Santeetlah Dam to Calderwood Lake Boat LaunchClass IV-V
9.25 Miles
Avg Gradient 83 fpm
Max Gradient 146 fpm
Gauge Information
Cheoah
River Description
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.
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). 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.
StreamTeam Status: verified
Last Updated: 2006-11-04 12:44:26
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The Cheoah River near Bearpen Gap near Tapoco, NC gauge is located at the bridge that marks the beginning of the lower section of the run.
Releases should range from 850 CFS to 1000 CFS but are often higher than the required amounts.
The river can be run at 4.15' / 670 cfs, but I would need at least 800 cfs to be willing to make the two hour drive from Asheville. As reflected in the ratings, the Cheoah gets harder as it rises.
5.0'/1500 cfs is a very exciting, challenging level providing a thrilling ride unlike anything else to be found in the Eastern US.
Levels over 6'/2800 cfs are probably too high for mere mortals on all but the middle section.� These ratings are based on the river's current tree and brush-clogged status.� If at some point some of these trees and brush are removed, easier lines will open up and the penalty for mistakes will be lower.
The upper section is reported to be very dangerous by a group that attempted a run at 6.8'/4000 cfs.
CHEOAH RIVER NR BEARPEN GAP NR TAPOCO, 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 | Cheoah— Santeetlah Dam to Calderwood Lake Boat Launch | IV-V | 143.00 CFS | low | 7/24 14:00 |
| AW Gauge ID: | 5711 |
| USGS Station: | 0351706800 |
| HUC: | |
| Latitude: | |
| Longitude: | |
| Class: |
User Comments |
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2008-01-16 07:08:48 (190 days ago)
There was a log up in the entrance rapid of bear creek during Christmas time after the high end release around 6k. The log was in the center of the rapid in the upper portion. The hole described below the bear creek falls really is not that menacing at release levels, and the west prong line consists of 3 prominent drops a 6-8ftr, a 4-6ftr and a 2ftr. The first I normally run river left on the tongue, the second you boof the slot on the right, the third is either the right slot or center slot. "Rods Hole" doesn't really offer as good of play as described at the normal release levels, although there is plenty of other good play on the river. Also there is a new take out the forest service made which was looking pretty nice and one of the girls that works at what was Joannes Grocery was saying the owner will probably charge for use of the parking lot this coming season. In addition the whole using the raft the dragon and trying to name one of the rapids the dragon is pretty lame considering the dragon actually starts in Tennessee, and the fact that many locals hate the bikers on the dragon due to the accidents they cause and the driving hazard they cause. So as a piece of advice i think the boating community should stray away from this dragon theme so we can be portrayed in a more positive light by the community. Edit
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2007-07-09 12:37:37 (381 days ago)
Robert Strangia
Updated Rapid names.....
Craik's Ledge, III mile 8.5
Southern Revival, III+, mile 6.4 (first long rapids below the store) Pipewalk, III+ mile 6.3 God's Dam, IV mile 6.2 Jeff's Wood, Class III (rapid below God's Dam) Takeout, IV(IV+)mile 6.1
The lines from right to left...
The Good, The Bad, & the Ugly Hancock's Ledge, III+(IV) mile 5.6 Yellow Creek Rapid, III+(IV) mile 5.1
Land of 1000 Holes, IV Mile 4.6 The Dead Sea, mile 3.7 Forest Service Bridge mile 1.9 Rod's Hole, III, mile 1.8 Fear Factor IV+ mile 1.5 (Entrance to Bear Creek Rapid), Bear Creek Falls, IV+ mile 1.1 Tail of the Dragon(River Right), IV mile 0.7 West Prong Line(River Left), IV+ mile 0.7 Tapoco Lodge Rapid, IV mile 0.5 Yard Sale,The Holes...
(Cupcake, Beefcake,& Shitcake)IV+ mile 0.4 Fugitive, Class III mile 0.1
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2005-10-05 11:48:56 (1023 days ago)
Brad Roberts
I'd have to call the approach, the falls, and the runout three seperate rapids. With bear creek being the stuff below the falls.
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2003-05-08 11:05:48 (1904 days ago)
Kevin Colburn
After a 12,000 cfs spill on 5/7/03 big chunks of the road (129) are gone. So while the Cheoah is running 2G and holding (a VERY GOOD LEVEL), there is really no way to access it that i know of unless you feel like running a 200+ mile shuttle! Call DOT before heading out there. It is possible you could run part of the River but just not the whole thing...
<br />
<br />
Check out a photo... Notice the debris on the road that shows that there were several more feet of water in the river....
<br />
<br />
http://americanwhitewater.org/photos/?photoid=4103
<br />
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2002-01-28 11:17:04 (2369 days ago)
John Gangemi
Some email reports just in over the
<br>
weekend. Thought I'd share with the
<br>
paddling world.-JTG
<br>
<br>
Geoff Kohl comments-
<br>
Just ran Cheoah with some other
<br>
first-timers on Saturday, January 26,
<br>
2002, at around six feet, a level we guess
<br>
that would equate to something like 2,700
<br>
cfs (it dropped to about 5.4 while we were
<br>
on the river). It was big, pushy and
<br>
thrilling. The Cheoah is definitely an
<br>
instant southeastern whitewater classic.
