2. Sinks to the Elbow (Lower Little)Class III-IV+
3 Miles
Avg Gradient 107 fpm
Max Gradient 135 fpm
Gauge Information
Little
2. Sinks to the Elbow III-IV+
River DescriptionOverview:
Eddy Out (III+)
Now you can decide to portage, cheat, or run the Sinks (IV) main drop. To portage, ferry to river left before you go under the bridge and take out. To cheat it, hug the far river right bridge wall and enter the rocky chute and bump your way down. This is only possible at good water levels. To run the main Sinks drop, which is a waterfall of about 10 feet in height, go with the main flow on river left. Run the center of the falls with a downflow angle. Too far right and there is a piton to pocket surf, and too far left is a wall. It is really pretty hard to get too far left. The best approach is a slow one, with a precisely timed delayed boof stroke on the right, keeping it downstream. The goal here is to land with your bow up, as the rocks underneath are not friendly. If you can't boof, this isn't the place to learn. Many swimmers have died here, and even more kayakers have gotten lucky. Always check the Sinks before running, it tends to collect debris. A good indication of how much water you will have on the landing is to look for the rock that sticks up just left of center at the bottom of the main Sinks drop. If you can't see a rock, there is plenty of water. The main drop has been run with this rock exposed with no problems, but use your good judgement. Foot entrapments are always a possibility below the Sinks. Ropes can be set up at the bottom of the Sinks to assist swimmers.
Next, after a nice shoulder boof on the left, is Airplance Turn, a great curling chut coming off of the river left retaining wall. Watch the pocket at high flows, and at flows below 3 feet, look for epic enders. A brief calm brings paddlers into 2 boogie rapids with multiple moves and beautiful green pools. After a pin rock avoidance in the next little drop, regroup for Bottoms Up, one of the best drops on the run. There are two options here. One is the river right boof, but the classic run is down the middle, banking right off of the big midstream boulder and dropping 4 feet into the cauldron below. For extra points, go for the dynamic rockspin into the cauldron. It is fantastic.
After two boogie rapids on a sharp bend to the right, one reaches Tunnel Rapid (III+), recognized by the tightening of the river and the current pouring into a depression in the river right wall. A right to left line on this rapid will see you through fine, just wait and drive in late, so as to get the meat. The reason Tunnel is significant is because just downstream is the Elbow (IV), a rapid you don't want to just flush into. danielfosbinder@gmail.com StreamTeam Status: verified
Last Updated: 2008-05-12 13:54:20
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The Little doesn't take much rain to run, and holds for up to a week after a good rain. In a good winter, flows are only a few inches away at any time. Now that the Little River above Townsend gauge is linked, accuracy is greatly improved in flow predictions.
It has been run as low as 2 feet, but it is not very fun. 2.3 is acceptable, but 2.4 is a better minimum.
2.4 - good minimum
2.7 - a great low level
3.0 - starts cooking
3.5 - high
4.0+ watch out.
The run has been done as high as 6 feet, but be ready for non-stop class 5. The elbow has been run at 9 feet.
3 feet is the classic level, 2.8 being the easiest.
Little River above Townsend [ TN ] |
Current Conditions
Station Graphs |
| Level Legend: | Running | Below Minimum Recommended Flow | Above Maximum Recommended Flow | Unknown |
| AW Gauge ID: | 11046 |
| USGS Station: | 03497300 |
| HUC: | 06010201 |
| Latitude: | |
| Longitude: | |
| Class: |
User Comments |
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2007-06-25 06:48:08 (473 days ago)
Alex Zendel
Be aware that there is a cave/sieve/undercut-like death trap underneath the water at the landing on the left ("main") line at The Sinks. Swimming over the drop or swimming after being stuck in the hole could easily be fatal. Here's an article about a non-boater that died in this hazard on June 4, 2007. http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_5572290,00.html. If I remember correctly, one of the local rescue squad members, who's also an accomplished boater, said that the submerged log referred to in this newspaper article was not a major factor in the accident - the lack of wood in the future does not mean that the danger is gone.
Consider setting safety at The Meanies (directly upstream) - boaters frequently swim out of the bottom hole, which can be rather sticky at most levels.
Have fun, be safe!
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2006-03-03 18:42:29 (951 days ago)
Kirk Eddlemon
The below comment about taking the online gauge with a grain of salt is true, but not due to any technical error. The reason is that the online gauge is 25 square miles downstream and that the watershed triples at that point due to all the valley tribs coming in. If the little is at 3.3 and the online gauge is at 500, it must have just rained and the bubble hasn't reached the gauge. Sometimes the Little at Maryville can be at 2000 and the little only at a low level if it was mostly valley rain(rare but it happens).<br />
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The key to not getting skunked is to look at the whole picture. How much rain fell where and when and how dry was it prior. Streamflow gauges are but one small component in predicting streamflow.<br />
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Besides, there is an online gauge for the Townsend site now anyway:<br />
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http://amazon.nws.noaa.gov/nexhads2/jsp/dipper/prepareDCPChart2.jsp?nesdis_id=DD5263E0&nwsli=CLCT1&pe_code=HG<br />
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Copy and paste if you have to.
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2004-12-07 15:17:04 (1403 days ago)
Brad Jenkins
ran this today real gauge reading was 3.3 below the Y. 12-07-2004, this online gauge is way off! been there before with this online gauge reading in the 500's and real water level was 3.8, take this online gauge with a grain of salt.
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