| River: | Blackwater |
| Section: | Upper |
| Location: | Sticky Fingers |
| Gauge: | 300 |
| Water Level: | Medium |
| Difficulty: | V |
| Accident Code(s): | Entrapment |
| Injury Code(s): | Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal, Fatal |
| Experienced/Inexperienced: | Experienced |
| Years Paddling: | >10 |
| Private/Commercial: | Private |
| Boat Type: | Kayak - Unknown |
| Number of Occupants: | 1 |
| Number of Victims: | 1 |
| Initial Report: | The Upper Blackwater, one of the steepest and most challenging runs in West Virginia, claimed the life of veteran kayaker Tim Gavin on March29th. Gavin, who had run the river dozens of times and knew it extremely well, was paddling with a close friend at a moderate 300 cfs level. The trouble occurred at Sticky Fingers, a dangerous drop with an undercut center chute. Reports by Bob Gedekoh, Mike Moore, and Paul Shelp describe the accident as follows: Gavin attempted the center slot but was shoved into an undercut. His friend worked his way back upstream and saw only 6" of the kayak stern sticking out of the water. He attached a line to the grab loop but could not free the boat. He then boated out and notified authorities and local kayakers. He returned to the scene later that day with a few friends but still could not recover the boat.
The next day a large crew of area kayakers returned. With one prominent paddler performing the dangerous in-water part of the rescue they recovered the body after a long struggle. There were anxious moments as the rescuer's leg was caught in a loop in the rescue line! Gavin's body was removed from the canyon by helicopter. Gavin was paddling a very short kayak. Although these designs allow creek boaters to attempt incredibly congested drops, they Maystuff more easily under logs and undercuts. Others, paddling longer designs, have broached where Gavin was killed, but their boats bridged the gap. The paddlers were held higher and had more time to escape. The same might have been true of the accident in which Scott Hasson, another well-known expert, died on the Lower Meadow in 1997. Again, a very short boat was shoved deeply into a sieve. Hasson survived a similar pinning a year earlier at the same spot in what was almost certainly a longer boat. This is not an attempt to "blame the boat"; because no two pins are exactly alike. The intent is to suggest, as a number of excellent paddlers have, that length, possibly combined with volume, Mayhave been a factor in a few accidents involving sieves. The optimum length for creeking has been the subject of much debate and these accidents will undoubtedly add to it. |
| Detailed Description: | The
Tim Gavin was an expert creek boater of wide experience. For many years he kayaked the most difficult and dangerous rivers in the east. He made solo runs down rivers like
“Tim had probably paddled the
At low to moderate levels, the conservative line through Sticky Fingers starts with an upstream ferry from river right to a tiny eddy against the shore on river left. After leaving this eddy, the boater crosses back to another eddy on river right, skirting a pour over and an undercut rock sieve. The initial right to left ferry is made in front of a slot, which drops over a ledge just above the sieve. Gavin died attempting to run this slot.
The slot is known to be runnable at higher levels and is regarded by some as a high water sneak. But one expert boater who helped recover Gavin’s body emphasized that the “slot line” is still potentially negotiable at 300 cfs, albeit risky. Reportedly Gavin often ran the slot line, even at lower levels. There is no doubt that Gavin was familiar with the “slot line” and that he chose to run it intentionally.
Mike Moore, an accomplished extreme boater and a close friend, was running the conservative low water line when he realized that Gavin was in trouble. When he reached the bottom eddy, he left his kayak and scrambled upstream. But by the time he reached the site of the entrapment most of Gavin’s boat and his body had disappeared beneath the water. The entrapment and subsequent submersion of the boat and its passenger occurred within seconds.
The kayak, and later the body, were recovered from the undercut sieve the next morning by a team that included local volunteers, state park authorities, as well as a number of Gavin’s boating friends. They included Mike Moore, Gary Ward, Ed Radar, Roger Zbel, Jesse Whittemore, Terry Peterson, Ben McKean, Michael “Boomer” Jenoska, and Andy Horton. Jeff Snyder handled the difficult and dangerous in-water component of the recovery. Gavin’s body was subsequently removed from the deep, rugged canyon by helicopter.
SOURCE: Written by Bob Gedekoh
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| Conclusions: | ANALYSIS: (Gedekoh) Tim Gavin’s death has caused many of his friends to reexamine their motives for kayaking extreme whitewater. Last year twenty canoeing and kayaking deaths occurred in the , more than twice the usual number. Many involved well-known experts in difficult rapids. “This just proves, once again, that running extreme whitewater is inherently dangerous, even under the best of circumstances,” one acquaintance observed. “If you tackle difficult whitewater frequently, there is a good chance that you, or one of your friends, is going to get killed. What happened to Tim, could happen to anyone. Being good helps, but it is no guarantee of safety.”
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| Report Status: | Completed |