Tallulah - 5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo


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Tallulah,

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5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo (Tallulah Gorge)

Class IV-V
Max Gradient 231 fpm

Tanner's Boof


Tanner's Boof
Photo of Jason Benton taken 11/21/2004

Gauge Information

Name Range Updated Level
TALLULAH RIVER AB POWERHOUSE, NR TALLULAH FALLS,GA 450 - 1200 cfs 00h33m 42 cfs (rc= -0.5 )


River Description

Gauge Description:
Flows are typically 500 cfs on Saturday and 700 cfs on Sunday of release weekends.
The gage is included for those who want to check back after a run, especially for those days when a 700-cfs release was planned, but Georgia Power actually released 1000 cfs.


This is a CL IV-V run and deserves the respect and paddler responsibility associated with this rating. Follow the AW safety code and enjoy paddlin' this Southern Jewel.

Releases on the first two weekends in April and first three weekends in November.
The gorge is reputed to have a gradient better than 200 ft/mi.

Inflatable Policy for the Tallulah Gorge - New for January 2003

Volunteers needed

Tallulah Gorge State Park needs some help to manage the releases on the Tallulah. Volunteering only takes a few hours, you can easily boat and volunteer in the same day. If you are interested in volunteering contact Bob Focht.

From StreamTeam Volunteer Don Kinser:
Here is the consensus list of rapid names from those discussions:
1. Last Step
2. Tanner's Launch
3. Oceana
4. Gauntlet
5. Bridal Veil
6. Zoom Flume
7. Lynch's Wrench aka Ticket Puncher
8. Amplitheater
9. Around the Corner
10. Tit
11. Tat
12. Tom's Brain Buster
13. Road to Aintry
14. Twisted Sister
15. Paddlesnake Ledge
16. Powerhouse
17. Maxwell's Last Drop
18. Damned lake

Directions: From Atlanta: take I-985 north and head for 365 north and Highway 23 and Highway 441. Tallulah Falls is located 12 miles north of Clarkesville on Highway 23-441. Just before the bridge crossing the river, take a left into the grassy field.
From the north: from Chattanooga, TN: Take I-775 north to Rte. 40 east, to US 64 east. In Franklin, head south on US Rte. 23/441 through Clayton. Tallulah Falls is 12 miles south of Clayton. Just after the bridge crosses the river, hang a right into the grassy field.
From Hendersonville, NC: Head west on US-64. Hang a left onto US-23/441, and proceed as above.

Camping: There is a campground at Tallulah Falls State Park, and Georgia Power maintains a primitive campground near the takeout at Tugalo Park.

This is a river which requires Class-V skills. Most rapids can be read-and-run by V paddlers, though Oceana and some other rapids are usually scouted.

Fun facts: It's a long walk to the putin, down something like 600 steps!
After the whitewater theres about 1.5 miles of flatwater across Tugaloo Lake to the takeout at Tugalo dam. From the parking lot to the lake is about 650 vertical feet. Parking lot is 1550ish and the lake is 900. Subtract 300 or so feet in steps, and that puts the gradient at close to 300 feet a mile. If anyone can give us an exact put-in altitude, please add it in the comments section.

Thanks to the AWA boaters have had releases in Tallulah Gorge since November 1997.
John Bell's account of the first decent of Tallulah Gorge, May 1993.
Tallulah has been permit free since the November 2001 Releases.

You can read a brief history of the area by clicking here.

A special thanks to the Nantahala Outdoor Center and Perception Kayaks for providing shuttle.

Photo of paddler Ardie Olsen at Oceana, taken by Ken Strickland from the observation deck, 1998.

This page works best at 1024x768 resolution.
Last updated April 2003


StreamTeam Status: Not Verified
Last Updated: 2009-10-16 12:58:37

Oceiana Pano High Water Release

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceiana Pano High Water Release  @Tallulah 5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo, (1.58MB .jpeg)

The Thing High water Release

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Thing High water Release  @Tallulah 5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo, (1.36MB .jpeg)

The Thing Low water Release

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Thing Low water Release  @Tallulah 5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo, (1.42MB .jpeg)

Oceana

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana  Tallulah Gorge, GA(22.98KB .jpeg)

Oceana slide at top

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana slide at top  Tallulah, GA(108.67KB .jpeg)

Oceana WebVid

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana WebVid  Tallulah, GA(952.38KB .mov)

Last Step Rapid - Tallulah

Detail Trip Report Edit  Last Step Rapid - Tallulah  Tallulah, GA(128.08KB .jpeg)

Bottom Hole at Oceana

Detail Trip Report Edit  Bottom Hole at Oceana  Tallulah, GA(114.19KB .jpeg)

OceanaBlaster

Detail Trip Report Edit  OceanaBlaster  Tallulah, GA(113.19KB .jpeg)

The Point of No Return - Oceana Falls

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Point of No Return - Oceana Falls  Tallulah Gorge, GA(400.05KB .bmp)

Here comes the Thing

Detail Trip Report Edit  Here comes the Thing  Tallulah Gorge, GA(400.05KB .bmp)

Wow, that was fun!

