Deathcastle Trip Report
Posted by:
Aedom (IP Logged)
Date: November 02, 2009 11:03PM
First off, it was an awesome weekend to be down on the 'Castle. Four different runs at four different levels with four different crews. A thanks to everyone who helps feed my addiction and a special thanks to Bart for being insanely not afraid of anything.
On Friday Dot and I ran it at about 900 cfs. We put in above Beech Narrows and everything was cool and groovy until we got to Teeth. This is (IMO) the trickiest drop other than the Beech. To make it more fun, Mother Nature has decided to place a big, fat tree across the "Molars" at the bottom left part of the drop with a root-ball sticking out in the center. Its pretty nasty and a bad place to between 900-1200 cfs. Anyway, I ended up running it first and hitting the eddy at the right of the last part of the drop. Dot comes down, flips, gets briefly pinned up against the rock in-front of the Molars, then washed down the left chute. She tries to roll a couple times, sees the tree (we knew it was there) and then hung-out for a second and BAM! There was just enough room for her boat to fit through. She then rolls up like "Did you see that?!" and gave the tree the bird.
On Saturday we ran it with James Thaxton at about 1500 cfs, and then again with Duane Cottle and Mr. Foley at about 2500 cfs. It was a big ride both times. Duane, Foley and I all ran the Beech, but not one of us stayed dry and Foley had a little run-in with the big tree across the big undercut at the bottom (as of Sunday this tree had parked itself safely above S-Turn). Ironically, however, Foley somehow had the cleanest line. I came off the left side, too far left and hit the HUGE wave-hole at the bottom. Unable to climb it, it pushed me down into the curler coming off of it and then tossed me upside-down and into the big slab rock on the left. Duane, being that he's completely insane, decided it would be a good idea to take the center line. I couldn't see very well, but suffice it to say he got worked. I don't think I would run Beech at much above 2500.
Sunday was where it was at. Bart met Dot and I at the take-out at about 1:00. The water was WAAAY up and had just recently peaked. Our guess was that the level was about 5,000 cfs. We debated running it, but then decided we could always hike out if it was too sketchy...or whatever. Dot decided she would run shuttle for us, but hiked down to the put in to check out Beech Narrows. The water was covering all but a few feet of the tallest boulder (which is usually about 15-20 feet above the water). This rapid was NASTY. The lead-in was pretty mean, with a very sick looking terminal hole. There was a 25-ft wide massive pillow, with seams on both sides with the upstream seam feeding up against the only exposed boulder. We walked it.
When we got up to S-Turn we decided that, from what we could see, it wasn't too bad and fortunately, it wasn't. We got out above the first drop of the Narrows and took about 45 min to scout everything, except the bottom of Cry Baby. The Narrows is a totally different beast at 5 grand. Big, fast water with HUGE holes big enough to park a van. At the very least scout Teeth at this level. We scouted, and chose what we thought would be the best line. At this point, I'm thinking that walking is starting to sound pretty good. I don't think I ever really decided to run it as much as all-of-a-sudden I'm in my boat and its about to be game-on. About 2.35 seconds later it was over. And we were both still in our boats. Awesome.
Seriously, if you haven't been on the Rockcastle, check it out. Bring your hiking booties and a camera. It's close, it's beautiful and it's a blast.
Adam