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Pond Brook, NH

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Baker Pond to Wentworth

Class IV-V
3 Miles
Avg Gradient 110 fpm
Max Gradient 180 fpm

Backyard Boof


Backyard Boof
Photo of Dave Livingston by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

Gauge Information

Pond Brook
low
1.23
10/7 18:30

Min Sug. Level:  3

River Description

Pond Brook is a very narrow steep creek. The river starts out class III then eases somewhat through a swampy area. The action picks up at about the 1 mile mark then quickly starts to build up to continuous class IV and V. It's geology is somewhat unusual for New England, it has a lot of ledgy type drops of 2' to 3' spaced closely to each other. One drop runs over a granite slide that drops approximately 30' over a 100' distance. Some of the river can be scouted from state route 25A which runs along the run but many drops are out of view from the road.

Pond Brook is located in the Upper Baker River valley about 16 miles west of Plymouth. It is a relatively small river that drains Lower Baker Pond. The river itself starts at the dam at Lower Baker Pond. There is good warmup rapids for the first half mile but you must portage around a low snowmobile bridge then contend with some flat water. For this reason most paddlers chose to put in ½ mile further downstream where NH 25A comes close to the river. At this point the river is flat and running through an open marsh. Shortly after the river enters the forest class II-III rapids begin. The most significant factors in this section are tree falls and strainers. Boat scout each drop carefully to avoid problems. The action picks up about a mile and half below Lower Baker Pond. Some class III ledge drops start appearing the first of which is "Roadside". More small ledge drops continue until they start to pick up in intensity just after the 2 mile mark. The remaining mile of river contains the largest and most intense rapids. It is mostly away from the road but never more than a quarter mile. Starting at Z-chute there is evidence of river modifications for mills built in the 19th century. These mills are long gone but the rock work is evident all the way to the last rapid.

Posted by Dan Holzman on the MVP message board 3/30/03
Pond Brook has some outstanding ledges, very photogenic, ends with a totally sweet set of slides and a 10 foot waterfall (built in boof ledge, note to self, get back there soon before water runs out, gotta run those ledges).
Beta on Pond Brook: there is a low snowmobile bridge or similar about 1 mile downstream of the put-in at the dam, mandatory portage. There is a log across the river in the first big drop about 1.2 miles downstream, MANDATORY portage, don't miss the eddy above this drop. Lessel's book makes this sound like a death creek, it isn't, the group ran all the drops with no major issues, however watch for lumber (as usual on creeks), and try not to hit your head (ditto).

Technical info

Put in elevation........885'
Take out elevation......557'
Total drop..............328'
Average drop/mile.......110'
1st mile................26'
2nd mile................159'
3rd mile................143'
Distance................3.0 miles
River width average.....18'
River geology...........Granite ledge, small to medium boulders
River water quality.....Excellent, clarity good to excellent.
Scenery.................Good mountain scenery, route 25a occasionally visible
                        on river left. 
Wildlife................Deer, moose, hawks. 

Directions


Put in


From southern NH
Take interstate 93 to exit 26 (Tenney mtn highway rt 25) 16 miles to Wentworth NH
Take a left on NH 25A
2.5 miles to where the river comes in close on the left. This is the first option put in. You can continue another 1/3 mile to Lower Baker Dam for the short warm up. The first option put in has limited parking just make sure you pull well off the road.

Put in


From Vermont
Take interstate 91
Take EXIT 15 toward US-5 / FAIRLEE / ORFORD N.H
Turn RIGHT onto LAKE MOREY RD.
Turn LEFT onto US-5
Turn RIGHT onto BRIDGE ST / VT-25A. Continue to follow VT-25A (Crossing into NEW HAMPSHIRE).
Turn LEFT onto BAKERS POND RD / NH-25A. Continue to follow NH-25A 13 miles to the Lower Baker Pond put in or continue another 1/3 mile to the roadside put in.

Take out


Head back to Wentworth and take a right on NH route 25.
Take a right on Ellsworth Lane road.
Park near the bridge at Back Yard rapid.
If you have many vehicles to park continue south on 25 over the Baker River Bridge then take a right onto the town ball field parking area close to the river.

