Posts Tagged ‘West Virginia Whitewater Rafting’

High Water Upper Gauley In June!

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

There’s high water at the Upper Gauley River in June with 85 degree weather.  You heard that right.

How can this be?  You know as well as anyone that the Gauley is its best in the fall.  Summer Gauley

Well, if you live anywhere in the East Coast you should also know that it has been raining consistently for the past six months.  Throughout the part of the year that we refer to as “not Gauley Season“, the Gauley is totally dependent on rainfall.  Some years are pretty dry, but some give you pretty good odds at catching the Gauley at a great level.  And we’re in one of those years.

Although it is different from the experience that you get in Gauley Season, a Spring/Summer Gauley trip more often than not gives people a whole new perspective on the Gauley River.

Yesterday, 6/21/11 the Gauley River was at 3100cfs.

Ready for a summer Gauley trip?

Songer Whitewater’s New Basecamp

Sunday, May 15th, 2011

From our humble beginnings in 1978 in a small cottage along the banks of the New River, to becoming one of West Virginia’s leading whitewater outfitters, Songer Whitewater has strived to share our love for the river. It’s been our lifestyle, our vocation but mostly importantly, our passion. That passion has driven us to share our culture with you.

2011 has been and will be a year of exciting change for Songer Whitewater. We’ve joined Adventures on The Gorge. Our new home is a world-class Adventure Resort located on the rim of the New River Gorge. You may wonder, “Just what is an Adventure Resort?” It’s where adventure and comfort join to form life-long memories. “All the adventure you can dream of-All the comforts you could desire”.

Our new home boasts 4 restaurants, 3 bars, a wide range of lodging options from rustic camping to deluxe vacation rentals, top-notch facilities and plenty of adventure. Our Adventure Resort is your personal playground, near Fayetteville, voted “Coolest Small Town in America” by Budget Travel Magazine. Our “On the Gorge” campus is nestled in the heart of everything that’s great about the New River Gorge.

We will be located next to TreeTops Canopy Tour, named one of the top 10 places to zip by USA Today and Gravity Ziplines, one of the fastest and longest zip line courses in the East. As part of our move, we also have on-site mountain biking and paintball. Nearby you can enjoy rock climbing & rappelling, kayaking, fishing and ATV tours.

The biggest change for 2011 is that we’ll start all of our trips at our Adventures on the Gorge headquarters on Ames Heights Road in Lansing, WV, just 2 miles from the New River Gorge Bridge. You will continue to see your favorite guides, staff and purple rafts when you raft with Songer Whitewater.

Our commitment to personalized service and to our relationships with you, our guest, will never change. These principles have been critical to our success over the last 25 years. We look forward to your visit to our new home at “Adventures on the Gorge”. We think you’ll be as excited as we are to see how much has changed and how much has stayed the same.

Call us at 877-237-3492 or email us at raft@songerwhitewater.com then get ready for your

 “Adventure on the Gorge”.

(Just tell them Len sent you!)

Len Hanger

Vice President

Songer Whitewater

Summer Season Kick Off: Memorial Day in West Virginia

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Spring is rolling into Summer, quickly.  Memorial Day is here and starts the summer season, and our country honors those service men and women who have fallen by celebrating our freedoms.  Because of their sacrifice, we get to relax and enjoy living in the most wonderful country ever created.

So, what are doing for Memorial Day? Vegging on the couch? Watching the grass grow? Does not sound like much fun to me. You either? Get out have some fun! Enjoy the outdoors!

New River Gorge National River

New River Gorge National River

Where can you go to have some early summer fun? The New River Gorge offers lots of options. Rock climbing, mountain biking, hiking in the national park, bass fishing and whitewater rafting are just some the activities you have in West Virginia. Why the New River Gorge? Here’s why I like to utilize the park.

Rock Climbing has beginner routes for a true novice like me. Yes, I am a true goober at climbing. Each time I have tried climbing the guides have shown me how to get to the top of the wall. Coaching me on hand and foot holds every inch of the way. Once on top, I have been known to shout, “I am King of the World!” Well, not really, but that is how I felt.

The New River Gorge has been home to mining, timbering, and railroading for over a hundred years. Now it is protected as a great natural resource for future generations. Roads left behind from these activities make cool mountain bike trails. My personal favorite trail is from Cunard to Thurmond. Old mining ghost towns of a bygone era offer a glimpse of long abandoned homes and businesses. As I travel along this trail, the New River slides by on its journey to the sea. I like to take time to stop at Surprise Rapid to watch the rafts blast the big waves and listen to the shouts of excitement. Taking a fishing pole along to catch a bass or two has produced a dinner of fresh fish (you have to know how to cook ‘em). Don’t forget a license.

