Learn about stars here
A 219 day old warning about this river was added. Click on comments below to read it.

Chattahoochee, GA

Disclaimer

5 - Middle Hooch - Buford Dam to Highway 20 (Bowman's Island Section)

Class I-II(III)
2.5 Miles
Avg Gradient 15 fpm
Max Gradient 15 fpm

Gauge Information

med
590
8/21 23:45

Max Sug. Level:  10000 cfs

River Description

This attractive short run, appropriate for giving beginners a little tantalizing taste of whitewater or a diverting bit of P&P for intermediate boaters, is small potatoes when the dam is not releasing but more like restaurant-quality baked spuds when it is. Not the best choice for rank newbies during releases, that about says it - things rapidly go to flood conditions and the difficulty increases to III+. They set off a big siren prior to opening the gates, so you will know the trouble is about to start, unless you are deaf. See Will Gosney's narrative below for more details.

The water quality is much better than the Metro Hooch 30 miles downstream; trout can be seen swimming along the bottom. It's COLD, since they intake the nice clear water 40 or 50 feet below the lake surface. The only real hazard is deadfall strainers. Although surrounding development has been heavy over the last decade, the river corridor there is still pristine, thanks to the Chattahoochee NRA and the efforts of the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper organization.

Put-in is just below Buford Dam at the southern end of Lake Lanier near Buford, GA. Drive across the dam to its western end and immediately hang a left through a gate  onto a steep dirt road that winds downhill to a nice park on the west bank just below the dam. There's lots of free parking, picnic area, boat ramp and restrooms. This area typically gets gated shut at dark or 5PM, with remaining cars towed away, so plan your trip accordingly.

Half a mile or so below the put-in the river is split by Bowman's Island. You can run right or left; either side takes you down a quarter mile of class I-II shoals until the flows merge again at the southern end of the island. There's lots of big, rounded, mossy rocks to keep things interesting. Good place to practice your rockspins.

Another mile or so beyond this point the river disappears around a left-hand turn marked by a large gravel bar on river left. Around that bend is the best whitewater feature on this section, where a rock ledge extends across the river. Most of the water bangs into a big obvious truck-sized boulder (the "Hump") in the middle and funnels around the right side. Approach from the left side and set right to hit the chute. Fine spot for squirts & enders at the bottom. That end of the Hump is deeply undercut but the eddy pool below is huge and shallow, with a wide sandy beach on river left. Beware of ancient strainers on river right, the current will push you in that direction. 

Part of the flow pours over left of the Hump and creates a small surfable hole.  At high water a nice flat surfing wave opens up here (see photos).

The whitewater take-out is below the Hump near the highway 20 bridge on the river-right side up a steep bank. That access is obtained by driving west on Highway 20 until you cross the bridge; look for the first dirt road on your right, drive in and find a park. No guarantees on the vandalism/theft factor at this location - cruiser traffic is heavy in the vicinity. You can park & play the Hump from there, however.

The second access point, if you don't mind wallowing through another couple miles of flat water, is to take out at the abandoned Settles Bridge. This is a marginally safer place to leave a car and ends the run with a nice leisurely float  that cruisers will love and players will hate. Take Suwanee Dam road south for a couple miles past highway 20 and turn right on Johnson Road. Drive another mile and turn right at the stop sign onto Settles Bridge Road just before you would enter the big housing development. The road immediately turns to dirt; look for the small brown Chattahoochee NRA sign. It dead-ends a half mile down in a recently-improved gravel parking area. Walk down to the river for a look at the ruined steel bridge; that's your landmark for takeout.

Here's some wisdom from Will Gosney concerning the conditions during a dam release:

"Special care should be taken by newer paddlers (if you are not comfortable on class III swift & turbulent water) during dam releases. The water level, especially near the dam will rise about 4 feet and triple in speed within the space of less than 30 minutes. Special care should be taken if you are in a shoal area as the difficulty will increase dramatically as the water level rises. At the full height of the release, the rapids tend to wash out, so if you are caught in a mid release situation, get to a safe area on shore or in a good eddy and wait for the water to rise fully. Do not get out on a mid stream rock as they will disappear underwater and a hydraulic will develop where the rock was. Keep in mind that if you put on shortly (within an hour or so) of the release, you can actually out paddle the bubble and arrive at the hump rapid when it is at mid release. At that stage, the difficulty may bump up to III/IV; it develops a river wide hydraulic and the eddy behind the big rock becomes turbulent and whirlpool like. At mid release, the left side of the island increases to class III+.

On this run at full release, the swift currents provide a very limited amount of rescue recovery potential and paddlers should be prepared to gather swimmers into their boats mid stream using advanced rescue techniques. Most eddies disappear and the shoreline develops more strainers. The water is very cold, this will lead to an increased risk of hypothermia and possible drowning if a speedy rescue is not made."


StreamTeam Status: unverified
Last Updated: 2006-02-14 20:02:57

Search Results

Photos/Videos 1- of 6

Photo#10862


  Chattahoochee GA
(65.07KB .jpeg)

Photo#10863


  Chattahoochee GA
(56.94KB .jpeg)

Photo#10864


  Chattahoochee GA
(54.09KB .jpeg)

My 1st swim


My 1st swim  Chattahoochee GA
(900.05KB .bmp)

Rookie on the River


Rookie on the River  Chattahoochee GA
(900.05KB .bmp)

Greg Simpson playing on "the hump"


Greg Simpson playing on "the hump"  Chattahoochee GA
(67.07KB .jpeg)

1

This topic does not exist yet

You’ve followed a link to a topic that doesn’t exist yet.

