Posts Tagged ‘Gauley River Rafting’

How To Choose The Right Gauley River Rafting Trip

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Thinking about rafting the Gauley River?  In this post, I’m going to tell about 4 different river trips for Gauley Season, and explain which trips are right for you.

It looks like this, but in a raft

It looks like this, but in a raft

Because I know what you want better than you do.  It ain’t my first rodeo.

The Lower Gauley
This one is what you could consider “tame” if it didn’t rock so hard.  Just because the lower isn’t littered with Class V rapids doesn’t mean it’s not loaded with awesomeness.  The rapids aren’t small- they’re just not as big as the upper.  If you want to step up your game, but aren’t ready for giant steps, choose the lower.

The lower is right for you if…
-You want to take it one rapid at a time before the river tries any funny stuff.

The Upper Gauley
It’s a big as big gets.  It’s not the most dangerous or the most difficult in the world, but it’s probably the most fun.  It’s a single day adventure on one of the greatest stretches of whitewater in the universe.  This trip is what Gauley Season is all about.

The upper is right for you if…
-You look at a big ol’ honkin’ rapid, and you’re like, “Hey bud- let’s party!”.

The Gauley Marathon
The Gauley has two sections, as mentioned above- the upper and the lower.  Usually, folks choose either/or.  But a few adrenaline nuts do it all in one day.  It’s called the marathon for a reason:  the trip is 26 miles long, with more than 100 rapids.  It’s the goods.

The Gauley Marathon is right for you if…
-You think Navy SEAL training looks like a great time.

The Gauley Double Upper
The Upper Gauley has 5 class V rapids on it (known as the Big Five).  On the double, we get out right below the last one, then head to the top to do it again.  This one is a no holds barred, white knuckle assault.  Best hang on, y’all.

The Gauley Double Upper is right for you if…
-You watch MMA matches and think, “Man, I’d be great at that.”

Choosing the right trip is an exercise in being honest with yourself.  Remember, the most important thing about choosing a Gauley trip is to pick the one that you’ll have the most fun on.  It’s all about having a good time.

The 10 Best Things About Gauley Season

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Alright, the countdown has started, y’all.  In one week, we’ll be rafting the sweet, sweet white water of West Virginia’s one and only Gauley River.  Woot!

In honor of the countdown, I thought we’d go ahead and post the 10 best things about Gauley Season.  Now, lots of people have lots of ideas about “the best” things about the Gauley.  But I just want everyone to know that these are the real 10 best, so please make sure that your list matches mine.  O.K.?  Great.

Here we go…

10.  Fog First off, not everyone gets to experience the fog on the Gauley.  It’s a treat reserved for early risers only, because the fog usually burns off when the sun comes over the gorge.  But for those masochists… um, I mean, fluffy morning bunnies who get out on the water early, rafting in the the thick fog is a special treat.  There’s not much that’s more exciting than paddling blindly over the lip of a ledge into white nothingness, when it sounds like there’s a train wreck going on right below you.  Cool.

9.  All of the rapids that aren’t the big 5 The big five rapids on the Gauley (in order- Insignificant, Pillow Rock, Lost Paddle, Iron Ring, and Sweet’s Falls) are all very, very fun.  But what about all those rapids in between?  There are crushing hits and killer surfs all along the way, so don’t neglect the in-between-o stuff.

8.  The first big wave of the day When that first wave smacks you upside the head (that’d be Entrance rapid for the Upper section, Ender Waves rapid for the Lower section)you’re going to wake right up, guaranteed.  It’s better than coffee.

7.  Autumn Some people call it Fall.  Whatever.  You know what I’m sayin’.  There’s just something about this time of year that will always mean a combination of crisp blue days, raging whitewater, and plenty of awesome.  It may be “football season” to you now, but once you run the river, you’ll never feel the same way about it.

6.  The Animal Race/Gauley Fest Say what you want about Gauley Fest- it definitely ups the entertainment factor on the river.  There are so many first timers on the river that weekend (it’s always the third weekend of Gauley Season), you’re bound to see someone do something… shall we say, interesting?  Plus the festival is a huge fundraiser for protecting whitewater rivers.  Plus plus the Monday Animal race is a Nascar start.  Wicked, as our friends from down east might say.