Over 30 years ago, I discovered whitewater rafting on the New.  I’d been canoeing for years on the Upper New on the easy parts. When I got to Thurmond, we were told you can’t take a canoe past here. “So what do you do?” Have to take a raft. “Ok, cool. Uh, where do you get one of those?” Well, found one of those and after one trip… hooked!

After all these years, I still love the New. I really like big waves and holes. No bigger water than the New River. Surprise, the Keeneys, Dudleys Dip and Fayette Station always get me pumped.

So you hanging on the couch this Memorial Day? Watching the grass grow? Not me, I will be somewhere in the New River Gorge. Hope to see you there!

Do Vegetarians Really Go Whitewater Rafting on Vacation?

Monday, May 17th, 2010

If I’m going white water rafting in West Virginia, I’ve got 5 words for you: pass the bean dip. please!

A question that comes through the Songer office is, “Can a vegetarian go whitewater rafting? And if they do, will they get eaten?”

Photo courtesy of John Thomas

And the answer is 1) yes, and 2) no.

At first, we suggest just eating everything green but the poison ivy (makes the throat a little scratchy).  Kidding!  Then we go into serious detail about the spread that you wouldn’t believe comes out of those banged up coolers.

So let me back up to the beginning of all this…

Lunch.  It starts with a super nice guy named Kenny.  He’s the manager at Foodland where they are so kind to pack the lunches for our white water rafting trips.  The ladies in their country kitchen make as much as possible from scratch and deliver potato salad to die for!

Oh here I go getting ahead of myself again.

It actually all starts with faxing. Lots of faxes. Some people are into texting; we are into faxing.  The lunch count is sent in days ahead of time and then updated very often; we live in the moment so to speak.  From there they pack it up and deliver the lunch coolers the morning of the trip.

The lunch is then loaded on the equipment truck, driven to the river with the boats & strapped into the raft at our launching spot.  About half way through the trip, as you round the river bend to reveal a selection of sandy beaches, the trip pulls over for a picnic lunch.

The guides lay it all out: loafs of bread and deli meats—but some of us aren’t there for the meat, amiright?

Continue down the line with slices of tomato, pickles, lettuce, carrots, celery (don’t forget the ranch), strawberries and grapes, potato salad, pasta salad, peanut butter & jelly, and CoOkiEs! But I have to say, the bean dip is what gets the veggies every time, yum.

Vegetarians make for really good paddlers, and rarely get heartburn after a swim.  We’re happy to accommodate you (meat eaters. too)!

Ah, Spring Rafting In West Virginia: Our Office

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

There are some really cool offices out there, it’s true.  But our white water river office in West Virginia wins, destroys the competition, hands down, every time.

Let’s go on a tour.

Okay, time to go to work

Okay, time to go to work

Our Commute

The commute, granted, is a little tough.  There’s never any traffic, but we do go down a lot of one lane, two way roads.  In a school bus.

But, hey, we’re wearing helmets!

And yes, it can get a little windy and twisty on the way to the river, but it’s a beautiful ride, with plenty of waterfalls along the trip.  And in the spring, plenty of flowers, too.

So that’s how we do our drive every morning.  Our bus drivers are way way better than listening to the radio.  And they all have licenses.  Promise.

The Lobby

When we get to the river, there’s a little bit of work to be done.  The guides inflate the rafts with air.  We hand out the paddles.  You get to meet and greet everyone on the trip.

This is also where we give instructions.  It’s a lot of information we’ve gone over thousands of times, so you’ll get some pretty good (and a few very stale) jokes thrown in.

The staging area for the trip is a pretty exciting place to be.  You’re ready to go, we’re ready to go (the bus drivers are definitely ready to go), soooooo….

Let’s go.

The Office

As soon as we leave the road, you’re going to notice one thing: the view.

It changes as we go down the river of course.  And on both the rivers we run, the New and the Gauley, the view gets better the farther downstream we get.

And, someone changes the wallpaper every fall and every spring (no charge!)

We do have a bit of a, um, dampness problem.  Generally, though, we don’t consider it too much trouble.  And, to tell the truth, the wetter the better.  In fact, we look forward to getting flooded every year- right about now, in the spring, actually.

(Okay, that metaphor is a bit of a stretch.  But just go with it, okay?)

So that’s the tour.  In text form, anyway.  Book a trip, and we’ll show you the real thing.

Be warned, though: our office is so nice, we’ve had several people quit their own jobs because of it, and come to work for us.

Just sayin’.

Spring Time Rafting 101

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Flowers are starting to bloom, the temps are rising, and the wonderful stinky neoprene is coming out of storage. Yes, Spring has Sprung!

Spring is a fantastic time to go rafting on the New River, you get fewer crowds, higher water, fine looking wildflowers, green trees and mountains.

