1. US 127 to Barnett Bridge (Upper Upper Clear Creek)Class I-II+(III)
20 Miles
Avg Gradient 18 fpm
Max Gradient 40 fpm
Mini Awesome ViewGauge Information
Clear Creek
1. US 127 to Barnett Bridge I-II+(III)
River Description20 Miles from Hwy 127 to Barnett Bridge, the next bridge. 4.5 more miles to Jett bridge. Many of the local paddling clubs do overnighters on this section. The rock houses are mysterious, wonderous and deserve to be explored. Some of them are incredably large, some overhang the creek and others are so deep in the woods that you only get a hint of there existance as you paddle by. We paddled from the put in on Hwy 127 to Jette Bridge once,25 miles, in our K1 creek boats. The first 10 miles were OK, the next 10 were painful and the last 5 miles were torture, knowing that we could have parked at Barnet Bridge, instead of Jette. This run is made for big open boats or touring kayaks. Registered users can submit comments. StreamTeam Status: unverified
Last Updated: 2006-05-08 23:54:12
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Clear Cr at Lilly Bridge [ TN ] |
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 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TN | Clear Creek— 1. US 127 to Barnett Bridge | I-II+(III) | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 | |
| TN | Clear Creek— 2. Barnett Bridge to Jett Bridge | I-III | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 | |
| TN | Clear Creek— 3. Jett to Lilly | II+(III) | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 | |
| TN | Clear Creek— 4. Lilly to Nemo | II-IV | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 | |
| TN | Little Clear Creek— Hwy 62 to Lily | III-IV+ | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 | |
| TN | White Creek (Morgan County)— Twin Bridges to Barnett Bridge | I-II | 5 cfs | low | 9/8 4:30 |
| AW Gauge ID: | 1783 |
| USGS Station: | 03539778 |
| HUC: | 06010208 |
| Latitude: | 36.1031 |
| Longitude: | -84.7183 |
| Class: | -1 |
User Comments |
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2008-04-08 12:38:46 (152 days ago)
Ben Burns
We ran this upper part at 2,000 Cf's with open boats and Kayaks, do not run more than 900 Cf's the class II is pushed to class III with some III +. You will have to portage about ten times due to dead fall. NOT FOR BEGINNERS!! I boat class IV-V a lot and took some beginners down and had to hike out around mile 17 due to they were not mentally ready for this trip. Edit
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2006-05-04 18:40:48 (857 days ago)
James Locke
This is a trip report from Chota Canoe Clubs listserve about our trip last weekend:<br />
<br />
The Mission: a route typically used for an overnighter<br />
The Crew: Duckie Boy and The-One-Who-Needs-A-Real-Helmet<br />
The Setting: Clear Creek from the 127 bridge to Barnett<br />
The Level: 350 cfs at Lilly (consider it minumum for a day paddle). It had <br />
peaked two days earlier<br />
at around 750.<br />
<br />
A beautiful Saturday dawned with a plan to meet at the Ranger Station in <br />
Wartburg.<br />
We knew there might be a little paddling involved (about 20 miles) so the <br />
meeting time was set for 8am.<br />
<br />
Put-on time: 9:23<br />
The first several miles were very pretty although scrapy (lots of <br />
wheelchair boating). The highlight<br />
of that section was about 50 yards of the river where you ran under a wide <br />
rock shelf (think of a taller<br />
version of the cave on Island Creek)). Lots of scenic camping areas and <br />
small waterfalls joined the<br />
river, slowly raising the river level. Lots of dogwood still blooming and <br />
the wild azaleas were thick<br />
with white and pink blossoms. We had heard that the first few miles <br />
dropped about 15 feet to<br />
the mile, then went to about 40 before settling back down. The steepest <br />
section had some pleasant<br />
class 2 stuff.<br />
<br />
A few areas had some portages. There were two rapids in <br />
the first 8 miles that could<br />
cause trouble with more water. Easily boat-scouted, but no obvious lines <br />
at the low level we were using.<br />
<br />
The toughest part was the "10 Mile Lake" in the middle. Although not much <br />
more than one mile in<br />
length, there is little as demoralizing as a long stretch of flatwater <br />
followed by several more in<br />
succession.<br />
<br />
Around mile 16, we ran into 5 canoeists who had been on the river for two <br />
nights and were going to<br />
spend another night there. They were a little amazed at the distance we <br />
had covered. Would have liked<br />
to chat more, but we had a schedule to maintain. At this point, my <br />
shoulders were starting to complain.<br />
<br />
Around mile 19, we hit the only significant rapid on the stretch; Monte <br />
Smith has a picture of it in<br />
at least one of his books. A class 3, the biggest hazard is that you run <br />
it blind. The river turns<br />
to the left for about 30 yards and then turns back right. At that point, <br />
you finally see the double<br />
drop. Not a problem in a kayak, a loaded canoe should have everything tied <br />