5.  Talented/Funny/Ridiculous Raft Guides Whitewater season is pretty much shut down everywhere else in the country, so the entire guiding community descends on West Virginia.  The population (and the tye-die ratio) tends to double around the river this time of year.  I’ve met some of the coolest people I know because they were Gauley Season guides (heck, I was a Gauley Season guide that first year- then I had to move here).  And they provide for some great stories.

4.  Pillow Rock ‘Nuff said.

3.  Gauley Parties Gauley Season is nothing if not a party, y’all.  We party out on the river, back at base, and all over the gorge during Gauley.  It’s the last fling of the year, not to mention a huge reunion.  Long loved guests, guides, and pretty much everyone in between comes in to town for the waves, the barbecues, the music, and the scene in general.  It’s an easy place to make new friends- we’ve got longtime guests who come for the same trip each year because they met each other on the trip.  When we say that a good time will be had by all, we mean everybody.

2.  Going Big Okay, going big is not exclusive to Gauley Season, but it is what Gauley Season is all about.  The way the rapids are, you’re best option is ALWAYS to point the raft at the largest wave you see and go big.  And the people that come to raft the Gauley are all for going big.  And, of course, we’re all for going big.  It’s just that time of year.  Nothing can stop it.  Go Big, Or Go Somewhere That’s Not Here! (just kidding- we really want all of you to come here, but you will at least have to go medium).

1. The  Sweet’s Falls Coliseum I don’t think I’m the first person to call it a coliseum, but let’s just put it this way:  If you’re above the falls, paddling toward the lip, and everyone starts cheering… you’re about to do something very special.  It’s an audience, a picnic, and kind of a mob all at the same time.  And the best part is, once you’re finished being the show, you get to sit back and watch as boat after boat lines up for their fate.  I’ve been rafting in a whole lot of places, and I’m here to tell you- there’s nothing else like it.  Anywhere.  Ever.

Can I Get An “Aw Yeah”? Gauley Season’s Coming

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Today, I felt the wind blow.  It wasn’t the summer wind, either, like the one that brings a storm in, or blows us back upstream on while we’re out rafting on the New River.

If you get bounced out of the raft, it feels like you're way above the river

If you get bounced out of the raft, it feels like you're way above the river

It means one thing only into this part of the country:  Gauley Season.

Aw yeah!

Sometimes it feels like it’s never going to get here.  Other times, like this year, we’ve been loving the high water all season long.  But still, it’s like watching a wave that’s going to break on you.  Here it comes- better get ready.

How to know when Gauley season is coming:

  • The calendar.  It starts the first Friday after labor day.
  • Lots of Colorado license plates in Fayetteville.
  • Old friends are out on the New River.
  • Kayaks everywhere.
  • The southern accent becomes audible as all our buddies from down south arrive.
  • The humidity disappears, and the clear blue football weather rolls in.
  • The air smells like neoprene as all the local guides get out last year’s Gauley gear.
  • You start to think about Pillow Rock.  All the time.

Got more?

How To Paddle The Gauley River (Like You Mean It)

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

If you come to run the Gauley River this season (and it’s coming up- starts the Friday after Labor Day), you better paddle hard.

And, honestly, that doesn’t mean go through the motions, or just paddle when you feel like it.  We call that weenie paddling.  If you’re caught weenie paddling on the Gauley, you’ll kindly be asked to de-board at that time.

And don’t try to fake it.  We can tell.

OK, I know that sounds a little harsh.  But there’s a reason for coming off that way.  A couple, actually.  First, it’s kind of a joke.  Kind of. We like to mess with our guests just a little, because we’re rowdy, and, hey, take a joke, will ya?

Second (and this is the better reason), the better you paddle the more fun stuff you will be able to do in a raft on the Gauley.  Honest.

Here’s why:  when you paddle, what you’re doing, in essence, is pushing back off the water and pushing yourself into the boat.  So it actually makes you much, much more stable to be paddling in big rapids when your guide tells you to.

Also, if everyone in the boat is doing that, the boat goes right where it’s supposed to go.  And on the Gauley, we like to go big.  If you want to go big too, you’ve got to paddle hard to get there.  So there’s that.

It makes a big difference from your guide’s perspective, too.  Your guide is there to show you a good time, to share something special with you, and, yes, to get crazy with you out on the river.  Paddling hard is like telling your guide that you are prepared for anything that might happen, and thank-you-sir-may-I-have-another.

Paddling hard means you get to surf.  It means you get to hit huge waves.  Run the biggest lines.  Go for that one slot where it looks like you’re not going to fit.  The Gauley is a demanding river.  Make sure you’re ready to do what it asks of you.

