The river has a
salmon population which was threatened in the 1990s but has improved since. The river and its
glen are tourist destinations for fishing, walking, cycling, canoeing and climbing, and are regarded as among the most scenic destinations in the country. Several guidebooks document walking
trails along the river, including the northern end of the
West Highland Way. Upstream the river's depth varies widely dependent upon seasonal rainfall and snowmelt, and at Steall Meadows the river can be waded on foot at certain times; a three-wire
simple suspension bridge is provided for when the flow does not permit this. For canoeists the upper reaches of the river at Scimitar Gorge, when swollen by heavy rainfall, are designated a
Grade 5 stretch, demanding a very high level of concentration and skill and described by the Scottish Canoe Association as a "maelstrom of water". ==See also==