San Joaquin,
|
|
2. Chawanakee Gorge (Dam 6 to Reddinger Reservoir)
| Usual Difficulty |
V (may vary with level) |
| Length |
8 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
137 fpm |
Probe!
Probe!Photo by Paul Martzen taken may 15, 2003 @ 600 cfs
Gauge Information
River Description
Chawanakee Gorge may be one of the best 1 day, class 5 runs in California or in the USA, or in
the northern hemisphere according to some of a team of boaters in 2003, who paddled this section
to study the recreational potential and quality of the river. Others in the group just said,
"Wow!" They reported that there are as many as 40 to 50 big drops in the 5.6 miles of
river.
John Gangemi says, "If the creation myth is true, then God was a boater! Boating just canÂt get
much better than Chawanakee. Mix up 50-60 Class IV to V drops, smooth Sierra granite domes,
tributary waterfalls tumbling 400 feet into the gorge, lots of house-size boulders, water and
youÂve got a paddlerÂs mecca."
There were only a couple mandatory portages. All class 5 drops were potentially portagable, but
some class 4+ drops might not have portage routes. Portages are over boulders.
Though the river is pool drop at the optimum flow, the difficult rapids are unrelenting, with
amazing class 5 drop after class 5 drop.

There is a very pretty bicycle ride along the rim of this gorge on a gated, paved road. You can
see perhaps 50% of the rapids from this road. There is also access between road and river by a
stairway to a gauging station, about 1/3 of the way into the run. Escape from the gorge at other
points would be very difficult.

American Whitewater is presently working to get boatable releases into this section on a regular
basis in the future.
Take-out: Italian Bar Road bridge across Reddinger reservoir. It would be nice to get out closer
to the mouth of the river near the powerhouse, but there is no public access to the river or
reservoir in that area. Paddle about 1.4 miles from the river across the reservoir to this bridge
access point.
Put-in at the bridge at Mammoth powerhouse. Paddle down the reservoir about 1 mile, to the right
side of the dam. Get out on rocks a few feet from the lip of the spill and walk across the spill
to an awkward downclimb through bushes, poison oak, and over steep rock. Once at the water the
difficulties begin.

The 8 miles given as total length of run includes 1 mile of flatwater to start, 5.6 miles of
river and 1.4 miles of flatwater at the end.
Driving Directions: It really helps to have a good map of this area. From Fresno take highway 168
through Prather. Turn left onto Auberry Rd to Auberry. In Auberry, at the junction of Powerhouse
Rd and Auberry Rd you have a choice of scenic routes. You can stay right on Auberry Rd, then in a
few miles turn left onto Jose Basin Rd (towards Mono Winds Casino). Stay left in the small
community and follow Jose Basin Rd to Chawanakee Flats and Redinger reservoir. Alternatively, in
Auberry, you can bear left onto Powerhouse Rd and follow it to Kerchoff Reservoir. Just across
the bridge at Kerchoff turn back right onto Road 235 which winds over a hill to Reddinger
Reservoir. Continue a long ways around the reservoir past the junction with Rd 225 to Italian Bar
Bridge.
From Reddinger to the put-in: Turn north onto Rd 225 towards North Fork. Turn right onto Minarets
Road towards Mammoth Pool. Turn right onto forest service road 8S03. (if you see Clearwater
ranger station, you have gone too far) Drive down this steep and very windy road to the
Put-in.
From the north, take highway 99 to Madera. Exit at the Millerton Lake - Yosemite turnoff. In
Madera turn left onto W. Cleveland Ave, then turn left onto E. Yosemite Ave / highway 145. Follow
highway 145 east to Friant. Turn left on Friant Rd and follow signs to Prather and then
Auberry.
----------------- More Comments --------------
Nathan Hunkapiller writes:
Chawanakee was a challenging and fantastic run. 350 cfs (if that's what we had) was a sufficient
flow although 100 or 200 more wouldn't have hurt. A little extra would certainly have cleaned
some drops up but may have made others more scary. It only felt bony in a few places. I think you
were right about 350 cfs feeling a lot more like 600.
The scenery within the gorge is on a grand scale. Just amazing! It's such a steep walled gorge
that once inside...you will be there till the end...except for a freakishly steep staircase that
drops all the way down into the canyon at mile 1.6 courtesy of SCE. With the exception of all the
powerlines that line the canyon rim, Chawanakee was very reminiscent of Bald Rock Canyon. The
whitewater was certainly on a similar level. The definining character was pool drop with a
relentless mix of boulder gardens, 6-10 foot ledges, and a few nice slides.
Around the end of the first mile, the gorge becomes very narrow and deep for about 1/4 mile. This
was my favorite stretch, although it was certainly intimidating...see picture.

Around mile 3 the whitewater intensifies and one encounters a trilogy of BIG drops. Perhaps all
of them are runnable with the right mindset but they looked pretty full on. Portaging this
stretch was a serious undertaking and took us nearly 45 minutes. The Class V continues most of
the rest of the run but eases considerably in the last mile.
Not including reservoir paddling, the two of us took about 6 hours to complete the run at perhaps
an average pace. Prior knowledge of drops could reduce that by a few hours as there are somewhere
in the range of 40-50 class IV-V drops. We were in and out of our boats countless times.
May 2, 2005 -------
Cgoold writes:
We did it this friday (July 28, 2006), with no 3000 cfs flow spikes or other insurmountable
obstacles to report. for the record, we'd call the run a "hard 5/easy 5+" ranking at 680 cfs.
Maybe the rapids aren't the hardest ever, but the walled-inness adds a healthy dose of stress.
Will I be able to scout or portage this drop? Should I go to the next eddy? In my opinion, 1000
cfs is going to be full-on in here. then again, if you knew what was below all those horizon
lines with smooth walls on either side, you'd be much more comfortable at higher flows.
Having done the run at roughly 350 and 680 (cfs), I think most class 5 boaters would prefer flows
in the range 400-500 for a mellower run. Only a few of the rapids needed the extra juice of 680
to be good.
Stevenson creek had 300-350 cfs. the river's much less congested below this confluence though
except for one rapid with a huge hole; call the run 5- below the confluence even at 1000
cfs.
A GUIDE TO THE BEST WHITEWATER IN THE STATE OF CA, HOLBEK & STANLEY, 1988
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Last Updated: 2009-06-24 20:09:38
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