How Gauley Season Works

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

During the summer, we dream.  We dream of the weekend after Labor Day.  We dream of -you guessed it- Gauley Season.

In our dream of the Gauley River, we dream of cool weather and intense whitewater.  We dream of rafts going through huge waves.  We dream of sunshine and crisp water.  We dream of waterfalls.  We dream of going Big.

This is where you start.  Cool.

This is where you start. Cool.

Dreaming is fine, because we know that, eventually, Gauley Season is coming.  It’s a magical time (not to sound too dorky, but it really is, like, unicorns-kind-of-magical) when everything that’s cool about whitewater is in one place: West Virginia.

And what exactly is Gauley Season?  Well’ here’s a little bit of an explanation.

The Gauley has a big dam on it called the Summersville Dam.  Behind the dam is, you guessed it, Summersville Lake.  The lake is great, but we’re mainly concerned with the river on the other side of it.

Anyway, the dam is controlled by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.  All year long, they save water behind the dam for flood control and lake recreation and to create hydroelectricity.

In the fall, it’s time to release all that water.  Not all at once.  Gradually.  So we can raft on it.

The reason the Corps is so helpful to rafting is multi-fold.  First, they have to make room in the lake for big winter and spring storm water.  The make room by releasing a lot of water through the dam into the river below.

Second, they used to do it all at once.  Twenty two days straight of running white water.  That used to be Gauley Season.  But legislation introduced in the 80′s helped us spread those days out.

Now we run (this is the tricky part) 5 four day weekends and 1 two day weekend, for a total of -you guessed it- 22 days.  But now they’re spread out over 5 Friday-through-Mondays and one Saturday-Sunday at the end.

If there’s extra water after that, we get -you guessed it- another weekend.  That one usually coincides with Bridge Day, the big BASE jumping festival on the New River Gorge Bridge.

And that’s how Gauley Season works.  So if it seems like, in August, we’re dreaming a little bit, well, that’s natural.  We’re just dreaming about -you guessed it- Gauley Season.

You coming?

The 10 Biggest Waves On The Gauley River

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Interested in big whitewater?  Us too.

Here’s a rundown of the biggest stuff you’ll see on the Gauley (if you’re looking for family rafting, please please don’t read this list.  We have a whole different river for you here).  Daybreak At Pillow rock

Before we start:

-”Wave” isn’t quite accurate.  We want to include holes and other stuff, too.  Let’s say that we’re actually describing the 10 best “hits” on the Gauley.  We’re talking about when your raft smashes into whitewater.  Ok?  Great.

-These hits are described at Fall Gauley Flow (2800 cubic feet per second).  If I just lost you, all I mean is that this list is for the river at normal, not high, water levels.

-We’re going in order, biggest last.  Got something to say about it? Did we get it wrong?  Add it to the comments, please.

10. Upper Collison Creek- Most guides don’t even bother to name this killer hit, but it’s about the best thing you’ll run into in the very top section of the river.  Early in the morning, this hit’s better than coffee for waking everyone right up.

9. Lower MASH-  Cool because of the little dogleg left directly above it.  Line up and let it fly- if you get it just right, it feels like a college linebacker came across and put the hammer down on the whole boat.

8. Hidden Hit Below Iron Ring-  Aka the hidden hit above Kevin’s Folly.  The best part is, everyone’s still too pumped on Iron Ring to really be ready for it.

7.  Last Wave In Insignificant-  If you’re really thinking about it, you’ll be lining up for this all the way from the top of the rapid.  The first wave slows you down just enough for the second wave to break on you like a house.

6.  Lower Stair Step-  Looks good on video, too.  Lower stair step puts a huge wave right in the middle of a long train of huge waves.  Perfect for out-of-the-raft back flips.

5.  Right Side of Woodstock Hole, Iron Ring-  To get the big hit at Iron Ring, you have to get scary close to going over the top of Woodstock.  It’s like playing chicken with the river.

4.  Iron Curtain- Right at the bottom of the rapid, this hole has a sweet spot as big as Detroit that stands boats straight up.  Smack-tastic-ular.

3.  Hell Hole, Pure Screaming Hell- This hole has sold more video than ll of the others combined. The farther right you are, the steeper it gets, until you end up folding the raft in half (which is when the fun begins).