down. Plan on hitting<br />
the line on the right if you can.<br />
<br />
3/4 miles later, we were at Barnett bridge, a mere 6 and a half hours after <br />
the put in.<br />
<br />
The whole trip was like a wilderness hike where you could sit down the <br />
entire time.<br />
Recommended for strong paddlers who need a break from steep creeks, also <br />
suitable for flat water<br />
folks (easy portages except for the last rapid). If you do an overnight, <br />
you can probably run it a lot lower<br />
although the first four miles will take longer as you hike alongside your <br />
boat.<br />
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2005-02-07 23:59:32 (1308 days ago)
James Locke
Copied from Bill & Nancy on Boatertalk:<br />
<br />
I am posting this because there is not much info available on this run. <br />
Saturday Feb 5 2005 <br />
Overnight canoe camping trip. in an Old Town Discovery 15.6 float bags front and rear <br />
<br />
Put on at 9:30 Jett bridge @ 3.1 feet don't know the cfs because some idiot got the gage taken off USGS UGH! <br />
<br />
First six miles technical with a few bony spots. Very intimate , closed in cliffs, beautiful. One spot you paddle under a large rock house: COOL. Another spot a waterfall falls in over a rock house into the creek. You could camp inside the rockhouse behind the falls and it would be great because someone has built a fireplace complete with chimney in there. The morning sun shines through the waterfall creating an amazing display. YOu would probably need to make it a 2 night trip to use this site because it is only about 1 1/2 miles in. In this top stretch we had to carry once and had to get out of the boat about 3 more times and do a short slide over rocks due to some unrunnable(by us with a loaded canoe @ this water level) rock jumbles. I was beginning to get worried about making the trip in two days because we were not making good time and were getting tired. We flipped once the first day @ the bottom of a rapid. Made it 8 miles or so the first day. Very quiet. We heard only 2 small airplane engines on the whole trip and that was it for man noises. Water is swimming pool clear. <br />
<br />
After the first 6 miles, the river opens up and takes on many small tributaries with the rapids becoming a little more powerful and getting a few waves. The second day went much faster. We did the last 12 or so miles in about 5-6 hours including one swim and one portage around a river wide tree, and a lunch break. With 5 more inches of H2O we could have blasted over this tree. The double drop at the end has been reported to be 1/2 mile from the end but my gps gave it as 0.74 miles. Be on guard. It looked runnable but the lead in is blind and appears to be just another class II wave train from right to left dissappearing on the left. eddy out on the right to scout/ portage. If you get on this wave train around the left you are comitted to running the rapid *about class III+ at this level- undercut bottom left! FOr some reason from upstream the noise of the rapid is muffled and it does not even sound louder that the many class I-II rapids on the run. We may have tried running it but we had had a good fright a few miles above. There are 2 or three rapids in the last 5 miles that have current blasting into large storage shed sized boulders. GOing by the rule that every rock in the Obed system is undercut, we assumed that they were undercut although this was not clearly visible. On one of these we missed our line and rammed head on into the rock. I went by the principle that if you are going to hit something, it is better to hit it head on. When it became clear that we would hit it, I just aimed for a head on collision. We rammed hard and broke the plastic nose piece of the boat. At least this stopped the momentum so that when we presently got pushed sideways into the rock we were able to lean in to the rock and hold the boat off with a heismanlike push to keep the boat from pinning. We lost both paddles and it was very dicey for a moment. Luckily we managed to hold the boat off long enough for us to eventually wash around the rock. One paddle was floating nearby and I grabbed it and retrieved the other paddle. <br />
<br />
Summary: <br />
* 3.1 on jett is enough water. would be fun with less. <br />
a lot more could get hairy for loaded canoe <br />
* Don't get discouraged by the first few miles. They are beautiful but rocky and full of pinning opportunities. the last half goes much faster. <br />
* This is a challenging trip with a loaded open canoe. I have been boating 10 years, kayak class IV nearly every weekend, raft guide in the summer, and canoe often, and this was a challenging trip for me. If you are not experianced, you will probably not die on this run, but you could end up hurt or with lost gear and a pinned boat and no "reasonable" way to secure assistance. From our campsite there was no way within a short distance to hike out of the gorge unless you are a good rock climber with gear. Hwy 62 as about 1.5 to 3 miles North as the crow flies (river left). Hiking out would be very difficult. <br />
<br />
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