Hiwassee - 1. Appalachia Dam to Appalachia Powerhouse


Hiwassee,

Disclaimer

1. Appalachia Dam to Appalachia Powerhouse (Dries)

Usual Difficulty III-IV (may vary with level)
Length 4.8 Miles
Avg. Gradient 32 fpm
Max Gradient 70 fpm

First Rapid, Drys


First Rapid, Drys
Photo of Brad Roberts by Kevin Miller taken 05/17/03 @ 1000+ cfs



River Description

From the Hwy 68 access, the first three and a half miles are extremely overgrown with trees and vines. Its all flatwater. At high flows this area could be lethal and is the textbook definition of a strainer. DO NOT PUT IN AT THE HWY 68 BRIDGE. I REPEAT DO NOT PUT IN AT THE HWY 68 BRIDGE OR THE DAM. ALL YOU WILL GET ARE MILES OF STRAINERS TILL THE NEXT ACCESS POINT.

After the Turtletown Creek confluence there are still some trees in the river but nothing that obscures boating. The river opens up at this point.

There is an alternate and probably preferred put in almost at the Turtletown Creek confluence. (Remember DO NOT PUT IN AT THE HWY 68 BRIDGE.)

So lets say it loudly, there is no good reason to boat the stretch of the Hiawassee between Apalachia Dam and Turtletown Creek. There are no rapids. You will be boating 3.5 miles thru a forest of trees, vines, strainers and rootballs. Use the Turtletown Creek access. Its also a much shorter shuttle.
From Turtletown Creek to the Apalachia Powerhouse is 5.7 miles at an average of 40 fpm. Using the Turtletown put-in makes for an 8.5 mile shuttle, all on dirt roads. Putting in at the Hwy 68 bridge is a 9.2 mile run with a 17 mile shuttle to the Apalachia Powerhouse, 11 of those miles on dirt roads. Be aware the roads can get rather muddy after a lot of rain.

When we ran the Hiwassee in May of 2003 we were able to take out on river left at the appalachia powerhouse. There was a small parking area for hikers and fishermen. Reports from Feb. 2004 say that TVA does not allow parking any more at the powerhouse.

Approximately one mile from Turtletown creek marks the start of the rapids. The river begins with a class IV or III series of ledges and shoals. The difficulty of the rapids is partially the choice of the boater.

More fun rapids follow downstream. The recovery pools are quite large between almost all of the drops.

The stretch marked on the topo maps as the narrows has some suprisingly boily funny water.

Recent flow example

DATE HEADWATER ELEVATION TURBINE DISCHARGE TOTAL DISCHARGE RIVER FLOW DAY
05/13/03 1275.90 2559 6622 4063 t
05/14/03 1276.71 2552 6604 4052 w
05/15/03 1276.62 2560 6477 3917 t
05/16/03 1277.14 2555 5153 2598 f
05/17/03 1277.69 2536 3542 1006 s
05/18/03 1277.16 2529 3534 1005 s
05/19/03 1279.04 2525 3007 482 m

StreamTeam Status: Verified
Last Updated: 2004-12-29 23:18:33