2.  Hawaii Five-0 Wave, Lost Paddle-  The best thing about this huge hit isn’t the front side, breaking part of the wave.  It’s the backside drop after you hit the wave.  It just keeps dropping away, for ever and ever. Stomach?  Oh yeah, it’s still up there.

1.  The Pillow Ride, Pillow Rock- Pass Inertia Hole to the left and you’ll be getting up close and personal with the world famous Pillow Rock.  A great Pillow Ride is a work of art, combining balance with power and a hint of stupidity to make things fun.  It’s like driving the General Lee on two wheels while shooting flaming arrows at a stack of dynamite- there’s nothing awesomer.

Well, what do you say?  Did we get your favorite?  Miss something?  We would never miss a hit on the river (heh heh), so let us know.

The Big 5: A Look At The Gauley River’s Most Famous Rapids

Friday, July 17th, 2009

The Upper Gauley is the most fun you can have on a rafting trip.

There.  I said it.  You can do rivers that are steeper.  You can do rivers that are bigger.  You can certainly do rivers that are more dangerous.  But you can’t find a one day whitewater trip that’s more fun.  Sorry ’bout your luck.

Rafting.  Rocks.

Rafting. Rocks.

What makes it that way? A lot of stuff.  Your guides.  The people in your boat.  Sometimes the fog (!).

For a lot of people, what makes the Gauley so much fun are The Big Five- five class V rapids that define the experience in some way for everyone who’s ever said, “I Did The Upper G.”  They are:  Insignificant, Pillow Rock, Lost Paddle, Iron Ring, and Sweet’s Falls.

This post is going to give a brief overview of what’s happening in each rapid.  If you really want to get an idea of what’s going on down there in that thundering gorge that we call our backyard, you have to go see for yourself.

Insignificant

This is the first really big rapid that you come to, and it has some things in it that are typical of the class V rapids on the Gauley.  There’s a technical entrance with some maneuvering to do, there are undercut rocks, there are huge holes (read: recirculating waves), and there’s something you must avoid.  What you’re trying to avoid in insignificant is called The Pourover.

The Pourover is right in the middle of where you want to go.  You can go to the left (fun), or you can go to the right (funner), but you can’t go straight.  If you do, and you’re sitting in front, expect your guide to be sitting next to you in about .00235 seconds.  After that, all bets are off.

Insignificant is a blast.  After you clear The Pourover, there’s a long series of big waves and holes that lead out to the end of the rapid.  Paddle hard, keep going, and then keep going some more. At the bottom, high five each other.  One down, four to go.

Pillow Rock

There’s nothing in the world quite like Pillow Rock.  It’s what you might have pictured in your head if you were an ancient explorer, and your map showed you where the world ended.  Pillow drops 50 feet in 50 yards, and it’s more like a roller coaster than a rapid.

It’s named for a house sized boulder on the left side of the river.  All of the water in the gorge slams into the front of it, drops steeply off the corner, down through the Toilet Bowl, and up again onto another rock called Volkswagon.  All you have to do is paddle the raft down the raging waters through the entrance, up past the rock (style points if you can touch it with your paddle), and down to the bottom.  Easy, right?

Maybe so, maybe not.  You want to get the boat way up on the pillow of water created by the rock (hence the name), but if you get too far… into the toilet bowl you go.  Pillow is always, always an exciting time.  Best of luck.

Lost Paddle

A quarter mile long class V rapid with 4 separate drops?  That’s the best way to describe Lost Paddle, because you’re going too fast to get very specific about anything.  Sit down, shut up, tighten your chinstrap, and paddle hard.  That’s the only way to get through.

Right in the middle of Lost Paddle is the Hawaii Five-O wave.  It’s hard to say exactly how big the wave is, but it’s been filmed on more than one occasion.  When you hit it, you’ll know:  This is what you came for.

The last part of Lost Paddle is called Tumble Home.  There are a few different ways to go here, all of them fun, challenging, and filled with steep drops and big waves.

Iron Ring

Iron Ring was named for a large eye bolt driven into the rock right next to the rapid (since stolen).  The water all gets pushed to the left side of the river, and then drops over two distinct ledges.   Line up and go, because Iron Ring is one of the best rapids you’ll ever do.

There’s a trick to Iron ring:  at the top you want to go to the right very aggressively, so use some marker waves to guide you.  Just get on the right corner of those waves and WHAM, WHAM two big hits later, you’re golden.