Detail Trip Report Edit  Wow, that was fun!  Tallulah Gorge, GA(41.68KB .jpeg)

Toms

Detail Trip Report Edit  Toms  Tallulah, GA(151.57KB .jpeg)

Halfway down the stairs

Detail Trip Report Edit  Halfway down the stairs  Tallulah, GA(109.39KB .jpeg)

Middle Line Oceana

Detail Trip Report Edit  Middle Line Oceana  Tallulah, Ga(60.39KB .jpeg)

Coming around the Thing

Detail Trip Report Edit  Coming around the Thing  Tallulah, Ga(14.22KB .jpeg)

Scouting Oceana

Detail Trip Report Edit  Scouting Oceana  Tallulah, Ga(107.17KB .jpeg)

Last Step

Detail Trip Report Edit  Last Step  Tallulah, Ga(117.16KB .jpeg)

Top of the Gauntlet

Detail Trip Report Edit  Top of the Gauntlet  Tallulah, GA(105.33KB .jpeg)

Second move in the Gauntlet

Detail Trip Report Edit  Second move in the Gauntlet  Tallulah, GA(99.19KB .jpeg)

Surfing the Thing

Detail Trip Report Edit  Surfing the Thing  Tallulah, GA(64.65KB .jpeg)

Tallulah Powerhouse

Detail Trip Report Edit  Tallulah Powerhouse  Tallulah, GA(93.42KB .jpeg)

Paddlesnake ledge

Detail Trip Report Edit  Paddlesnake ledge  Tallulah, GA(107.67KB .jpeg)

The Big Slide

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Big Slide  Tallulah, GA(95.52KB .jpeg)

Oceana from the Playhole

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana from the Playhole  Tallulah, GA(84.48KB .jpeg)

Bridal Veil

Detail Trip Report Edit  Bridal Veil  Tallulah, GA(97.50KB .jpeg)

Oceana from the pool

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana from the pool  Tallulah, GA(41.44KB .jpeg)

Lynchs Rapid

Detail Trip Report Edit  Lynchs Rapid  Tallulah, GA(29.40KB .jpeg)

Lynch-2

Detail Trip Report Edit  Lynch-2  Tallulah, GA(32.29KB .jpeg)

The Thing vs Micro 240

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Thing vs Micro 240  Tallulah Gorge, GA(36.13KB .jpeg)

Oceana, River right view

Detail Trip Report Edit  Oceana, River right view  Tallulah Gorge, GA(321.24KB .jpeg)

Amplitheatre

Detail Trip Report Edit  Amplitheatre  Tallulah, GA(25.43KB .jpeg)

Tallulah Groove

Detail Trip Report Edit  Tallulah Groove  Tallulah Gorge, GA(96.14KB .jpeg)

Rolling up at the Thing

Detail Trip Report Edit  Rolling up at the Thing  Tallulah Gorge, GA(73.28KB .jpeg)

Last Step

Detail Trip Report Edit  Last Step  Tallulah, GA(43.39KB .jpeg)

The Thing Unmasked

Detail Trip Report Edit  The Thing Unmasked  Tallulah, GA(149.28KB .jpeg)


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Gauge Information

Gauge Description:

Flows are typically 500 cfs on Saturday and 700 cfs on Sunday of release weekends.
The gage is included for those who want to check back after a run, especially for those days when a 700-cfs release was planned, but Georgia Power actually released 1000 cfs.

Gauge Information

Name Range Updated Level
TALLULAH RIVER AB POWERHOUSE, NR TALLULAH FALLS,GA
usgs-02181580 450 - 1200 cfs 00h33m 42 cfs (rc= -0.5 )

RangeWater LevelComment
450.0000-1200.0000 barely runnable-high runnable

Report - Reports of Tallulah 5 - Tallulah Gorge to Lake Tugaloo and related gauges

Reports give the public a chance to report on river conditions throughout the country as well as log the history of a river.

