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Ivy Cr nr Marshall, NC [ NC ] |
Current Conditions
Station Graphs |
| Level Legend: | Running | Below Minimum Recommended Flow | Above Maximum Recommended Flow | Unknown |
| State | River Name/Section | Class | Level | Rel. Level | Updated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NC | Big Laurel Creek— Hurricane to Hot Springs | III-IV | 20 cfs | low | 10/12 3:30 | |
| NC | Brush Creek— to French Broad River | IV-V | 20 cfs | low | 10/12 3:30 | |
| NC | Spring Creek— Route 1171 to NC Route 209 in Hot Springs | III-IV(V) | 20 cfs | 10/12 3:30 |
| AW Gauge ID: | 1749 |
| USGS Station: | 03453000 |
| HUC: | 06010105 |
| Latitude: | 35.7694 |
| Longitude: | -82.6211 |
| Class: | 3 |
User Comments |
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2006-09-05 22:16:03 (768 days ago)
philippe damiano
I ran this on labor day. It was low but raining. between 300 & 400 cfs ? It was runnable, but if I run it that low again, which I won't, I would probably hike down and only run the big drops to save some plastic. <br /><br />
The gradient picks up quick about 100 yards down from the bridge at the end of sharp hollow road. There are several 8 to 10 foot ledges with short calm stretches in between and then comes the first decent sized drop. About a 25 foot cascade with a potential piton rock in the pool below on river right. I ran the river left side of the drop and the pool was about 6 or 7 feet deep at the bottom. Up next and not to far away is another 20 foot slide that should probably be scouted. Most of the water is falling into the river left side of the drop and curling up underneath some undercut boulders. I tried at first to set up a seal launch above the drop on the river right to avoid the undercuts but couldn't find a stable enough place to get into my boat. I ran a sketchy line, launching off of a rock on the river left side, over the main current, and off the river right side of the last few vertical feet at the bottom. This pool looked pretty clean. <br /><br />
A few more skinny rapids later is the tallest drop of the run. About a 30 foot cascade that I would recommend running on the river left side to avoid a kink about halfway down. The bottom half of this drop is vertical with a clean pool and it's alot of fun. I ran it a couple of times. There is a trail on the river left side of the pool that is portagable but really slippery. I would have to recommend bringing a partner and roping the boats back up for multiple runs. <br />
<br />
It's a crusty hike up the tracks to Barnard, but well worth it. Thanks to philippe damiano for the access, posted by Josh Dalton. Edit
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2003-04-14 01:24:56 (2008 days ago)
Brad Roberts
Forum: BoaterTalk
<br />
Re: brush crk.north of ash. by huka Apr 13 2003, 1:28 GMT New
<br />
Date: Apr 13 2003, 2:33 GMT
<br />
From: Neckyyakr
<br />
<br />
I've run Brush Creek...not to long ago as a matter of fact. If it's running, (the Laurel will be around 2ft. I think. Dunno it was big though) Brush Creek is a definite gem. Your boat will touch shore to shore at the put in, as it's tiny. The drops are all fairly straight forward and for the most part can be boat scouted. The first ledge is best fun on the right side with a left side boof stroke to angle yourself to the right and into an eddy. Everything else is mainly just slides and cascades. A nice 20 footer with a good launch pad is worthy of nothing. THere are very few entrapments with the exception of one slide around the middle of the run. The top of the drop feeds into an undercut...out and then down about a 20 foot slide with a good boof at the bottom. Best route is to seal launch into the slide, below the undercut so you can enjoy the rest of the slide. Apart from that, you might scout for strainers, but everything else is good to go. I would compare it to running the Chauga. Except with much less push and more slides and cascades. It's well worth it. Wish I could go....
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2003-03-25 16:33:44 (2028 days ago)
Dave Schall
I walked it on 3-25-03. It looked all clear except for one low overhanging branch in the enterance to the second to last big slide. I would characterize this run as very tight. When I walked down from Bernard I wasn't sure it was even the right creek because it was so small. From the top: The first significant rapid is a long series of short slides culminating in a 6 to 10 foot boof requiring a sharp right turn and another sharp left to set up. The landing is into a very shallow pool. This is also the toughest rapid to scout because there are rosebushes on both sides of the river and no shore access. I hiked right up the middle of the creek. Next there are three or four fairly straight forward slides into pretty good sized pools. The last of the slides runs right to left and at low water the left wall of the slide looks undercut about halfway down, not a good place to get stuck. With enough water you can probably get enough right to left momentum to avoid these. The next drop is a steep slide of about 25-30 feet that goes vertical for the last 10 or so feet. The entrance looks pretty clean but I wasn't real sure about the depth of the pool at the base of the drop. I was able to climb up from the river left side of the drop and I think a portage there would be possible. Things mellow after this with more broken ledges and slides to the French Broad. The hike back to Bernard on the railroad took about 10 minutes which would be a good option for short shuttle and multiple runs. That's all I have. I haven't run it and I don't think I will anytime soon. Steep stuff.
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2002-11-18 23:24:08 (2155 days ago)
Brad Roberts
More from boatertalk....supposed to be a bunch of 10 to 20 footers and one 30 footer. Lots of vert.
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2002-10-02 20:11:31 (2202 days ago)
Chris Guptill
I've never run this, but I worked in the
<br />
area on the French Broad, so I hiked it
<br />
a few times. This run looks like a solid
<br />
IV-V run, with a 25 foot drop and some
<br />
other slightly smaller big drops thrown
<br />
in for fun. As it's name suggests, be
<br />
aware of wood in the stream bed. I
<br />
would suggest scouting before
<br />
running this, or else going with
<br />
someone who knows it, as some of
<br />
the landings are tight.
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