Sweet’s Falls

It was once called the Dragon’s back, before anyone ever ran it.  14 feet of falling water, with some cross currents and odd rocks poking out here and there to make things interesting.  It took Pennsylvania kayaker John Sweet to be the first to go.  The rest is history.

There are tons and tons of great stories about Sweet’s, and all of them are worth hearing.  It boils down to this: don’t go too far right, and don’t go too far left.  Just like bowling, stay nice and steady in the lane with just a little kick at the bottom.  In theory.

Below Sweet’s is the one, the only, the famous Box Canyon.  More rock than water, the box is a great place to put on a show for the crowd that’s gathered at the falls.  Just remember one thing:  smile for the cameras.

That’s pretty much it.  The Gauley has tons and tons of rapids in between these ones, so by no means should you think that these are the only rapids worth mentioning.  It’s just that these are the Big Five, and the deserve a little special recognition.  Have any good stories from the big 5?  Please, share.

White Water Rafting- The Biggest Crash Ever

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
images1

Here's National Geographic's take on crashing

In the river biz, you crash sometimes.  No getting around it.  As the saying goes, “There are two kinds of rafters- those that have flipped, and those that are going to.”

Well, we just had a crash.  A huge one.  A group of about 100 people had to cancel their 4th of July white water rafting trip.  We are, to put it mildly, bummed.

In this post, we’re going to give you two things:

  1. The special we’ve decided to run to try to make up for our lost business.  We think it’s a really good deal, and we hope you’ll take us up on it.  (We also hope that our lost group can come back when the logistics work for them.  Thanks for trying, guys.)
  2. The story of the greatest raft crash ever.

First, the Special:

  • 125 dollars and 50 cents (not much, if you really think about it).
  • Friday the 3rd and Saturday the 4th (that’s coming up).
  • Rafting on the New River (at water levels right now that we consider “perfect”).
    This is just a temporary setback

    This is just a temporary setback

  • Party at Songer (oh, it’s on).
  • Fireworks (kind of ridiculously big ones).
  • Cookout (burgers, dogs… the goods).
  • Music (from Djs to bluegrass and everything in between).
  • Prizes (super shwag).
  • Games (sumo suits, dunking booth… think “carnival”).
  • Kids stuff (bouncy rooms, hayrides, and a scavenger hunt).
  • Not-kids stuff (drink specials in the High Water Lounge).
  • You (we hope)

When you crash, you’ve just got to pull yourself back in the boat, point it at the highest wave you can see, and go big.

Ready to do it?  Give us a call.  Let’s hang out together this 4th.

Second, the Story:

Alright- get comfy.  This is kind of a long one…

When I was training guides on the Gauley, I always took comfort in the fact that I was getting the most dangerous river trips that I was going to take all season out of the way first, right off the bat.  Guiding guests is nothing compared to taking trainees, and here’s why:

Trainees get to drive the boat.

OK, plan B.  Wait, C.

OK, plan B. Wait, C.

That’s pretty huge.  Because when people train for Gauley season, they’re already guides.  Well, they’re supposed to be.  They come to West Virginia from all over.  Maine to Georgia.  Colorado to California.  Alaska, New Zealand, and South Africa.  If they have what it takes, they get to guide on the Gauley.  If they don’t, they get weeded out.  That’s what the training is for.  Weeding.

So there I would sit, white knuckled, letting someone who didn’t know the river drive my boat.  Each trainee would take turns.  I would gently (sometimes not so gently) suggest where they should take the raft.  Most of the trainees were great.  Some weren’t.

This story’s about one of the ones that weren’t.

When I trained people, I would let each trainee guide a couple of rapids in a row.  On the Upper Gauley, that worked out pretty well.  I could let someone guide 2 or 3 medium sized rapids, and then a big one.  And that’s what I did with California.

I call him California because I can’t remember his name, just where he was from.  And, actually, it goes a little deeper than that.  Rafters have a little “east vs. west” thing going on.  It’s all in fun, of course.  There are great (and I mean great) guides from pretty much everywhere with good whitewater.  But the further west you get, the guides just sometimes get a little more… groovy.  It’s like, they’re more peace & love, and we’re more Budwiser & violence.  Like I said, all in good fun.

Anyway, California took the stick about 3 rapids above the famous, the one, the only… Sweet’s Falls. (If you know the river, you can kind of see where this is going).