Reports

When River/Gauge Subject Level Reporter
Tallulah [GA] Tanner's Boof n/a Paul Durrence
Tallulah [GA] Bridal Veil 700 Marissa Ray
Tallulah [GA] Bridal Veil Point Of No Return n/a Christopher Brigman
Tallulah [Ga] Tragedy at Tallulah 500 CFS Steve Royster
Tallulah River [GA] (RM) Oceana at 5 to 10 cfs 5 to 10 cfs Robert Maxwell
Tallulah Gorge [GA] (RM) Oceanna/Gauntlet from Above 700 Robert Maxwell
Tallulah [GA] Oceana low Todd Hoffman
Tallulah [TN] Oceana n/a Paul Butler
Tallulah [GA] The Setup for Success on the Middle Line 550 Kirk Eddlemon
Tallulah [GA] Shredder at Oceana n/a JB Seay
Tallulah [GA] "VIDEO" Left Line Oceana Left Line Bridal Veil "VIDEO" 700cfs Whspin
Tallualh [GA] "VIDEO" Middle Line at Oceana Left At Veil n/a Whspin
Tallulah [GA] Bad line at Oceana 700 Mark Hammock
Tallulah [GA] Tallulah April 04 Highlights 500 cfs Chris Gorman
Tallulah [GA] Gordon Byrd at the Tallulah 500cfs Gordon Byrd
Tallulah [GA] Oceana 500 Kevin Colburn
Tallulah [GA] Getting shredded at Oceana 500cfs Mark Stover
Tallulah River [GA] hitting the pillow 500 cfs Daniel Fosbinder
Tallulah Gorge [GA] Hurricane -- Large n/a Matt Muir
Tallulah [GA] The Face of The Thing n/a Matt Muir

Report Table Options

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User Comments


2009-10-05 08:56:53 (34 days ago)
Tugaloo is a fun place to go Edit

2002-11-22 18:16:47 (2543 days ago)
Brad RobertsDetails
From the parking lot to the lake is about 650 vertical feet. Parking lot is 1550ish and the lake is
900.

2002-11-15 11:19:16 (2550 days ago)
Matt MuirDetails
Check out http://www.chattoogariver.org/Articles/2002Su/Dam.htm for the history of the Tallulah and
Chattooga before the erection of the Tugalo Dam. It's got some niche ole photos of rapids which
used to exist, some 80+ years ago. (Sniff...)

Thanks to "Gomer" at BT for pointing out that great article!
Add a Comment

Rapid Summary

Mile Rapid Name Class Features (Legend)
0.0Put-In5.0Putin Photo
0.0Last step aka The Entrance RapidIV+Photo
0.0Tanners Launch aka The BoofIVWaterfall Photo
0.0Oceana5.1Hazard Waterfall Photo
0.0Playspot below OceanaIIIPlayspot Photo
0.1Gauntlet aka The approach to Bridal VeilIV+Hazard Photo
0.1Second part of the GauntletIV+Hazard Photo
0.4Final ApproachIII+
0.5Bridal Veil5.0Access Hazard Photo
0.5Zoom Floom aka The Groove aka The ChannelIII+Photo
0.5Lynch's WrenchIVPhoto
0.6AmplitheatreIVPlayspot Photo
0.6Around the CornerIII+Photo
0.6TitIII+
0.7TatIVPhoto
0.7Tom's Brain BusterIV+Hazard Photo
0.7The Road to Aintry aka The Big SlideIVPhoto
0.7Twisted SisterIII+Playspot
0.8Paddlesnake LedgeIVPhoto
0.9PowerhouseIII+Playspot Photo
1.0Maxwell's Last DropIII+Photo

Rapid Descriptions

Put-In (Class 5.0)

Halfway down the stairs

Halfway down the stairs
Photo by Brad Roberts taken 11-10-01 @ 500 cfs

592 stairs with a 45 pound boat on your shoulder.

Last step aka The Entrance Rapid (Class IV+, Mile 0.0)

Last Step

Last Step
Photo by Sutton Bacon taken November 2002

After sliding into the pool from the deck there is about 20 feet of flatwater before the first rapid. The first rapid goes about 30 feet before running into the cliff wall and taking a 90 degree left turn.
Its usually run by boofing off a three foot tall ledge in the center aiming between two rocks, then punching a pourover hole before getting typewritered to the left and punching another hole.
The first rapid is one of the more difficult on the river. Just below is a good cartwheel hole.