In order to not freeze your booty off, you need to dress appropriately.   Here are a few basics you need to know:

  • Avoid cotton at all costs (yes, it may be comfortable but when it gets wet it does retain water, think wet sweatshirt)
  • Wear wool, poly pro or a fleece
  • Splash Jacket
  • Wetsuit
  • Wool socks
  • Neoprene booties

Don’t forget your Chums glasses strap and a water proof camera to capture all of those thrills. Lastly you may want to bring a little sunscreen, the sun is hard on you after a long winter. You are now ready to experience Big Time Splashes on the New River.   See you on the river……………

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.

Twas The Night Before Rafting…

Monday, December 14th, 2009

‘Twas the night before rafting, and all through the gorge

The waves were a’crashing in rapids so large.

The moon in the sky, so big and so bright

Shone down on whitewater that cold winter’s night.

Christmas Lights

Christmas Lights

There were no hoots and hollers from summertime rafters

No raft videos playing at big party-afters.

The only things stirring along the New River

Were birds in their nests from the occasional shiver.

When out of the West Virginia sky did appear

A 4×4 sleigh pulled by eight whitetail deer.

Santa pulled into Songer, and jumped out while laughing,

“I been workin’ all night… I wanna go raftin’!”

The Songer guides all were asleep in their beds

While visions of Pillow Rock danced in their heads.

Santa yelled, “Load the boats! We need to go fast!”

And the guides replied, “Santa, we’ll freeze off our… um… it’s going to be really cold.”

Cried Santa, “No matter if the rapids are cold!

I’m ready to paddle- I’m from the North Pole!”

So they ran the great river in the freezing cold night

(The deer almost flipped at Suckers Go Right).

Santa said, “That was cool! Can the elves come ride soon?”

The guides said, “Well, most kids don’t come until June.”

“That blows,” cried the big man.  He said, “What a bummer,

That the whole world waits to go rafting ‘til summer.”

“Well,” said the guides, “Just give rafting for later,

Everyone loves the summer- don’t be such a hater.”

Said Santa, “Gift certificates?  For Songer?  For fun?

I can give this whole rafting experience to someone?”

“Well, that would be awesome as something to give,

Those people would thank me as long as they live!”

Said the guides, “Not just rafting- ATV riding, too,

And biking and climbing- everything that we do!”

Santa laughed as he took off up over the ridge

And flew underneath the New River Gorge Bridge

So if you find Songer in your stocking this season,

You’ll know Santa’s first rafting trip was the reason,

And remember this rhyme, no matter how far you roam:

Merry Christmas to all!  Go big or go home!

The Best Raft Crash Story Ever

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Well, a lot of people liked this other story about crashing a raft on the Gauley River.  So I thought I’d post another one about doing something similar on the New River Gorge.

kind-of-like-this-but-with-more-people

Kind of Like This...But with More People

So, there I was, many, many years ago, working at some other raft company that is not in any way related to SONGER (just wanted to get that out of the way, right off the bat), waiting at the river for the bus to come with our guests.

Now, there was a time on the river where the industry was seeing huge growth.  Each year was bigger than the last, with more and more people coming rafting.  One of the side effects of that explosion in popularity was the frequent appearence of some, shall-we-say, large-ish rafters.

And not just kind-of.  I’m a large-ish person myself.  Always have been.  But this was different.  Some raft companies were investing in XXXX-L life jackets (which actually looked kind of like the rafts).  These were like floating tents that you could buckle onto someone.  They were huge.

It was a different time.

So there I was waiting at the put in, and the other guide is this skinny guy that we nicknamed Twigs o’ Fury.  And the bus pulls up and the guests get off and right away, I know one thing:  I will be earning my money that day.

Standing apart from the others is group of eight people who are each wearing the XXXX-L life jackets.  And they take one look at me, and one look at Twigs, and said, “Hey, y’all!  Let’s go with big man over there.  He kinda looks like he can pull us in!”

Now, this actually used to happen to me quite a bit because I’m pretty big.  But you would expect to see maybe one or two of the XXXX-Ls on a whole trip.  Not eight in one boat.  And it wasn’t like the life jackets were comfortably buckled, either.  The buckles were twitching under the tension- I expected at any moment to hear a PWAINNNG! and look over to see Twigs with a broken piece of life jacket lodged in his skull.

I took one look at my group and smiled.  At the time, I was up for any kind of adventure, no matter how large.  I swept my arm out to invite them into the boat, and exclaimed in the most confident voice I could muster, “Y’all, let’s go rafting!”

Were were in trouble before we pushed off the bank.  Getting that much mass into a floating raft without immediately capsizing is a delicate task.  Several times, I thought we were over before we started- the long, heavy-duty tubes of the boat dipping dangerously close to waterline at weights shifted and rubber squeaked.  Imagine blowing a balloon right up to the popping point.  Then keep blowing.  A little more.  More.  There.  That’s how it felt, all day long.