Sweet’s is a 14 foot waterfall.  Now, if you run it correctly, it doesn’t feel like 14 feet.  If you run it wrong, though, it’s every bit of 14 feet.  Feels a lot higher, actually.  I’m getting to that part.

Running Sweet’s means that you can’t go too far right.  If you do that, you drop straight down into The Energizer, a nasty hydraulic that sucks birds out of the sky.  If you go too far left, you’ll hit a hidden rock.  The rock has a lot of very colorful names, but let’s call it The Ejector.

Now, you have to remember, you’re going over a waterfall.  Fast.  If you hit The Ejector, the raft stops.  Everyone else?  They keep going.  It’s actually quite fun to watch it happen to someone that’s not you.

So, you can’t go too far right, and you can’t go too far left.  You’ve got to put the raft on this tongue of water that’s about, well, as wide as a raft, and -bloop- you’re down.

The only problem is that Sweet’s Falls is a class V rapid.  The reason it’s a class V rapid is because it’s a blind drop.  You can’t see where you should go.   In fact, there is absolutely no way to know if you’re too far right or too far left until you’re going over the falls.  Newer guides will say things like, “There’s-a-tiny-wave-that-pops-up-every-3-seconds-and-when-it-does-I-put-the-right-corner-of-my-raft-on-the-left-side-of-that-wave-with-a-45-degree-right-hand-angle-and-I-call-all-back-twice-and-spin-around-to-the-left-as-I-go-over-and-that’s-the-line.”

Right.  Sure it is.  Actually, they’re just saying that to hide the sheer terror they feel about what they are going to try to do.

Now, we were way above Sweet’s when California starts to guide. And he had to start our with a pretty simple Class III rapid, which, as someone who has come to train for Gauley Season, he should have had absolutely no trouble with.  Except he crashed.

Trainees fell out of the boat.  We spun off the rocks.  I shouted commands.  And I looked back at California and said, “What the hell are you doing back there?”

“Dude, chill,”  he said.

“Are you serious?”

“Yeah, bra.  Just chill.”

“Did you just call me ‘bra’?”

“Look.  Bra.  It’s all good.”

“What you just did wasn’t very good.”

“Alright, Bra.  I’m gonna just tell you, k?  You’re really harshing my mellow.”

“I’m what?”

“You’re harshing my mellow.”

“I don’t… I don’t even… know what that means.”

“It just means, y’know, chill.”

“Do know Sweet’s Falls is right up there?”

“Yup.”

“Do you… know what that is?”

“Yup.  Saw it on Youtube.”

O.K., I’m going to leave some space here for you to laugh at me for letting him continue to guide.  Here it is:

Back.

There's my flippy

There's my flippy

So we came into the entrance to Sweet’s Falls, and right off the bat, we’re too far left.  We were right over The Ejector.  I shouted, “You’re too far left!” and California proceeded to do absolutely nothing.  He’d frozen.  I pleaded at the top of my lungs for all the other trainees to back paddle.  They were digging in as hard as they could.

Meanwhile, I was trying to turn the boat, and I’m just flat-out givin’ ‘er.  I was putting everything I could into the turning strokes that might just have saved us from annihilation.

And nothing happened.  The boat wouldn’t turn.

I took one second, which was kind of feeling like my last, to look back, and I saw California, doing exactly what I was doing.  Just straight-up cranking the turn.

Except he’s on the other side of the boat.  He canceled us out.  We were doomed.

And we actually slowed way down from all the back paddling.  We were still going to hit the ejector, but now we were in slow motion.  And I had some time to think about my life, and all the people I’ve ever loved.  And, also, how beautiful Ejector Rock is, because we were going so slow I could see facets and colors in it and stuff you’re never, ever supposed to see.  I yelled, “Hunker Down!”, a command I didn’t prep those trainees for, but its one they all instantly recognized from the fear in my voice.

Instantly, I grabbed two trainees to pad myself with.   And we hit the rock.

It sounded like when you’re playing pool, and you break.  There was a loud CRACK from all of our helmets hitting together simultaneously.  And I looked up.  Which is when I saw him.

California was directly above me.  Upside-down.  Way, way up in the air.  Looking at me.  He had been Ejected, and was now about 15 feet above the river, rear-over-teakettle, totally rolling down the windows with his flailing arms.  We spun off the rock and went over the rest of the drop backwards, and he flipped over and went feet first, right into the drink.

He was the only one to fall out.

When he finally surfaced (once in front of Box Canyon, and finally again below it, for those of you playing along at home), I had a good idea where he would be.  So I moved the boat right over to where he was, and waited for him to come up.