If permissions allow (as a AW Member, you may edit River Wiki, for example) you may create it by using the “Create This Page Button” below by hovering your mouse over the edit wrench.

If you don’t see a wrench, you don’t have permission to edit or edit is turned off.

If you don’t know what you are doing click on the sandbox and instructions link off the create page link.

Gauge

Gauge Description:

This gauge records direct release levels at the dam. Notice it usually gets turned on for a few hours a day then goes to zilch. During extended periods of rain the releases are more continuous and can be huge on occasion. Get daily pre-release info by dialing the Buford Dam info number: 770-945-1466.

Chattahoochee R at Buford Dam [ GA ]

Current Conditions

Stage Flow Updated
-0.59 590 8/21 23:45

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
GA Chattahoochee— 5 - Middle Hooch - Buford Dam to Highway 20 I-II(III) 590 cfs   med 8/21 23:45

Station Description

AW Gauge ID:1053
USGS Station:02334430
HUC:03130001
Latitude:34.1569
Longitude:-84.0789
Class:-1

WXPort

News





icon of message No guide books for this stream. If you know of a book that describes this stream please contact and advise the StreamTeam member for this run.

User Comments

2008-06-21 10:23:36 (61 days ago)
Directions given are not correct. From Ga20 take Swanee Dam north until it ends at Buford Dam Road. Make a left on Buford Dam and make first left onto dirt road after crossing the dam Edit
2008-01-15 05:40:04 (219 days ago)
in case you haven't picked up on this already, if you run this section at full release, there is NO place to get out of your boat. the banks of the river become a continuous strainer and the water is freezing. the river is not hard and there isn't much whitewater, but if you screw the pooch on this one, there are incredible consequences if you are unprepared...that being said, learn how to t-boat rescue (even if you kayak and can roll) and run it with a few friends low first, then high. Edit
2007-08-27 09:05:24 (360 days ago)
The parking lot at Settles Bridge has been vastly improved. There is now a nice ramp that makes getting your boat to your car much easier. We have been paddling this section of the river for five years now. The only negative we see is the increased amount of tube riders due to the opening of an outfitters on Hwy 20. Edit
2006-03-29 14:55:02 (876 days ago)
Will GosneyDetails
Jus a couple more comments since this came up on <br /> the GCA list.<br /> Google map for shuttle directions:<br /> http://tinyurl.com/p3btg<br /> http://maps.google.com/maps?<br /> oi=map&amp;q=1250+Buford+Dam+Road,+Buford,+GA+<br /> 30518<br /> <br /> If you are a new boater and you hear the dam release <br /> warnings what to do? If you are in an area that has <br /> any whitewater, proceed downstream and find a good <br /> area to exit the river for a while. Get up on the bank <br /> above the high water lines. Do not get on a <br /> midstream rock. The water comes up as much as 4-6 <br /> feet. If you are very near the dam, exit the river as <br /> quickly as possible and wait for the water to come all <br /> the way up, usually within the hour. They usually give <br /> the warnings up to 1/2 or so hour before the release. <br /> It usually takes 1- 1 1/2 hours for the release to reach <br /> GA 20. After the water comes up, consider the other <br /> notes I wrote above. <br /> The release water usually washes most everything out <br /> and if you know where the GA 20 rapid is, you can get <br /> out in the large pool above and scout or walk the <br /> rapid.<br /> This is a great run for those really hot days in the <br /> summer when you want to cool down. The water is <br /> always very cold and cools the valley down a few <br /> degrees. If it is not mid summer hot day, dress <br /> accordingly.<br /> Will Gosney<br /> 770-560-3600
2005-12-14 21:39:23 (981 days ago)
Ben HarbinDetails
Put in directions:&lt;br /&gt;<br /> Begin traveling West on Buford Dam road from Buford toward Cumming.&lt;br /&gt;<br /> While crossing the dam you will pass the closed intake parking lot on your right. There will be a hard right turn immediately after the parking lot. The dirt road to the put in is on your left in this curve. Follow the road to the boat ramp. &lt;br /&gt;<br /> &lt;br /&gt;<br /> Call for the release schedule before putting in. The water is very cold all year.
2005-08-29 21:30:59 (1088 days ago)
MIke vecchioDetails
can anyone give me directions from the put in I would like to try this one.
2005-05-06 09:45:43 (1203 days ago)
Russell BaileyDetails
5/1/2005<br /> We did a nice paddle from Settle's Bridge to the dam and back at minimal release. Portaged up river left channel at the rapid above GA 20. About 2.5 hrs up and 1 hr down. Easier but longer than going up Metro Hooch. Going up the river left side of Bowman's Island is easier. Very pretty - lots of fishermen near the dam.<br /> <br /> Have done same at full release but not as pleasant - better waves to play, but freight-train current and you miss the super clear water quality of minimal release.
Add a Comment

Rapid Summary

Mile Rapid Name Class Features (Legend)
1.0Bowman's IslandII
2.5The HumpII+Takeout Playspot

Rapid Descriptions

Bowman's Island (Class II, Mile 1.0)
Shoals on either side of the island.

The Hump (Class II+, Mile 2.5)
Rock ledge extending from left bank with 2 chutes. Right chute is an S-turn; left pours into a hole.


AW Membership Status

Please join AW.

To enjoy extra features of this website please register by clicking here.No permissions.

Volunteer Opportunities / Activities

StreamTeam

Steve ReachDetails
Brad RobertsDetails
...

Disclaimer Data Sources

EPA Surf This Watershed

USGS Page for This Station

NPS GA Rivers Inventory


Journal Archive Articles



 River Alert  
 State News  
 River Links  
  (RSS)  
  (KML)help  
  (mobile)  
 River Info (mobile)