Bear Creek, |
|
| Usual Difficulty | V+ (may vary with level) |
|---|---|
| Length | 8 Miles |
| Max Gradient | 400 fpm |
Bear Creek drains a high Alpine valley deep in the John Muir Wilderness and is overlooked by
spectacular 13000 foot peaks. The run is a formidable undertaking due to tough hike in at
altitude and the demanding paddling and portaging to complete the run. Technically an overnight
trip on Bear creek requires a Wilderness permit for which there is a quota (and a fee only if it
is reserved in advance). The creek cuts through classic Sierra granite terrain scattered with
groves of Pine and Aspen and presents many challenging rapids and portages, not to mention a very
significant amount of wood.
A shortish class IV warm up with one short portage leads quickly to the sight of rapidly
increasing gradient, minimal eddies and continuous white water so get out to scout and set
safety. This is the top of "The Big Lebowski", a 3/4 mile slide of substantial gradient and some
significant consequences. Below this and without pause lies a large and stout rapid, so be sure
to identify an exit point as most will portage river right.
Further hazard laden rapids quickly lead to the top of a mandatory portage river right around a
spectacular cataract. A spirited seal launch immediately below this (and above the next
waterfall) is required as the portage route now changes sides. The 20 foot vertical waterfall
immediately below appears to have a shallow landing and has yet to be run. Further bushwacking
allows the river to be regained once the gradient has become sane again.
Many smaller rapids, some clean, some mank, continue until another well concealed unrun waterfall
is again reached as the river suddenly turns to the left. Further portaging river left leads to a
good route into this new gorge. More good rapids lead to Twin Falls, where two slides drop into a
scenic pool (an ideal camp site for the ascent and good place to leave overnight gear).
The nature of the creek changes subtly here and now long easy pools are interspersed by fierce
mini-gorges, stout drops, and never ending wood portages. Many drops still remain unrun here,
partially because they are wickidly stout, partially because some drops need different
waterlevels to be safely runnable and partially because many are full of wood. Nearing the end of
the run, some sections clear up and become more continuously runnable with some great
slides.
The first descent was done in June 2007 by Culley Thomas, Macy Burnham, Amanda Maruich, Roman
Nelson, Shawn Hartje and Ben Hawthorne, and it was paddled again several times in summer 2008
Other Information Sources:
Video by Hartje First
Descent 6-3-2007
There is a stick gauge a quarter mile upstream of the takeout. The gauging station is clearly visible 150 feet below the trail. An optimium level to run the most rapids might be XXX on this stick gauge. On the 15 June 2008 the water was high, on the 23 June 2008 and 3 June 2007 the water level was close to ideal. Comparable gauges might be SF Merced In Wawona and SF Kings.
| When | River/Gauge | Subject | Level | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1y156d18h33m | Bear Creek [CA] |
Bear Creek |
250 | Ian Buckley |
| 1y157d18h33m | Bear CreekPacific Crest Trail to Bear Diversion Dam [CA] |
Bear Creek |
n/a | Ian Buckley |
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