Bottom Creek, |
|
| Usual Difficulty | V+ (may vary with level) |
|---|---|
| Length | 3 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 210 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 300 fpm |
May 7th, 2009: Wood Warning: There is more wood in Bottom Creek now than I have seen since the mid-1990's. A lot of this wood is in the way. There are two logs blocking the rapid in the 2nd rapid below the Waterfall Section, for instance. We had to walk at least two rapids due to wood on our run today. Others we were able to run by barely squeeking past/under/over some logs.
Matt Muir writes:
"Before accessing this stream, please be very confident that you have the requisite skill
(solid Class V), and be certain to treat the river, the land, the surroundings, and the local
landowners with due respect. Relations with landowners in this area are fragile and could be
severely damaged by a small amount of careless behavior."
Gordon Dalton:
First things first: This run is in a steep, "remote" gorge and has some very sketchy spots.
Go with someone who knows the run your first time. There is always at least one mandatory
portage in there - you simply MUST get out at the right spot
above "Eye Of The Needle" (aka, "Inner Earth"). It would
be very easy to miss this exit point and drop past the point-of-no-return here at Eye of the
Needle. That mistake would most likely be fatal. Almost all boaters will portage at least
two rapids ("Eye of the Needle" and "Gravity Cavity.")
Most folks will portage in three or more places. Stud creekers will usually portage twice,
depending on water level. Everyone will portage in at least one place.
Do yourself and all of us a favor: go with someone who knows the run on your first time down. It
could save your life and it will definitely make your day much better.
One more point: Do NOT block the school bus turnaround area at the take-out. This keeps
happening and it could threaten access to the take-out. Don't hang out and have a little victory
party there either. The sheriff rolled through this area the last time I was there.
This is a run for experienced Class V+ boaters only. No other creek in Virginia compares to
Bottom Creek. The gradients are as follows: 1st mile=280 fpm, 2nd=300 fpm, 3rd=170 fpm, and the
fourth mile levels out to 80 fpm. The drops mentioned below are only some of the
significant rapids on the run. The Waterfall Section drops at 800 fpm for about a quarter-mile.
Go with someone who knows the run; there is one mandatory portage and most folks
will also walk Gravity Cavity at normal flow levels. Missing the "Eye of The Needle"
portage could easily be tragic. As one good boater said, "Bottom Creek makes the Upper
Blackwater[WV] look easy." Access to this run is crucial and a serious injury, trespassing, or an
evacuation from the gorge could threaten everybody's access to this Virginia gem. Sorry for all
the warnings, but please Don't screw this up.
Those that paddle this run will enjoy some of Virginia's best steep creeking, as well as some of
the best scenery around! Private property surrounds the run, and the landowners are owed respect
and appropriate behavior - on and off the river. This mixed hardwood and virgin hemlock forest is
home to a rare species of fern, and the creek itself holds 3 species of rare fish.
Put-in: At the Nature Conservancy preserve. Use a Gazeteer or your local buddy to show you
how to get there. There are several turns on county roads. Consider supporting the Nature
Conservancy - they take care of this wonderful and endangered area.
Take-out: Be extra courteous and respectful of the landowners in this area; drive slowly
and be low-profile. Do not block the school bus turn-around area. I repeat: DO NOT PARK IN THE
WAY OF THE SCHOOL BUS TURN-AROUND AREA. Park well off the road, and to the side, and not
in the little niche the bus uses to turn around. Be low-profile.
The Run...
Bottom Creek is one of Virginia's most exciting steep creeks. Some of the named rapids
include:
"The Kettles": a ledge series you'll encounter shortly after putting-on. Several routes
exist depending on level. If you have trouble here you should probably head back to the ol'
family truckster and save Bottom for another day. Kettles is nothing compared to the rest of
the run. The road is not far away, you can bail out here. The Kettles are named for the
potholes that dot the bedrock around this drop. You'll leave the Kettles and drop a couple more
drops, but the first portage is very close...
"Gravity Cavity": Almost always a walk for most folks due to an ill-placed
undercut/sieve. Don't miss the portage eddy on the right above the drop. Make the short
portage around "gravity cavity" over the bedrock on the right. I've run this one at super-high
water, but even then you could feel the sieve tugging at your stern. More fun drops lead down
toward...
"Eye of the Needle": This is a Mandatory portage. Here there is a narrow
flume at the top leading into a huge sieve where the entire stream dissapears under
mega-boulders. You MUST take-out well above the entrance flume and walk around the whole drop. It
is essential that you know where this danger spot is - you could EASILY drop into it blind. A
fun-looking class IV rapid leads into this unrunnable drop, so don't screw up. You may need to
walk the rapid above Eye as well. (Some folks do a two-stage portage at river level. At high flow
you may want to take out early and go high up and around). Again: run this creek with someone who
knows it. Carefully carry "Eye of the Needle" on the left, it is not an easy carry. Some
kind soul has left a rope here to help lower boats. You can put-in immediately below the sieve by
carefully sliding yourself off the sloped rock cliff into the pool below. "Eye of the Needle" is
also called, "Inner Earth."

Above: "Eye of The Needle" (aka, "Inner Earth"). Do not take this creek lightly!
Some folks may choose to keep walking around....
"Crash Test Dummy": This drop is at the end of the short pool below the big sieve ("Eye of
the Needle"). The whole creek funnels into a 3 to 4 foot wide waterfall dropping about 15 feet.
