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Visual
The guage information provided above is for the Lockatong, which is the nearest USGS guage and a good indicator for this run.
If it looks like enough flow to run the bottom several drops, then go for it. This little screamer needs probably 1 1//2 to 2 inches of rain to get going. If the Lockatong is hitting 1200 cfs and still going straight up or if everything else in the area (Lock, Wick, Tohican) are all way high, then Devil's Tea Table may be a go, but probably not for long since it has tiny drainage area. If you have the skills, hit this before going for high water runs on the Lock or Wick or before you jump over to runs on the PA side.
Lockatong Creek At Raven Rock [ NJ ] |
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 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NJ | Devil's Tea Table— Devil's Tea Table | V | 31 cfs | low | 12/2 12:30 | |
| NJ | Lockatong Creek— Just upstream of Idell to Raven Rock Rd. | III-IV | 2.97 feet | low | 12/2 12:30 | |
| NJ | Warford Creek— Kingwood Station-Barbertown Rd to Rt. 29 | III-IV | 31 cfs | low | 12/2 12:30 |
| AW Gauge ID: | 9460 |
| USGS Station: | 01460880 |
| HUC: | 02040105 |
| Latitude: | |
| Longitude: | |
| Class: |
User Comments |
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2008-04-15 08:28:39 (231 days ago)
Wayne Gman
Before the Tohickon releases this year (March 08) I completely removed all the wood from the Hell slot as well as cut a much larger window "through" the large creek wide strainer. Anyone who belongs on the run should be able to handle it till more wood collects. Its all easily scouted from the road.
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2008-04-15 08:20:43 (231 days ago)
Wayne Gman
A month ago this run looked low and a bit draggy. The flow didn't seem optimal. We were very concerned about the wood stuffed into the left slot 100 yrd downstream of the bridge. The point here is that this creek was very deceptive in its look from the road. Besides being bigger at creek level which I
expected the speed was way faster. If it looks fast it will be a rocket ride. At our lower level the cross over for the 7ft boof was tricky making us worry about taking the tail into the Left slot with wood for a very bad time. The large strainer a few hundred yards downstream is a major hazard with a tight passible river right line. I was told this week that the log guarding the tunnel was shifted by paddlers to open up the entry line into the tunnel.
I just adopted this AW web page to make some changes since the original creater dropped the page (jamie?) Anyway I just wanted to clean it up, add a pictures and correct the gradient from 400 to 500+ which is what our gps said was the deal....FAST RUN @ FLOW. If the creator wants to do something else with it just let me know.
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2008-01-25 12:10:18 (312 days ago)
Mark Zak
I've scouted this monkey from Warsaw Rd. before when I worked in Trenton. My initial beta indicated that this run may be called Cain's Run and/or Warsaw Creek. These names originated from the Revolutionary War. I believe the Devil's Tea Table is a far more appropriate name.
The run certainly looks to be very flashy with a mix of some boulders and mostly bedrock slides and technical drops, probably a great compliment to a follow-up high water run on the Lock, Wick, or Tohickon/Geddes. As of my last check, there were at least two formidable strainers in the steep section which might have to be removed before the spring of 08 runs.
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| Mile | Rapid Name | Class | Features (Legend) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0 | Warm Up, Above Put In Bridge | III+ | |
| 0.3 | Entry to "Right Out Of Hell" at Horizon Line | 5.0 | |
| 0.3 | Hell Slot | 5.0 | |
| 0.4 | Cloud 9 Eddy | ||
| 0.5 | Entry to the Jersey Devil | 5.0 | |
| 0.5 | Jersey Devil | IV+ | |
| 0.5 | Under Cuts | IV+ | |
| 0.7 | Exit Tunnel | 5.0 |
Till I get better pictures the scouting pictures will have to do. Pictured is the warm up class 2-3 section leading to the bridge.
I would walk up with the boat and put in just about where the upstream horizon line is. It's maybe 2 tenths of a mile above the bridge. A warm up is worth it as this creek kicks off strong just below the bridge. The whole run is about .7 miles long if starting from the "Warm Up" putin.
Everything downstream of the bridge I call class 5. It's always a wildcard how big the water will be so CL 5 fits this essentially single very long rapid.
Note the V notch shimmer of water on the river Left horizon Line. That is the entry to the very ugly Hell slot. This slot catches all the wood. I don't go anywhere near this line. I choose be hard river right. You can see the Van sized large dark unfriendly looking boulder leaning out as if undercut. (click on the picture to see clearly). I drive up over a shallow ledge right next to it and bounce into the eddy that gives me a perfect shot at "Right From Hell's" 7 foot boof. At Higher water I might cross over in front of the Hell Slot but at my lower levels I felt there was too much guard rock action going on to get right. Jeff did this cross over to right line at low flow and said it was much harder than it looked like in the scout.
Either way Drive the boof hard and try to fall off the boof rock as flat as possible. Is should just be a typical creek hit and not a painful piton even if you screw it up. The landing rock formation seems somewhat friendly. If you roll over you'll be on more rock than water to brace up.
River Left slot that often traps wood. Always check. Run rapid to the right to run the 7ft boof, "Right Out Of Hell". Cross over river Left to river Right moves in front of the Hell Slot are much more difficult than the scout would lead you to believe. I don't suggest this move (especially at lower water) if the Hell Slot is choked with wood.
The Creek starts taking off now and In 50 yards there is a break coming at the biggest eddy on creek Left. Its the only slice of heaven here at Devil's and I like to think of it as "Cloud 9". 3 boaters can fit in hear briefly but 2 or 1 is much more manageable.
Cloud 9 swirls pretty fast. A swimmers boat can easily get in here and stay in this eddy for a long time.
Once exiting the eddy be on the look out for a huge tree taking up 75% of the creek on river Left. Look to bounce down in the shallower Right side. You can see the tree coming far away to setup a good line or to get out.
The pace will increase in the middle 2 tenths of a mile so be ready for reactive combative paddling. All the eddies I saw at my Medium-Low run I typically just blew by not wanting to risk boating this beast backwards. It was very exciting reminded me of the excitement level of paddling the Blackwater and Green Narrows.
If you are not having a good time, Cloud 9 is the place to climb out.
Easy looking start to the "Jersey Devil"
Biggest Fastest section on the creek. It drops down about 20 ft in a series of small smooth ledges. What a blast!
At the top of the rapid is a triangle rock in the middle of the flow that you keep on your right. Skip in for a great ride.
The Under Cuts follow right after the Jersey Devil. Stay Left.
Towards the end the intensity of the river ramps down just a little. Its more shallow on the right and I used that to bounce and grind to a slower pace so I could really spot the log and my exit eddy. I grabbed an eddy just upstream of the log pictured so I could climb out. No trail is available. It's a short steep bushwhack. On 2/8/2008 paddlers were boating Devil's after 6 inches of rain 2/5-8/08. Paddlers reportedly have shifted the log to open up the entry into the Tunnel.
Steamkeeper Note: I just documented this creek to ellivate boater knowledge of the run. I'd love to post better pictures into the rapids description for us all. Meaningful pictures need to be taken near creek level. If I've named anything incorrectly from the perspective of the pioneers of the run just drop me an email and we'll add/delete/modify as needed. -WG
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