<br>
The big ledge and the area immediately
<br>
downstream on the right are the only parts
<br>
that seem to start to get troubling due to
<br>
the nature of some huge offset holes. The
<br>
rapid below Tapoco Lodge (past the bridge)
<br>
is worth remembering, well-defined lines
<br>
with huge hidden holes at five-and-a-half
<br>
feet.
<br>
<br>
It could definitely go higher than this,
<br>
but I don't think any of these rapids will
<br>
wash out--they'll just create more monster
<br>
holes.
<br>
<br>
There is one hazard I'd mention, and that
<br>
is a set of cables that are in the river
<br>
just upstream of the power house (and just
<br>
downstream of the below-the-bridge rapid).
<br>
Even though I saw them while in an
<br>
upstream eddy, I lost track of one
<br>
silverish cable and came quite close to it
<br>
while paddling downstream. My friend said
<br>
he saw black cables in the water too. This
<br>
is quite close to the upstream IV rapid
<br>
when the water is up, and a paddler in our
<br>
group swam just above the cabled section.
<br>
Had he not found an eddy, it could have
<br>
been a scary situation.
<br>
-Geoff Kohl
<br>
<br>
Scott Hanshaw comments-
<br>
<br>
Ran it on Sat, Jan 26, 2002. Level was
<br>
around 5.5 on the USGS gauge. This
<br>
was an unbelievable run! This level is
<br>
higher than the test releases, which
<br>
made for an incredibly wild ride, But I
<br>
can see that at the higher end of
<br>
the test levels (900+) This would still be
<br>
a great run. A group of us
<br>
paddlers from Arkansas would usually make
<br>
4+ trips a summer, out east, to
<br>
the Ocoee. We have slowed down some in the
<br>
last few years because the Ocoee
<br>
has lost its "zip". If regularly scheduled
<br>
releases were set up on this
<br>
river, I'm certain we would be road
<br>
tripping often. At the release levels
<br>
I'm guessing that the play potential would
<br>
be excellent. At this level it
<br>
was "hang on to your hat and look out for
<br>
the monster holes". Very Sweet!
<br>
<br>
I will defiantly be watching the gauges
<br>
and when it runs again on a weekend
<br>
I will be loading up for a road trip!
<br>
<br>
Thanks
<br>
Keep the rivers flowin'
<br>
<br>
-Scott Hanshaw
<br>
<br>
Don Kinser comments-
<br>
Ran the Cheoah yesterday at 5.34 feet on
<br>
the Bear Pen Gauge (CFS not
<br>
available). It was big. There is no way in
<br>
hell the section below the bridge
<br>
just above the lodge is class 4 at this
<br>
level. Much more like class 5+.
<br>
Reminded me of Pine Creek on the Arkansas.
<br>
It is big, continuous and
<br>
unrelenting. Once you went under that
<br>
bridge you were committed.
<br>
<br>
The section above from the little store to
<br>
the bridge was outstanding and
<br>
totally continuous. Big waves, big holes,
<br>
big fun.
<br>
<br>
There were many people on the river and it
<br>
had come down to 5.34 feet from
<br>
almost 7 the day before.
<br>
<br>
Keep up the good work.
<br>
<br>
-Don Kinser
<br>
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2002-01-28 10:52:36 (2369 days ago)
Kevin Colburn
The Cheoah got paddled on january 25th, 26th,and 27th at flows ranging from well over 2500 cfs down to 1000 cfs. higher flows were NOT compared to the ocoee, they were compared to the Arkansas Numbers with Pine Creek Rapid at the bottom, like the Lower 5 of the North Fork of the Payette, and like a continuous Lochsa. Even the lower flows were awesome and challenging and aesthetic. The water was clear/blue, the air was 60-70 degrees, the locals were curious and enjoyable to chat with, and the river was incomparable. There is nothing like it left in the Southeast, It is Incredible.
<br>
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| Mile | Rapid Name | Class | Features (Legend) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0 | Put-In | ||
| 0.5 | First diversion pipe | ||
| 0.7 | Craik's Ledge | III+ | |
| 2.2 | Joannes Grocery | ||
| 2.9 | The rapid above the pipe | IV | |
| 2.9 | Swinging Bridge Rapid | III+ | |
| 2.9 | Wilma's Ledge aka God's Dam | IV+ | |
| 3.1 | Takeout | IV+ | |
| 3.1 | Takeout/Entrance | ||
| 3.1 | Takeout/First Drop | ||
| 3.5 | Typical Upper Cheoah Scene | IV | |
| 4.5 | Typical Rapid on the Middle Cheoah - Yellow Creek Rapid. | IV | |
| 5.0 | Land of Holes | IV | |
| 6.0 | The deadend pool | I | |
| 6.1 | The easy stuff | III | |
| 7.0 | The Forest Service Bridge | ||
| 7.1 | Rod's Hole | III | |
| 7.4 | Entrance to Bear Creek Rapid | IV+ | |
| 7.5 | The Falls | IV+ | |
| 7.5 | Bear Creek Rapid (The Slide) | IV+ | |
| 7.5 | Bear Creek - The left side of the Island. | IV+ | |
| 7.5 | Bear Creek Rapid (The Hole) | 5.0 | |
| 7.6 | Rapids below Bear Creek | IV | |
| 8.4 | Tapoco Lodge Rapid | IV | |
| 8.6 | Yard Sale | IV | |
| 9.0 | The Lake | ||
| 9.2 | Calderwood Boat Ramp |
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| Cheoah releases | Robbinsville,NC starts 08/17/08 |
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