Moose
3. Bottom: Fowlersville to Lyons Falls
| Difficulty | V |
| Length | 4 mi |
| Avg Gradient | 72 fpm |
| Gauge | Moose River at Mckeever Ny |
| Flow Rate as of 1 hour | 4.63 ftmedium runnable |
| Reach Info Last Updated | April 7, 2021 |
Projects
Once Great Rivers Await Restoration The mighty rivers of the Adirondack Region have been dammed and dewatered for more than a century. Once vibrant and free flowing, dams have damaged the natural river ecosystems of the region, home to diverse aquatic and terrestrial life. The Adirondack Region is renowned [...]Read More
River Description
2020 Release Dates:
Spring: April 19*, 26* May 3*, 9-10**, 16-17, 23-24, 30-31 June 6-7
Fall: October 4, 11, 16-18, 24-25
*Currently cancelled releases due to Covid concerns: 4/16, 4/23 and 5/3
**The weekend release of 5/9-5/10 will be re-evaluated as necessary
Bottom Moose River Guide Video Bottom Bottom Moose River Guide Video
All boaters planning to paddle the Bottom Moose Releases are required to sign-in at the power station office (located between Agers Falls and the take-out overlooking the right left side of Crystal) before accessing the river. On release days a sign reading 'Whitewater recreation sign-in' is placed by the side of the road at the entrance to the office. Click here for the details.
OVERVIEW
Paddlers should have Class 4 skills if they want to have fun on the Bottom Moose at normal and Class 5 at higher flows.
Releases occur on weekends in October and April-May.
Summer time on the Moose is a local favorite. The river becomes more like a traditional creek at low water, opening new lines, and giving beginners a chance to learn on warm reliable class 4-5. The run stops after double drop without the releases once the river is below 4-4.5 feet, but with more and different lines this is not a problem. Once the river drops below traditional levels the power company is unable to produce power and river is low but runnable from below Agers Falls to Magilla.
DIRECTIONS
From the West:
From the NY Thruway, take Exit 33 (Rome). Head right from the ramp, taking Rte. 365 East, t
...River Features
Putin
Putin river right or river left, upstream of Fowlersville Falls. You can run one rapid just a hundred yards above the road, if you wish or put in at the bridge and start your day off with a Fowlersville Fling.
For those looking for a bigger challenge find the ramp hidden in the woods. Be sure not to land too flat and don't try it under 3ft!
Fowlersville Falls
Starts with a bang!
This photogenic baby is a huuuge slide, with a terminal hole in the middle. The hole is easy enough to avoid; at normal levels, everyone runs this on the left--and then maybe they climb up and run it again, because nobody got them on video the first time.
At 3ft or below the center and right lines open up.
Funnel
Technical, with a diamond-splitter rock at the bottom. The rock becomes exposed at levels below about 3 feet. It's best to bang through a hole toward the right and ride the channel to the right of the diamond-splitter.
There's an optional boof for those who want to provide carnage for their video-wielding buds. (See the photos on the right for the boof and the effects of a blown boof; click on the photos for the full-sized version.) Boof is best at and below 3ft
Knife's Edge
Scout from the river-right sloping rock face.
The standard line here is the S-curve: ride a very narrow shelf on far river-right, then to drop off the shelf and snake your way between two large boulders (first photo on the right). The middle route, just left of the first boulder, is dangerous at low water, as there's a nasty pothole which caused a fatality in 1987 (see the rescue, second photo on the right). Finally, for the adventuresome, there's a niche boof way river right. Better not drop off the shelf early, as you'll be in a world of hurt in the rocky channel down there. If you don't like the look of the rapid, there's a sneak to the river left of the whole thing.
Difficulty ranges from II-V+ depending on flow and line
Double Drop
Technical, with a couple of holes. After the pool following this rapid is the mandatory portage at the power plant.
Double Drop begins with a right-to-left snaking line around some holes (first photo--click on photo for the full-sized version),...and ends with a boof in the middle or left (second photo--click on photo for the full-sized version).
Portage
Get out and walk around the dam. This is also the takeout if you're running the 'Bottom,' which paddlers often do when there's enough water to run the first four rapids but no scheduled release--and therefore not enough water to run the 'Bottom Bottom.'
Be careful, especially in winter. This might be the most dangerous thing you do all day.
Ager's Falls
One of the easier 18-footers around. There is some minor complexity to the runout, but this waterfall can be run just about everywhere. That's why there are so many photos of people running it two and three at a time.
Shurform
Right Channel: Steep, long, shallow, and technical. If you mess up the approach, you get up close and personal with a rocky mess in the middle. The approach is most easily run by punching a small but deceptively squirrelly wave and getting left. Stay high and to the left before dropping down at the very end. Another option is to run just right of the rooster tail.
