Wild,
|
|
Hastings to Gilead
| Usual Difficulty |
III-IV (may vary with level) |
| Length |
8.7 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
47 fpm |
| Max Gradient |
80 fpm |
Typical drop on the Wild
Typical drop on the WildPhoto of Typical drop on the Wild by
Skip Morris @ 5.6 (1675cfs)
Gauge Information
River Description
[Note: Commentary and description taken from email from Gary Bamberger. Eventually we'll write up a
proper description of this river.] Yahoo, we finally caught the WILD RIVER at a prime level. We did
2 runs today and as the AMC Guide says...a few inches makes a BIG difference! On the first run we
decided to take the left fork in the road (Me Rte #113) at the suspension bridge and run Evans
Brook which runs along route 113 down the north side of Evans Notch into the WILD RIVER and then
down the Wild to the take out at Rte. #2. Evans Brook is a really small stream and it will likely
be a while before it's runable again. Although it did have a bit of wood in it, we were able to
paddle through without getting out of our boats. The second run we ran the more traditional Wild
river trip by driving/walking up the right fork in the road to the upper section. All in all we
agreed that the best paddling/play is really below the suspension bridge so even if the gate is
locked to Wild RIver Campground...you haven't miss too much play. HOWEVER, when Me. Rte #113 (the
Evans Notch Rd) is closed, as it was today, it's a long walk to the confluence of Evan Brook and
the Wild River at the suspension bridge...a minimum of ~1 1/2 miles and more if you want to run
Evans Brook or the upper section from Wild River Campground (~5 miles)...However, we had the key to
the gate hee- hee! ;-) Anyway here's our consensus: The first run according to the USGS gage was
running ~7 feet (~3500CFS) and on the second it had dropped to 6.5' (~2500CFS). On both runs the
water was up into the trees/bushes along the riverside. The first run felt a little washed out with
some good sized waves, many holes you really would really rather look at from the other side of the
river, and few eddys to rest in. The second run was much more playful with wave upon wave to surf
and more friendly holes to play in. It surprised me that just 6 inches made such a difference. I
had heard from other local paddlers that 6 to 8 feet was the level to try to catch the Wild at, and
I would have to agree with ~6.5' for play and ~7.5' for big water river running. We agreed that the
run is primarily class III with several class IV drops thrown in to keep you on your toes and felt
a lot like Lower Poplar Rapid on the Dead at 5500CFS, but with WAY MORE PLAY. The river definitely
goes in my book as one of the great "Play Rivers" since as soon as you washed off one wave and turn
back around downstream, there were 3 or 4 more looking you in the face! :-) One of the paddlers in
our group compared it to the Donnaconna section of the Jacques Cartier, although a smaller version.
I never been up there but maybe this summer. Sooooo, attached below are some personal notes I made
about the Wild RIVER in my computer and let's not hope it's another 5 years before this gem runs
again.
WILD RIVER- 4/28/05 Park at take out at USGS gage at Rte 113 & Rte 2. which is 10.9 miles east
of NH Rte #16/#2 intersection in Gorham, NH and/or 9.5 miles west of Bethel, ME on Rte #2. It's
then 1.5 miles to the Maine DOT Gate that closes Evans Notch in the winter and then an additional
1.4 more miles beyond that gate to the fork in the road at the Suspension Bridge. (Confluence of
Evans Brook and the Wild River) We did 2 runs 1st @ 7.0' (3400CFS) Evans Brook-Wild River to the
take out and the 2nd @ 6.5" (2500CFS) which was a better level Wild River all the way. Best play
from suspension bridge to rte #2 (~3 miles). Class III with ~4 class IV drops-all boat scoutable.
Note at these levels the water is up into the trees/brush along the river. Future
recommendations-between 6 and 7 feet on the USGS gage.
Gary Bamberger, DVM
407 White Mountain Rd.
North Conway, N.H. 03860
PS: Oh yea, I almost forgot...as we were taking out after our second run we ran into the USGS
"boys" who were just about to take a reading of the river manually to calibrated their gage. It was
really interesting to watch them work. They climb up into a 2 man "cable car" running across the
river at the USGS gage and lower a heavy sensor into the river. The cable is marked off in what
looked like 10 foot increments and they would go to each spot on the cable and take a reading of
the flow starting on the right shore and working slowly over to the left shore. One of the men had
what looked like a huge wrist watch on his left wrist from which they received the data from the
submerged sensor while the other man wrote down the info in a logbook. We talked to them a little
on shore and it seemed that they found our playing in the river as interesting as we found hearing
what exactly they were doing. I just wish they would put that Ellis River Gage back in though...
gary
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Last Updated: 2005-11-05 06:23:12
Editors