He broke the surface like Free Willy, gasping and sputtering, eyes like saucers.  And I was there.  I grabbed his jacket and held him along the side of the boat.  Then I looked right into his deer-in-the-headlights mug, and I spoke…

“Well, California… How’s your mellow now?”

Last we ever saw of that guy.

It's a fine line between crashing and going big

It's a fine line between crashing and going big

And the moral is, there is no moral.  Everybody crashes.  But rafts float just as well upside down as they do right side up- they’re just temporarily harder to sit in.

Have a happy 4th of July.

New River Water Levels–Part 3

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Spring rains are funny. They come in, then leave but where do they deposit their moisture? Some areas get large amounts and others, only a light shower. For those of us who make our living running rivers, we have to figure that out. How do we do that? As I mentioned in previous posts, this is not an exact science. We use river gauges from the internet, voice recordings from the dams and even, drive down to the river and look.

Monday was one of the days, where even with all of the technology, driving to the river was in order. The past week has been rainy almost every day. However, the rivers had not risen but a small amount. Where did the rain go? One of the most interesting and difficult things is how to gauge the amount of runoff that actually gets to the river. Now that spring is in full blossom, the plants and trees with a full compliment of leaves soak up a tremendous amount of that water. But once the plants and trees are saturated, the runoff increases quickly.

Monday, New River was at 7 feet on the Fayette Station gauge, about 14,000 cfs(cubic feet per second). Great spring water level, very runnable and loads of fun. Waves are tall and thick, meaning they have large volumes of water, very powerful. Our people on the river were very impressed with the trip. However, more rain had fallen than was in the river bed. Where is the water? Around 5pm, the answer was clear, everything was saturated and the full runoff was on.

The New, Gauley, Greenbrier, Meadow and Bluestone Rivers all have a direct impact on where we raft and which craft we use. All of these went up late on Monday afternoon. New River is now about 10 feet, over 30,00 cfs and the Gauley is 8,000 cfs. High, but still raftable. New River has 10 foot waves and huge hydraulics. Gauley River

New River Gorge Fayette Station Rapid

New River Gorge Fayette Station Rapid

is raftable on the Lower section but the Upper is not commercially runnable.

What does all of this mean to you? Great water levels for the next several days and that will extend well into May.

Does this help you understand how whitewater rafting works? What questions do you have? Let me know, I will try to answer with information that helps you decide, “Which river is right for me?”

New River Water Levels Part 2

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

In my last post, I discussed, “How high is the water”? With that discussion, the various gauges used to determine the level on the New and Gauley Rivers were the focal point. When we have rain events, these gauges become our eyes to what is coming our way over the next few days.

As I write this, March 29, these gauges are all on the way up. Recent rains in North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia have dropped a lot of rain in our watershed. It has rained for a couple of days now and all of the creeks and small streams have extra water. With this scenario, both the New and Gauley Rivers are at or above normal spring levels.  This week Songer Whitewater has trips on the New River and if the water gets too high, we may take our trips to the Gauley River.

Today, Sunday, is normally a day off to do household chores, visit friends or watch the NASCAR race. This Sunday I watched the gauges all day to see what is going on with the rivers. (I did keep up with the race.) Using gauges from the Army Corps of Engineers, US Geological Survey and driving down to Fayette Station to look at New River, it is quite easy to see the river is cranking!!

These gauges are placed at strategic points on the New, Gauley, Greenbrier, Meadow and Bluestone Rivers and give you a sense of how high the water is and how fast it is going up. If you saw the first post, I talked about how we measure water in CFS (cubic feet per second). A cubic foot of water is about the size of a regulation basketball. Right now the New River is at 26,000 cfs. That translates to about 10 feet on the Fayette Station bridge. Yee Haw!!

For those of you who have rafted the New, Whale Rock goes under water at that level! So big waves and holes all along the river from Thurmond to Fayette Station. The Gauley is running 3700 cfs from Summersville Dam and over 7000 at Belva on the Lower section. This is well above our fall level of 2800 cfs. The Upper is too high for commercial trips with the combined flow from the Meadow River. Boy, the Lower is a blast at that level.

If you are thinking of rafting these spring levels, now is the time to call and save yourself a seat on one heck of a roller coaster.

Well, that about sums up my Sunday and how even on a day off, I am looking at “How high is the water?”.