Potomac River. The U.S. Geological Service’s stream gauge on Difficult Run near Great Falls, Virginia, has a mean daily discharge of 33 cubic feet per second.[5] The mean daily discharge is significantly less at other USGS stream gauges on the river.[6]

The stream is named not for the nature of the stream's rapids themselves; rather, long-boatmen in the time of the Patowmack Company found the two sharp bends of the Potomac near Difficult Run's mouth treacherous.

Watershed

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The Difficult Run watershed is the largest in Fairfax County at 37,179 acres (150.46 km2).[7] A map of the watershed[8] shows the following subwatersheds that make up the Difficult Run watershed:

  • Captain Hickory Run
  • Piney Run*
  • Colvin Run*
  • Snakeden Branch*
  • Little Difficult Run*
  • Rocky Run*
  • Angelico Branch
  • Piney Branch*
  • Wolftrap Creek*
  • Rocky Branch*
  • Lower Difficult Run
  • Sharpers Run
  • Middle Difficult Run
  • Upper Difficult Run
  • South Fork Run
  • The Glade
  • Old Courthouse Spring Branch*
  • Dog Run[9]

The Difficult Run watershed includes 145 miles of streams, with the larger tributaries indicated by a * above in the list of subwatersheds.[10]

The watershed includes four large waterbodies: Lake Anne and Lake Fairfax on Colvin Run and Lake Thoreau and Lake Audubon on Snakeden Branch.[11]

Management

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The Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan was adopted by the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors on Feb. 26, 2007. Ref The management plan includes action items for Difficult Run’s subwatersheds in addition to watershed-wide activities. The later includes removing dump sites, obstructions (e.g., beaver dam), and fish passage blockages; repairing utility crossings; and restoring riparian buffers.[12]

Watershed Conditions

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Although there are many degraded areas of the watershed, it does have some areas of high biological and habitat integrity, especially toward Great Falls, Virginia.[13]

Natural resource issues in the watershed include:

  • Pollution from stormwater runoff
  • High quantities of stormwater runoff
  • Uncontrolled stormwater
  • Erosion and streambank instability
  • Stream water quality
  • Need to protect natural resources
  • Stormwater regulatory compliance[14]

Land Use

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The Difficult Run watershed has experienced great changes in land use since the area was first developed in the 1600s.[15] Currently, development in the Difficult Run watershed varies greatly, ranging from very developed areas (such as Tysons, Reston, and Vienna) to forested areas (such as Great Falls).[16] Several major highways cross through the watershed including Lee Jackson Memorial Highway (U.S. Rt. 50), the Washington Dulles Toll Road (Rt. 267), and Leesburg Pike (Rt. 7).[17]

The greatest land use type in the watershed is residential.[18] Development intensity throughout the watershed ranges from 8.2 to 27.4%.[19]

Other land use statistics include: Six percent of the watershed area is wetlands. Twenty percent of the watershed area is forest.[20]

Water Quality

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Difficult Run is considered impaired in three locations because it does not meet standards for fish consumption and aquatic life—findings include PBC in fish tissue, E. coli water, and poor benthic-macroinvertebrate assessment.[21]

In the late 1990s the Virginia Department of Forestry conducted a riparian restoration project on Difficult Run to help improve water quality. Along with an outreach project, these efforts are a model for other local stream restoration initiatives in the state.[22]

Fish

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A total of 29 fish species have been found within the watershed, including[23]

Fish Species - Common Name Fish Species - Common Name
Blacknose Dace Margined Madtom
Creek Chub Yellow Bullhead
Tessellated Darter Green Sunfish
White Sucker Redbreast Sunfish
American Eel Spottail Shiner
Rosyside dace Fathead Minnow
Longnose Dace Pumpkinseed
Central Stoneroller Brown Bullhead
Common Shiner Eastern Mudminnow
Bluegill Fallfish
Cutlips Minnow Fantail Darter
Satinfin Shiner Golden Shiner
Swallowtail Shiner Longear Sunfish
Largemouth Bass Warmouth
Northern Hogsucker

Parks and trails

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Using community planning, a secluded 12-mile (19 km) hiking and biking trail was built along Difficult Run from Reston to Great Falls Park. The trail is well-known among area mountain biking enthusiasts for its rolling terrain which makes for fast, smooth rides although there are portions requiring technical skills. The portion of the trail that sees the most mountain biking activity starts near the end of Michael Faraday Court, behind SkateQuest-Reston ice skating rink and follows the tributary stream valley to Lake Fairfax. From Lake Fairfax the trail crosses over Hunter Mill Road and follows Difficult Run itself all the way to Great Falls Park. Great Falls Park is a unit of the George Washington Memorial Parkway, and is administered by the National Park Service. In addition, almost the entire length of Difficult Run is paralleled by the Cross County Trail,[24] which is maintained by the Fairfax County Park Authority for continuous coverage along the run.[25]

See also

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List of Virginia rivers

References

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  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed August 15, 2011
  2. ^ Map of the watershed of Difficult Run
  3. ^ Difficult Run Watershed - Fairfax County, Virginia
  4. ^ The Difficult Run Trail, with NPS map of the run and the trail
  5. ^ USGS Current Conditions for USGS 01646000 DIFFICULT RUN NEAR GREAT FALLS, VA
  6. ^ USGS Current Conditions for USGS 01645704 DIFFICULT RUN ABOVE FOX LAKE NEAR FAIRFAX, VA
  7. ^ According to Fairfax County GIS data April 2007
  8. ^ Difficult Run Subwatersheds, George Mason University B-WET
  9. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Planning Project, Fairfax County, Virginia
  10. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  11. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  12. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Subwatershed Condition and Plan Action: Watershed-wide Projects - Fairfax County, Virginia
  13. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Summary - Fairfax County, Virginia
  14. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Introduction - Fairfax County, Virginia
  15. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  16. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  17. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  18. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  19. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Summary - Fairfax County, Virginia
  20. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Management Plan Watershed Condition - Fairfax County, Virginia
  21. ^ Virginia Draft 2012 305(b)/303(d) Water Quality Assessment Integrated Report Appendix 1A: List of Category 5 Impaired Waters
  22. ^ Case Study: Difficult Run Riparian Project A Guide for Riparian Restoration Projects, Virginia Department of Forestry
  23. ^ Difficult Run Watershed Summary - Fairfax County, Virginia
  24. ^ Detailed Map of Entire Length of Cross County Trail
  25. ^ Reston-to-Great Falls Park: Difficult Run Trail


38°58′34″N 77°14′06″W / 38.97611°N 77.23500°W / 38.97611; -77.23500

Category:Chesapeake Bay Watershed Category:Geography of Fairfax County, Virginia Category:Hiking trails in Virginia Category:Rivers of Virginia Category:Mountain biking venues in the United States Category:Protected areas of Fairfax County, Virginia Category:Tributaries of the Potomac River