Rapid Naming Convention
It is not the intention of the author to name rapids for his own personal ego. Every effort was made to find the current, historical, or conventional name for each rapid. Unfortunately, Pond Brook is not run very often and paddlers have not named even the toughest sections. Historical records and maps do not have any information. Names assigned on this page and associated map were given by the author. Those names are mostly generic and are given to identify a unique feature (i.e. Z-chute) or location (i.e. Powerline) prevalent on or near the rapid. If in the future the traditional name is uncovered or paddlers begin to accept a new name, the author will attempt to change those names to correspond with the accepted norm.

StreamTeam Status: verified
Last Updated: 2006-05-29 18:05:35

Search Results

Photos/Videos 1- of 17

Last drop on Pond Brook, NH


Last drop on Pond Brook, NH  Pond Brook NH
(304.81KB .jpeg)

Backyard Slide


Backyard Slide  Pond Brook NH
(31.82KB .jpeg)

Bill at the top of Megaslide


Bill at the top of Megaslide  Pond Brook NH
(210.18KB .jpeg)

Butch at Powerline


Butch at Powerline  Pond Brook NH
(374.43KB .jpeg)

Butch at the top of Megaslide


Butch at the top of Megaslide  Pond Brook NH
(30.67KB .jpeg)

Chris at Backyard Boof


Chris at Backyard Boof  Pond Brook NH
(303.87KB .jpeg)

Dave at Funnel Ledge


Dave at Funnel Ledge  Pond Brook NH
(24.77KB .jpeg)

Dave at Powerline


Dave at Powerline  Pond Brook NH
(26.50KB .jpeg)

Dave Livingston at Backyard Boof


Dave Livingston at Backyard Boof  Pond Brook NH
(313.98KB .jpeg)

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Gauge

Gauge Description:

The season is usually in spring (April/May) and after heavy rains. There is no gage on this river, paddlers must drive up to the last drop on Ellsworth Lane Rd and look to see if there is enough water. A rough correlation can be made with the Baker River gage. It is estimated that a level of 3.0 feet on the Baker could be a minimum flow level on Pond Brook.

BAKER RIVER NEAR RUMNEY, NH [ NH ]

Current Conditions

Stage Flow Updated
1.23 182 10/7 18:30

Station Graphs


Linked Reaches

Search Results

Level Legend: Running Below Minimum Recommended Flow Above Maximum Recommended Flow Unknown
Descriptions of reaches with River Name in bold have been verified by a regional StreamTeam member.

State River Name/Section Class Level Rel. Level Updated
NH Baker— 1. Warren (Upper Baker) V 182 cfs   10/7 18:30
NH Baker— 2. Rte. 118 to Wentworth II-III 1.23 ft   10/7 18:30
NH Baker, S. Branch— Dorchester V 1.23 Feet   low 10/7 18:30
NH Pond Brook— Baker Pond to Wentworth IV-V 1.23   low 10/7 18:30

Station Description

AW Gauge ID:58
USGS Station:01076000
HUC:01070001
Latitude:43.7961
Longitude:-71.8450
Class:6

WXPort

News





Guidebooks



Classic Northeastern Whitewater Guide : The Best Whitewater Runs in New England and New York
$19.95


Let it Rain: A paddlers guide to northeastern US and Canada
$39.95

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Rapid Summary

Mile Rapid Name Class Features (Legend)
0.0Map of the Mid Pemi regionPutin Takeout Photo
1.6RoadsideIIIPhoto
2.1FunnelIII+Photo
2.3IslandIIIPhoto
2.3Megaslide5.0Photo
2.4Z-ChuteIII+Photo
2.5PowerlineIVPhoto
2.6MinislideIVPhoto
2.9Backyard SlideIVPhoto
3.1Take Out

Rapid Descriptions

Map of the Mid Pemi region

Rivers of the Middle Pemigewasset region

Rivers of the Middle Pemigewasset region
Photo by Mark Lacroix


Roadside (Class III, Mile 1.6)

Paul at Roadside

Paul at Roadside
Photo of Paul Egbert by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

After a long series of class II and III ledge drops and rapids the river pulls in close to the route 25a on river left. Roadside rapid starts with a congested rapid that pushes a paddler towards river right then drops over a 3 foot ledge. The main flow heads directly into a couple large boulders. The left side of the ledge is rather shallow in medium water.