But we all eventually made it safely into our locked and upright positions.  As soon as we hit the current, our problems were immediately apparent to everyone on the river that day.  We had become prisoners of inertia, wildly out of control, bouncing from rock to rock like an overweight bumper car.  We pinballed our way through the rapids, hitting pretty much everything there was to hit on our way down the river.

I don’t know if the people in my boat had ever enjoyed something that much that didn’t have BBQ involved, but we beat fun over the head that day.   It was awesome, except my body ached from trying to guide a 17 ton raft and bellylaughing simultaneously.  And I didn’t know it then, but I would be making customers for life with our run through the last rapid of the afternoon.

That last rapid happened to be called Flea Flicker.  Now, at lower water levels, Flea Flicker is pretty tame.  But when there’s been a little rain and the river comes up just a touch, Flea Flicker starts to fold up on top of itself, with a wave in the middle that just gets bigger, and bigger, and bigger.

There’s also an easy way to go around that wave.  Which is what I had planned on doing since we had first pushed off, hours before.

But as we got closer, I began to think:  These people are here for the experience!  Let’s go for it.  This’ll be like a physics experiment.   I would create West Virginia’s first and only super collider.

So I asked.  “Hey, y’all feel like going big up here on this next one?”

“Hell yes,” they answered.  “We are big.  We need to go big!”

“You sure?”

“Do it!  Do it!”

We were committed.  I lined up the supertanker and called for full speed a head.  The momentum started to builld.  We were bouncing along, a head full of steam, straight toward a wave that was crashing back like a brick house falling in.  We were unstoppable.

Or so I thought.

When our raft hit that enormous wall of water, here’s what happened:  We made a taco.  The front of the raft stopped, and the back of the raft kept going, and in a split second, the boat folded up like a hide-away bed with the entire Beluga Family stuffed inside it.

Then, we made a reverse taco.  In the next split second, the boat sprang open, and all of the contents, except for me, flew straight up into the air.

It looked like the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

I tried to scream.  But everything was happening too fast.  People were flying around like smashed atoms.  Newton’s laws were being broken right and left.  The sheer immensity of my raft crew took over all available airspace.

I ducked, but there was no way to avoid the newly-winged tonnage.  It was all happening too fast.  I looked around wildly, trying to find some safety in between the chaos.

And that’s when I saw her.  Miss Teen Beluga was launched and locked on my trajectory, sailing toward me at the speed of huge.  She was coming rear-end-first, like she was riding an invisible Harley Davidson right at my head, full speed and backwards.  All I saw was the spandex getting bigger, and then black.

She took me out like a linebacker- WHAM! We went underwater, and it seemed like time slowed way down.  I could see the bubbles, and the sky, and the waves and it was beautiful.  And, y’know… I had this large woman sitting on me.

And I thought to myself:  I should have gone to law school.

When I came up, I had the ridiculous task of pulling everyone back into the boat.  It was one of those things that so hard, you just start cracking up.  And I was.  I was standing in the boat, laughing out loud, herniating myself trying to wrestle the Beluga Family back into the boat.  I’m sure I looked like an absolute maniac.

And that’s when Big Daddy Beluga, spitting up water, and laughing right along with me despite himself, asked, “So now, what’d you say the name of that rapid was?”

My sides hurt.  I was crying I was laughing so hard.  I could hardly breathe.  I fell onto the floor of the raft, and almost shouted, “It’s called ‘Flea Flicker’!”

“Well,” said Big Daddy, “I guess we’re gonna hafta start callin’ it ‘Hog Toss!’”

It was one of the best trips of my life :-)

Good Gauley- Thanks To Y’All

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
airborne at pillow rock

Pillow Rock

Gauley season in West Virginia is just about done.  There’s still one more weekend -Bridge Day- which you can book right here.

And after that?  We’ll we usually do one or two or three trips before the whole thing winds down.

The Gauley River this year was a blessing.  We had great fun and lots of laughs with our guests, guides, and staff.

In short, it was awesome.  Here are some of our favorite memories…

-Headlamps in the morning for those first trips at daybreak.

-The sound of the horn at the Summersville Dam, telling us (warning us?) that the water is rising!

-That first wave hitting the boat.  It feels like a prize fight when you suddenly realize, “Hey, I’m in the ring!”

-Gauley Fog.  n othing better than comming around a bend and not seeing the rapid you hear.

-Pillow Rock.  Pillow Rock.  Pillow Rock.

-Lunch out on the river.  Blue skies, good friends, eats.

-The smell of woodsmoke in the mountains.

-Leaves turning.  Nothing looks better this time of year.

-The scene at Sweet’s Falls.  And can I just say that Songer OWNS the box canyon?

-Great, great parties in the highwater lounge.  All the music and dancing we could handle for a season.

-Hearing Gauley stories from young and old, virgin and veteran, friends from the past and faces fresh this season.

We just want to take a moment to say thanks.  Y’all are the best.