Tanners Launch aka The Boof (Class IV, Mile 0.0)

(RM) Peter Horne at Tanner's Boof

(RM) Peter Horne at Tanner's Boof
Photo of Peter Horne by Robert Maxwell @ 700

Just after the first rapid is a short pool, followed by a horizon line. The common line is the auto boof on the right. There is a center line that feeds into a large hole, but I have not seen this line run often since the first week of releases.
After landing the boof the river necks down thru a 10 foot wide slot.

Oceana (Class 5.1, Mile 0.0)

Oceana

Oceana


Playspot below Oceana (Class III, Mile 0.0)

Oceana from the Playhole

Oceana from the Playhole
Photo of Jeff Tallman & Shane Day by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs

Good cartwheel and loop hole.

Gauntlet aka The approach to Bridal Veil (Class IV+, Mile 0.1)

Top of the Gauntlet

Top of the Gauntlet
Photo of John Taylor by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs

A long convoluted rapid with some offset ledges and a nasty pourover. The general line is a little to the right of center, boofing off of the first ledge, then keeping it straight to punch the holes. The final move is busting the diagnol ledge/hole on the right and grabbing the eddy by the cliff. There is a piton rock after the first boof to be avoided, land flat. Too far left gets you close to an undercut. To far right and you might get typewritered into the eddy behind the pyramid rock and into the trees. Most people catch an eddy at the bottom right against the cliff before making the ferry over to the river left set-up eddy for Bridal Veil.

Second part of the Gauntlet (Class IV+, Mile 0.1)

Second move in the Gauntlet

Second move in the Gauntlet
Photo of John Taylor by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs


Final Approach (Class III+, Mile 0.4)
After peeling out of the river right cliffside eddy at the bottom of the Gauntlet, go to the right of the midstream stand of trees. Just below the trees is hole that keeps getting more sticky every year. A few years back a boat without floatbags washed into the hole and never surfaced until the water was turned off. Swimming out of the hole will probably lead to a swim of Bridal Veil. After the hole cut hard to the left to catch the Bridal Veil eddy. Its best to make sure there is not too big a crowd in the Bridal Veil eddy before peeling into this rapid - or you might wind up running Bridal Veil blind.

Bridal Veil (Class 5.0, Mile 0.5)

Bridal Veil

Bridal Veil
Photo of unknown by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs

A good sized slide with an evil hole. Bridal Veil is usually scouted (and portaged) from the left bank. From the river left set-up eddy there is a small but sticky river wide hole to punch. While the top hole looks harmless, people have swum out of it and ended up swimming the entire drop. The standard line down Bridal Veil is to punch the top hole about 5 feet off the left bank, then hug the left bank and punch the left corner of the hole at the bottom. While the middle line has been run, it is generally avoided because it feeds you into the meat of the hole.

In case of emergency there is a trail out of the gorge at Bridal Veil on river right.

Zoom Floom aka The Groove aka The Channel (Class III+, Mile 0.5)

Tallulah Groove

Tallulah Groove
Photo of Will Reeves & Shane Day by Brad Roberts taken Nov. 17, 2001 @ 500 cfs

One of the most fun rapids anywhere!! After coming out of the Bridal Veil eddy follow the main current between the two large boulders, then cut to the left and follow the narrow channel back upstream. From there just drop into the narrow channel up against the river left bank. What you have is about a hundred foot long waterpark type slide that is maybe 4 to 5 feet wide. Big Fun!!

Lynch's Wrench (Class IV, Mile 0.5)

Lynch-2

Lynch-2
Photo of Eric Paysen by Brad Roberts taken April 2001 @ 500 cfs

On the first decent Walt Lynch dislocated a shoulder here. Lynch's tends to separate a number of boaters from their boats. The top move is about a 7 foot boof, landing in some squirlly water with a major cross current and a good sized hole. After getting hammered here for years my preferred line is to boof right to left into an eddy behind the center rock, then peel out and run the rest of the rapid down the right. After the first boof there are three good sized holes to punch before the eddy above amplitheatre.

Amplitheatre (Class IV, Mile 0.6)

Amplitheatre

Amplitheatre
Photo of Will Reeves by Brad Roberts taken April 7, 2001 @ 500cfs

The top ledge of this rapid is the crux. Its not a tough move at 500 cfs, but at 700 cfs the hole gets a bad attitude. After the top hole the rest of the rapid is a wavetrain. There is a nice eddy river left that sets you up to play on two of the waves.

