Beaver, |
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| Usual Difficulty | IV-V (may vary with level) |
|---|---|
| Length | 3 Miles |
Also see the Taylorville Section (Class III), and the Eagle Section (Class V), both of which run on weekends in September. See also the Raquette River, Stone Valley Section (Class V).
The Beaver River originates from Stillwater Reservoir in the western section of the Adirondack
Park northeast of the village of Lowville. The area is undeveloped and camping is available
throughout the area.
Terrific campsites are available at the Soft Maple Campground centrally located between the
Taylorville and Eagle runs. Boaters also often crash at the Moshier put-in. However, camping at
the Taylorville put-in is no longer permitted after reports of public nudity and midnight
low-water descents of the drops at Taylorville were brought to the attention of Orion.
Hazard Warning!
Moshier Falls, the last rapid on this reach, has a very nasty sieve on River Left. Just
downstream of the boater in the photo above, a paddler got sucked under a rock on Aug. 31, 2003.
Quick action by boaters with ropes helped stabilize him and get him out of the hazard. Moshier
Falls is no place to swim!
Posted by Chris Koll:
The releases are a product of negotiations by American Whitewater that resulted in a series of 11
whitewater releases during a typical year spread over three challenging sections of Beaver River
whitewater. The sections are dry except for release days when Orion Power allows water to spill
back into the natural river bed creating whitewater runs ranging from class 3 to class 5.
The runs are typically short--varying in length from one to four miles--and on most release days
water is scheduled on two different parts of the river. Boaters can easily paddle one section of
the Beaver in the morning and then catch a second section in the afternoon.
The whitewater sections include the Taylorville run, a 1.5-mile stretch that features six class
3-4 drops. While some of the drops appear intimidating--particularly a steep 30-foot slide--the
rapids are fairly straightforward and are appropriate for strong intermediate paddlers looking
for an introduction to steep creeking.
The Moshier section is the jewel of the river--a 4-mile run that includes two runnable
waterfalls, a number of easy class 3 rapids, and concludes with a long, technical class 5 rapid
composed of four discernible drops. The section is appropriate for experts or strong
intermediates with judicious scouting and/or portaging.
The Eagle section is short and demanding. Only a mile in length, the run starts off with four
class-5 drops where the river drops the equivalent of 475 fpm. Eagle is a demanding expert
run.
Questions regarding the Beaver can be directed to Chris Koll by email or by calling 315-652-8397.
And now for something completely different: Click here for Karl Gesslein's view of the Beaver. (Clicking will open up a new browser window.) If you like that, check out some more drawings here.
Lat/longitude coordinates verified by GPS.
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