The landing zone is shallow and the LZ feeds into an undercut on the right. At higher levels the
landing zone becomes quite aerated, juicy and swirly.
There's more fun and challenging stuff until you reach Gorilla North.
"Gorilla North": is a stairstepping, hole-ridden flume. The second ledge creates a
deceptively sticky hole/eddy that has caused some looooong sketchy hole rides. At lower levels it
gets tight, at higher levels it gets thick. "Launh Pad", the rapid above Gorilla sits very
close to the brink of Gorilla. Do not miss the eddy above Gorilla - especially at higher flow
(!). "Launch Pad" is essentially part of Gorilla North.
Very quickly after Gorilla, you will find yourself on the edge of the world...
"The Waterfall Section": This long series of rapids is the climax of the run. This is a
long and steep class V+ drop. The "Mouse Trap" is the initial boof and slide, leading into the
shallow, sievy "Swiss Cheese." The dramatic finale of the drop, "Two Blind Mice," is a rock
garden leading into a 20' slide into a sticky low-angle hole. You might consider setting up a
"traffic cop" on the right bank since you can't see the bottom of the drop from the set-up eddy.
Beautiful and dramatic Camp Creek Falls is the 200' waterfall (2nd highest in Virginia) that
plummets into the river from the left.
Class IV+/V- boulder gardens: ...with wood. This is called the "California Section" due to
the granite bedrock rapids. Nice tight slots and boofs with ever-shifting logs. Look out for wood
in "Rock and Roll" especially.
"Canoe": A 8-foot tall ledge is a sweet boof with a clapper of a landing.
After that there is mixed class III-IV- water to the takeout. Much wood seems to settle in this
lower "California" setion of the run below the Waterfall Section. There is limited parking at the
take-out and it is near a residential area. Please be discrete and respectful at the take-out.
Again: Do not block the school bus turn-around area.
Note: The above description is merely intended to give you an idea of what's up.
There are plenty of other drops in there, and probably several hazards not mentioned. Go with
someone who knows the deal! Please do not jeopardize our access to this creek.
For more information or concerns drop me a
line.
Please note: The pictures posted on this site are in no way intended to "promote" this run. This
description, and the pictures herein, are here so that paddlers unfamiliar with this stream will
understand that Bottom Creek Gorge is the real deal and should not be taken lightly. This ain't
Gooney Creek!
The gauge on the bridge near the take-out has changed since the '90's. There is a yellow-painted scale on the river-left piling. There is also a single white tick mark on the right piling. The tick mark roughly equals the "old" 6 inches and is roughly commensurate with the yellow-scale 2 inches. I will not address max/min levels here - that's your personal call. Mostly I judge the level of water above the pilings footer ledge. If there is about 1" of water over the left piling footer then you can make it down without too much scraping. If "Kettles" rapid is too pushy then you may want to head back to the car before you get over your head down in the gorge. Hiking out from the Gorge could be very unpleasant and you must not trespass in there.
NEW GAUGE: There is a new gauge on the upstream, river-right piling of the bridge at the put-in. The bottom mark is a decent minimum. If the level is at the top of the top mark, or lapping onto the flat top of the piling footer, then you have a solid "medium" flow (although some folks say this level is "too high"). As it gets above the red marks, or above the piling footer, it is getting into "stout" territory.
| When | River/Gauge | Subject | Level | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bottom Creek [VA] |
Bottom Creek |
highish | Glen Piegari | |
| Bottom Creek [VA] |
"Gorilla North" |
n/a | Gordon Dalton | |
| 1y87d08h41m | Bottoms Creek [VA] |
eye of the needle |
elf | John |
| 1y88d08h41m | Bottom CreekBottom Creek Road Bridge To Route 637 [VA] |
crash test dummy horizon line |
elf | John |
User Comments
It is in the second to last ledge of the rapid. It ould be a safety issue - especially if someone's
bow goes under the log. (June, 2009) Edit
but has a very large log just under the water surface in the center of the middle ledge. Edit
last weekend. Zig Zag above Gorilla North had a terribly placed log in the main channel. Wood
throughout the lower section, every other rapid had wood. I plan on doing a cleaning job this
summer but until then be careful, scout, and allow extra time for wood portages. Eric O'Connell Edit
than i've seen since the mid-1990s. There is wood in the second rapid below the Waterfall Section
(i.e., two drops below Three Blind Mice) and in several other spots.
year (meaning above 0 inches), some things have changed. The gauge is pretty broken because the
river widened there (the first run, it said 1 inch and was more like 4 and the second run said 5
inches and was more like 11). There is a great deal more wood in this creek now too. It is
primarily in the runout but it is also spread throughout the run. Please be careful and take your
time with this run. The only specific wood that I can remember is a riverwide log at the bottom of
the rapid below Canoe. Don't die or get stuffed under some wood on this creek. Thanks, Ellenberg
P.S. I swam on both runs. Edit
wood. Heads up
serious land owner issues that could potentially shut the creek down to all kayakers. It would be
horrible to lose access to a gem of a creek such as bottoms. Lets not mess up relations with the
land owners, we do not want this river to go to waste like Johns has. Be Safe out there...and watch
for wood below two blind mice, it tends to collect on the bottoms section.
difficult. A couple friends have boated it and they confirm this. There may be property issues.