Sespe Creek

Sespe Creek
Arroyo Sespe, Cespai River, Sespe River
Sespe Creek flowing through the Sespe Wilderness
Map showing Sespe Creek highlighted in the Santa Clara River watershed
Native nameS'eqp'e' (Chumashan)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionVentura County
Physical characteristics
SourceSan Emigdio Mountains
 • locationPotrero Seco Campground,
Los Padres National Forest, California, United States
 • coordinates34°37′37″N 119°26′31″W / 34.62694°N 119.44194°W / 34.62694; -119.44194
 • elevation5,280 ft (1,610 m)
MouthConfluence with the Santa Clara River
 • location
Sespe, California and Fillmore, California, Ventura County, California
 • coordinates
34°22′48″N 118°57′17″W / 34.38000°N 118.95472°W / 34.38000; -118.95472
 • elevation
355 ft (108 m)
Length61 mi (98 km)
Basin size260 sq mi (670 km2)
Discharge 
 • locationFillmore, California
 • average126 cu ft/s (3.6 m3/s)
 • minimum0 cu ft/s (0 m3/s)
 • maximum85,300 cu ft/s (2,420 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftHot Springs Canyon
 • rightLion Canyon, Timber Creek, West Fork Sespe Creek, Little Sespe Creek
TypeWild, Scenic
DesignatedJune 19, 1992

Sespe Creek (Chumash: S'eqp'e', "Kneecap") is a stream, some 61 miles (98 km) long, in Ventura County, Southern California, in the Western United States. The creek starts at Potrero Seco in the eastern Sierra Madre Mountains, and is formed by more than thirty tributary streams of the Sierra Madre and Topatopa Mountains, before it empties into the Santa Clara River in Fillmore.

Thirty-one miles (50 km) of Sespe Creek is designated as a National Wild and Scenic River and National Scenic Waterway, and does not have dams or concrete channels. It is one of the last wild rivers in Southern California. It is primarily within the southern Los Padres National Forest.

The name Sespe can be traced to a Chumash Indian village, called Cepsey, Sek-pe or S'eqpe' ("Kneecap") in the Chumash language in 1791. The village appeared in a Mexican Alta California land grant called Rancho Sespe or Rancho San Cayetano in 1833.