Around the Corner (Class III+, Mile 0.6)

(RM) Around The Corner

(RM) Around The Corner
Photo by Rob Maxwell @ 700

From a small leaky eddy you'll see a midstream rock. You can run either side of the midstream rock down a shallow bumpy sliding drop. On the bottom right is a minor hole.

Tit (Class III+, Mile 0.6)
Seen from above this drop is about 10 feet wide with a small rock bisecting the middle. Bang off the right side of the ledge, then go to the left of the trees growing midstream, from there work back to the right to catch the small leaky eddy above the next drop.
There is also a sizeable eddy on river left, but just over then next horizon line on river left is a pretty significant undercut.
At 700 cfs this drop and the next tend to become one rapid.

Tat (Class IV, Mile 0.7)

(RM) Tat

(RM) Tat
Photo by Rob Maxwell @ 700

A flattish pool leading up to a horizon line spit by a shallow midstream rock. The bottom left of this drop features a pretty nasty undercut.
Most people run right of the center rock for that reason. On the right side aim for the middle where there is a break in the hole at the base of the slide. At higher flows (700 cfs) the hole at the base of the slide gets pretty beefy. The break in the hole is still there, but being off line will lead to a surf. I've seen three boaters getting surfed in the hole at once. On Sundays there is a sneak far river right thru the trees.

Tom's Brain Buster (Class IV+, Mile 0.7)

Toms

Toms
Photo by Rob Maxwell @ 500

The standard line is to run down the far right hand side, punch the holes, stay upright, and go for the eddy at the bottom. I've also seen experts catch 5 eddies in this rapid. Lots of people have gotten hammered at Toms. Tom Jackson for one.

The Road to Aintry aka The Big Slide (Class IV, Mile 0.7)

The Big Slide

The Big Slide
Photo by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs

The longest single rapid on the river. Most people tend to slide over a few small ledges to the river right eddy and boatscout. From there most head toward midstream and start down the slide. From the top you see a large midstream boulder at the base of the drop. That rock is not really a problem, you can go around either side of it, or if the river is over about 800 cfs boof right over it. What you can't really see from the top is the hole just in front of the rock. Its a big one!! The good new is that most of the time you'll be going so fast that you blow right thru the hole. Most of the time ;-)

Twisted Sister (Class III+, Mile 0.7)
A long wave train with a couple of holes hidden along the way. At the bottom is an S-Turn move around a boulder with a good play wave/hole below that.

Paddlesnake Ledge (Class IV, Mile 0.8)

(RM) Paddle Snake Ledge

(RM) Paddle Snake Ledge
Photo by Rob Maxwell @ 700

Another big sloping ledge rapid, but blind from the top. The standard line is to start in the top right eddy, ferry across the top, cut over the top curler wave then ride the slide from top left to bottom right punching the fluffy hole at the bottom. Its sorta like a reverse version of Jawbone on the Chattooga.

Below this is another wave that sees some play.

Powerhouse (Class III+, Mile 0.9)

(RM) Powerhouse Rapid

(RM) Powerhouse Rapid
Photo of Kevin Thomas by Rob Maxwell @ 700

The powerhouse features a low head dam. The hole is strongest on the right. There is a break in the hole on the left center side of the dam. Just below the dam is the USGS gauge. Most of the water below the dam splats into a vertical cliff wall. Therefore lots of boaters tend to splat the wall too!

Maxwell's Last Drop (Class III+, Mile 1.0)

Tallulah Powerhouse

Tallulah Powerhouse
Photo by Brad Roberts taken 9-10-01 @ 500 cfs

A series of easy medium sized ledges just below the powerhouse. Its the last whitewater before the lake paddle. There is one hole of note, the entire river necks down and makes a 5 foot tall ramp into a squirlly hole. This one was knocking a bunch of people over recently. You can miss the hole by boofing off the ledge on the far right.



Member Message

Nonmember Message

Events

Tallulah Releases Saturday the 7th 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 500 cfs
Sunday the 8th 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 700 cfs
Saturday the 14th 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 500 cfs
Sunday the 15th 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 700 cfs
Saturday the 21st 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 500 cfs
Sunday the 22nd 09:30 AM to 4:00 PM EST 700 cfs
  (iCal)  

Associated Projects

  • Tallulah Gorge
    The dams on Tallulah Gorge were among the first rivers in the Southeast to be relicensed and wow what a classic whitewater river it has become.
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