Archive for January, 2010

How To Surf West Virginia

Monday, January 18th, 2010

One of our favorite things to do out on the river is surf white water.

And people who haven’t had the chance to surf West Virginia don’t get it.  That’s understandable.  It’s not something most folks think about.  :-)

Surf west virginia, y'all!

Surf west virginia, y'all!

How in the hell do you surf a raft on a river, anyway?

Well, that’s what this post is all about, and it starts by understanding one basic principle:

  • Waves in rivers are just like waves in the ocean, except they stay in the same place.

It makes sense if you think about it.  Otherwise, the rapids would all float away downstream, right?  We all know that an ocean wave rolls in to shore and, along the way, it breaks.  That’s how it works.

But a river wave never rolls anywhere.  It just sits there, breaking and breaking and breaking (most of them, anyway).

What we do is paddle into the breaking part of the wave.  With some luck, some good paddling, and some super jedi skill from the guides, we can get the raft to catch the wave, just like a surfboard.

Once you’re in there, the river does the work.  Water sprays up all around, the boats spin out and do 360′s, and a good time is had by all.  Eventually, the river will spit you out so you can go back and do it again.

The type of wave we’re talking about here is shaped differently than an ocean wave.  It’s called a hydraulic, or a hole, and actually looks like those breakers on their way in more than those glassy waves you tend to see a little farther from shore.

Hydraulics can be super powerful.  If you’ve ever seen a river flood, it’s usually the hydraulics that are causing more problems than the currents.

But the ones we play in are just that- playful.  They grab the boats and give us a ride.  Most of the surf spots appear on the New River later in the summer.  The Gauley river has great surfing year-round.

And who knows who the first person to paddle a raft back up into a rapid to go surfing?  But God bless ‘em.  Now it’s part of almost every trip we run, and it’s a guest highlight.

And that’s how we surf West Virginia :-)

What’s White Water Rafting Like?

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

White water rafting is like a wet roller coaster with no seat belt.

But safer.  And wetter.

You must be this tall to ride this ride

You must be at least this tall to ride this ride

We get asked the “What’s it like?” question a lot.  Even on the river.  “What’s the next rapid like?”

It’s tougher to give an answer than you might think.  The whitewater experience is a little different every time.  That’s part of the reason it makes it so much fun.

But the roller coaster comparison is a pretty good one.  We drift right up to the lip of the rapids, big ones like on the New River, or bigger ones like on the Gauley River.  Then, the waves pick us up and we’re on our way.

Things are pretty fast and furious in the middle of a rapid.  Or at least it seems that way.  The guides are completely (!) aware of what’s going on, even though it seems like the river is crashing all around you (because it is).

And then calm.  The rivers here in West Virginia are what we call drop/pool whitewater.  It just means that the calm pools are broken up by big rapids.  Or that the big rapids are broken up by calm pools.  However you want to look at it.

But where the roller coaster analogy really works best is right before the rapids.  As guides, we’ve pretty much lost the butterflies-in-the-stomach nervousness above the rapids (mostly).  But most guests tell us that it’s just like that moment when the coaster is clicking up the first big incline.

And you hear that chain under you?  That’s like the rapids getting louder.  And the silence there at the top of the hill?  That’s like the moments before you’re paddling, where your guide yells out, “Get ready!  Get ready!” and there’s this long wait (actually about 1/3 of a second) before you dig in.

And then the waves are like, you know, the rest of the coaster (corkscrews?).

This is true even on our family trips.  Meaning, even when the rapids are small, kid-sized ones, the excitement factor is the same.  It all depends of the paddler (that’s you).

And then, of course, when you’re done, you immediately want to do it again.

Yep.  A big, wet roller coaster is about right.