"I think you will not find any propagation issues. Fast fading/multipath/Rayleigh issues (where there is constructive/destructive interference as the signal travels different paths from one end to the other) should not be a problem. " (sentence corrected! oops!)
This is a matter of the incident angle. When the angle is very small, the river will look like a mirror. At a higher incident angle, more of the signal travels into the water and is absorbed. When you add in the possibility of waves, the reflected signal will be scattered from multiple points, and the probability is that the multiple reflections will actually cancel each other out and never get a chance to interfere with the direct-path signal.
The effect is similar to the mirror-image you see of the horizon when looking over a flat road on a hot day. If you get you head up even a few more feet, the mirage will disappear. If the road/terrain is very uneven, you won't even see the mirage effect.
This comes from my own experience of range testing 900 MHz signals over water and land many, many times. When receiver/transmitter are positioned 4' above the reflecting surface (ground, water) on a 1/2 to 1 mile range test, I find many nulling points were data reception goes to zero. When the height is 6', I find mostly points were signal strength drops off, but data still mostly gets through. At 10', I can't even find the effect when I plot the signal strength Vs distance. So, for the situation kc7cjo is asking about - 30' above the water and 1500' between points, I see no issue at all.
kc7cjo - no problem with being a technician. Welcome to Eng-Tips! You're obviously a ham, so am I! My disclaimer statement was because in some other eng-tips forums there are discussions of the nuances of what a PE means. Civil engineers work in a world where most need a PE. In the electronics world, most electronic engineers don't need a PE, and few go for it.