Cheoah, |
|
| Usual Difficulty | IV-V (may vary with level) |
|---|---|
| Length | 9.25 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 83 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 146 fpm |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHEOAH RIVER NR BEARPEN GAP NR TAPOCO, NC | ||||
| usgs-0351706800 | 400 - 2500 cfs | IV-V | 04h23m | 1120 cfs (rc= 0.3 ) |
The Cheoah River is
located in the extreme southwestern corner of NC, near Robbinsville. For seventy years the
nine-mile section between the Santeetlah Dam and Lake Calderwood was dewatered. American
Whitewater along with the Western North Carolina Paddlers advocated for releases for over 6
years. Whitewater releases on the Cheoah began in the fall of 2005. Each year there are at
least 18 releases for paddlers to enjoy for the next 40 years.
The Cheoah is unusual for rivers of its volume in the Southeast in that its gradient is
relatively constant. This means that with the exception of 2 or 3 half mile or so sections, it is
unusually continuous, more so than anything else with a similar volume of water in the Southeast.
Some call it "warm western-style paddling;" those paddling it at the higher winter 2002 flows
continued the Western analogies, comparing it to Pine Creek on the Arkansas and the Lochsa at
high water. No doubt contributing to the analogies was the water quality, which was crystal clear
during the winter flows. All who have paddled the Cheoah have agree it will become one of the
crown jewels of whitewater world.
The portion of the
Cheoah from JoAnne's Gas and Grocery Store to Lake Calderwood can be broken into three sections:
a 1.5 mile brushy and tree-clogged upper section with a number of sticky holes and a potentially
troublesome river-wide ledge a bit downstream of the hydroelectric bypass pipe, a 4 mile
relatively open and mild middle section that features some nice wave trains at higher water
levels, and a 1.5 mile lower section with the most gradient and the best defined drops. Efforts
have been made to clear channels in the upper sections of the river, however there are large root
balls scattered throughout the stream bed and swimmers should be extremely careful.
At flows of about 1000 cfs or under, the upper section is about a half grade and the middle
section a full grade easier than the lower section, with the first two sections similar in
difficulty to the Ocoee. The risks are greater, however, as much of the channel is heavily lined
with trees and brush, giving the run a nature akin to paddling during a flood. The main technical
challenge is presented by the frequent series of offset holes. Because of the trees and brush, it
is not a good place to paddle if you don't have a rock-solid roll and the ability to read water
well on the fly (bank scouting would not be fun).
The lower section is
the best defined, with a number of classic drops. It begins at the bridge on which the Bearpen
Gap gauge is located. My favorites were the sequence of four drops with the biggest single
drop on the river (a ledge about 8 feet high) being the third and the drop beginning at the
bridge downstream of the Tapoco Lodge. There were many, many waves to surf and a number of very
playable holes, including two potential rodeo sites: one at Tapoco Lodge and one at the end of
the drop beginning at the bridge downstream of the Lodge.
At the highest level paddled during the summer test releases (4.7 feet / 1,130 cfs), the upper and lower sections were much closer in difficulty as the offset holes were beginning to get sticky. The hole below the river-wide ledge was beginning to look scary at this level; recovery after a swim would be challenging due to the thickets of trees growing in the water and on both banks for a considerable distance downstream. The lower section didn't change much, so the result was a run that was a lot more fun but not any scarier (assuming strong class IV skills, and keeping in mind that the Ocoee only requires strong class III skills). If more of the trees and brush were removed, the upper run would almost certainly get easier at every level as paddlers wouldn't be forced to run through the meat of the holes and the entrapment danger would be lower.
See also Chris Bell's Asheville-Area Boating Beta Page.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Video Podcast about the Cheoah Relicensing
AW's Kevin Colburn and Jeff Paine talk with John Grace of Lunch Video Magazine about the Cheoah relicensing project.
LVMTV :: Monday Morning Madhouse 3/16; American Whitewater's
successes with Cheoah Releases from Lunch Video
Magazine on Vimeo.
January 2010 |
||||||
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
31
|
1
|
2
|
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
31
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|