Left Channel: Oh, yes: if you go left of the island, then it's really technical, with an undercut rock and a pitonat the bottom. Rate that line a 5.1. Come into the bottom facing 45* right and charging along the diagonal right, or stay left and try to ride over the peton just outside the under-cut.
Powerline
Nicest, easiest rapid that draws the most blood on the river. Read and run down the center working right if you aren't comfortable. Otherwise the eddy moves are a lot of fun (until you miss one that is) Careful of the pourover rock at the bottom.
Crystal
Whoa, Momma! This is one of the most visually impressive rapids in the East. From a rock at the bottom of the rapid, you can see it snake around for a quarter mile. It begins with a horseshoe hole which can mess with you, your boat, and your plans for the future. Typical, at normal levels, is to boof it left, as in the picture at the right (you know what to do: click on photo for the full-sized version).
Then, deal with the squirrelwater to line up for the final drop, a fifteen-footer with a spanky hole at the bottom. At low water (less than 2.5), it's really important to avoid penciling in on the right--the rock is exposed and ankle-breaking. At higher water (3.0+), it's harder to make the right-to-left move for the final Falls--but the middle line opens up, so you can bump'n'grind down that if need be.
Whoa, Momma!, this is a fun one!
Another low water option is to start on the eddy on river right above the horseshoes, ferry left into the pothole eddy between the horseshoes, then drop down.
Magilla
This one's optional; many paddlers take out before it, and it may not have any water even when the rest of the Moose is running. (It's dependent on yet another dam release.)
It kinda looks like Gorilla on the Green, but it's not as big a drop and the approach isn't so nasty. Nonetheless, don't drop your guard on the approach, either. It's not quite trivial--as seen in the first photo to the right (you know what to do: click on the photo for the full-sized version).
The second photo shows the preferred boof off the drop.
You can also run the middle channel off Magilla--just right of the normal boof line. That's extremely tight; it's easy to bang your elbows on the rock walls on the way down (don't ask how I know).
Matilda is another spout off the shelf. Enter a few feet right off the dam wall on the left. The landing isn't bad at higher flows, but brutal at low water (locals walk the dam and run the drop). The water constricts into a slotted channel and quickly snakes around to the lip. Take a few strokes left to try to get centered as you roll off the top of the lip.
Takeout
Takeout on River Right, either before Magilla or after.
Spine Compressor
Below the next dam pond is a dam on the right under a green bridge. This is the top of Spine Compressor, a seldom run drop that requires either very high flows, or heavily damaged splash boards. Go center on the dam and continue down a small wave train towards the lip. Be sure to hit the crease where there is the most flow right of center. A strong boof stomped at the last moment is the only way to have a soft landing. At most there is 2ft of fast moving water down there. The hole after the drop is no joke, be ready for a huge hit. Once you recover another drop is around the bend before you get to a camp site on the right.
Trip Reports
Log in to add a reportThis spreadsheet was transcribed from the USGS survey in March of 1964. Actual measurements were only made for the ranges from 1.5-3.7. Above 3.7 values were calculated (estimated).
from FB 5.24.2016
Mike Webster Yes. Except for Moose Fest in October, releases increase the flow over Agers and down. Generally a Moose release can not effect the river above Agers. General?
Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs · Edited
Eric Adsit
Eric Adsit Between 2.2 (ish) and 5.5 feet on the McKeever gauge, if the dam is online and no release is scheduled, there will be no water from the Portage dam down. Below 2.5 and above 5.5, some water is allowed to pass through into the Bottom Bottom, but if it's below 2.4 it's not really worth doing.The Top 4 run with natural flow all the time, but as Mike said, during October Moosefest they get a bump up from the draw down of the Fulton Chain of lakes.
Unlike · Reply · 3 · 22 hrs
Jeremy Poulin
Jeremy Poulin That being said,there is a release this coming weekend
Like · Reply · 22 hrs
Sam Bernstein
Sam Bernstein The dam occasionally goes offline as well in which case the section just becomes undamned essentially I believe. Happened last fall for several weeks.
Like · Reply · 20 hrs
Chris Koll
Chris Koll A Bottom Moose release simply means that some or all of the water in the river is allowed to spill over the dam at Agers. During a typical release, they'll spill around 600 CFS (which is about 3'). Obviously, if the river is under 3'--the spill is less. When the river is higher--say around 4'--they'll continue to divert some water which keeps the Bottom four more manageable.
Unlike · Reply · 1 · 19 hrs
Running the dam. Moose fest 2011 I think.
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest
Moose River Fest