Accident Database

Report ID#68272

2010-09-20
accident date
n/a
victim
n/a
victim age
Gauley (7
river
7 (Upper). Summersville Dam to Mason Branch
section
Fingernail Rock Rapid
location
n/a
gage
n/a
water level
N/A
river difficulty
Pinned in Boat Against Strainer
cause code(s)
n/a
injury type(s)
n/a
factors
Private
trip type
Raft
boat type
status?
status

Description

Non-Witness Narrative by (do not publish name) on 2010-09-20 (okay to publish): FAYETTE COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) 9-20-2010 — A swift water rescue is taking place Monday evening on the Gauley River where a whitewater rafter fell into the river earlier. Firefighters tell us the person fell into the water in the Wood’s Ferry Landing area around 3:30 p.m. Monday. Crews will continue to search the river until dark. No other information is being released. This is the second rafting accident on the Gauley River in the last few days. A woman died in an unrelated incident during the weekend. UPDATE 9/20/10 @ 8:15 p.m. — Here are more details about a missing whitewater rafter in the Gauley River, according to a news release issued by the U.S. National Park Service: At approximately 1:50 p.m. (Monday), National Park Service rangers received a report of a 21-year-old male in a private raft who disappeared while running the Fingernail Rapid on the Gauley River. Fingernail Rapid is located about 7.5 miles below the Lake Summerville Dam. National Park Service swiftwater rescue personnel, Kesler Cross Lanes Volunteer firefighters, Nicholas County Sheriff’s department divers, and the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources responded to the scene and conducted a search of the area. The raft has been recovered. However, initial search efforts for the victim were unsuccessful, and the National Park Service made a request for a reduction in the river flow. The Army Corps of Engineers at the Summersville Dam commenced a progressive draw down of the Gauley River at approximately 3 p.m. to reduce the amount of water cascading through the river corridor. Normal river flows at the time of the accident were about 2,800 cubic feet per second. The draw down to about 300 cubic feet per second is allowing searchers and divers to begin working in the pools in and around the Fingernail Rapid. Search operations are ongoing.