Funnel (Class III+, Mile 2.1)

Dave at Funnel Ledge

Dave at Funnel Ledge
Photo of Dave Amato by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

When you notice the river narrow significantly through a dark hemlock forest you are approaching the Funnel. The river narrows to 22 feet wide then drops over a 3 foot ledge. The right side below the ledge has a ski jump. Most paddlers chose to run hugging river left. Be careful when running this section since a tree fall could easily span the entire river.

Island (Class III, Mile 2.3)

Dave at Island Drop

Dave at Island Drop
Photo of Dave Livingston by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

Not necessarily a tough section but it lies just above the Megaslide so a screw up here could be consequential. The river breaks up into several narrow channels amongst ledge drops. Pull out in the eddy below and scout Megaslide.

Megaslide (Class 5.0, Mile 2.3)

Butch at the top of Megaslide

Butch at the top of Megaslide
Photo of Butch Mixon by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

This is the toughest drop on Pond Brook. Shortly after Island the river drops over a double ledge with a somewhat sticky river wide hole. Right after the last ledge drop catch the eddy on river right just above the main part of the slide. The slide itself drops 30 ft within a distance of 100 feet. The main part of the chute forces paddlers through a large hole then directly into a rock with a vertical face upstream. This top of this rock is barely above the water surface at medium levels and forces the river sharply right through the final portion of the drop. This rock usually has a good pillow in front of it but still most paddlers tend to hit it. Good reason to have elbow pads.

Z-Chute (Class III+, Mile 2.4)

Marc at Z-curl

Marc at Z-curl
Photo of Marc Aucoin by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

Another narrowing section of the river leads up to Z-Chute. The first ledge drops down to a large curler angled from upstream right to downstream left. Immediately after the end of the downstream left curler another curler cuts to downstream right. At the bottom there is a relatively large hole.

Powerline (Class IV, Mile 2.5)

Dave at Powerline

Dave at Powerline
Photo of Dave Amato by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

Located directly under the overhead power lines. At the top the river drops over a 3 to 4 foot ledge. The second drop forces the paddler to start on river left then maneuver diagonally over another 4 foot ledge towards river right.

Minislide (Class IV, Mile 2.6)

Marc at Minislide

Marc at Minislide
Photo of Marc Aucoin by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

A short distance below the power lines the river drops over another series of ledges then finally runs out into a violent slide. The best approach is to run directly below a midstream boulder at the top of the first ledge then ride out the rest of the drop trying to stay upright in the violent chute between two parallel ledges on either side of the river.

Backyard Slide (Class IV, Mile 2.9)

Backyard Slide

Backyard Slide
Photo of Bill Ryan by Mark Lacroix taken 5/21/06 @ 3.4 ft

The final rapid on Pond Brook is a long and fun one. Just above the rapid the river splits around an island. The left channel is usually best. Just after the Island the river turns right and drops over a long slide best run on river right. Just after the slide there is a series of low ledges with sticky holes. A small pool lies just upstream of Backyard Boof. Line yourself up in the center of the river and push off the 8 foot vertical ledge drop. Below this there is another small ledge drop that leads to a bridge. Once past the bridge the river flattens out for the rest of its distance to the Baker River. The rapid is named after the residential backyards it flows through. The residents on river right are very friendly and take interest in our adventure just watch out for their river side flower beds if you should scout or decide to take another run on Backyard Boof.

Take Out
The takeout at the bridge at Backyard rapid has limited parking but is the most convenient. If your group is small then this would be your best bet. Large groups should park their vehicles at the Wentworth ball field directly across the street from the convenience store which is just before route 25 crosses over the Baker river. The confluence of Pond Brook is actually downstream a ways. If you paddle all the way to the Baker you will have to carry back upstream some distance. Another option would be to cut across a spit of land just as Pond Brook takes a sharp right in the runout flatwater below Backyard rapid. Once at the Baker you're vehicle will be directly across the river.


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