Sawyer River
Livermore
| Difficulty | V |
| Length | 3.2 mi |
| Avg Gradient | 190 fpm |
| Gauge | Saco River at River Street, at Bartlett, Nh |
| Flow Rate as of 1 hour | 3010 cfsabove recommended |
| Reach Info Last Updated | May 2, 2018 |
River Description
This run is so good that at least two New England paddling legends have named their first born son after it. It is characterized by long boulder garden rapids with a few distinct larger drops mixed in for good measure. At lower flows it is a great condensed collection of class IV+ drops, at higher flows the whole river seems to melt together into one continuous rowdy class V rapid.
Directions and history from: Greg and Sue Hanlon's Steep Creeks of New England, which has more info on this run. Text used with permission.
Park on the North side of Rte. 302 next to the highway bridge which crosses the Sawyer. From late fall through Spring it is necessary to shoulder your boat 3+ miles upstream to the hikers' lot, which is the normal putin. Hey: sometimes you gotta want your whitewater! The dirt road is usually open to the public during the Summer (when there is usually no water.) Go to the National Forest Services ' Forest Road Status' to find out if and when the access road is open.
The first known run of the Sawyer was April 24, 1992, by Boyce Greer, J.J. Valera, Greg Hanlon, Bill and Joan Hildreth after scouting and removing several trees at low water.'
Hanlon cautions that the Sawyer tends to collect logs. 'Beware!'
The Sawyer River is among the best class V runs in all the northeast. The continuous steep gradient over and around massive boulders will challenge the best paddlers.
River Features
House
House rapid is behind the house on the road up, and is often where people put-in. Though people used to run the left, after the floods a few years back, the flow has been pushed over to the right side. The rapid is a large slide into a giant boulder which splits the flow. Some water goes left down a manky ledge, a little water goes under the rock, and most of the flow goes out right down another, smaller slide. The bottom of this slide has a hole that tends to keep people who mess up on the upper part of the rapid. If you keep your bow right throughout the rapid, without drying out on the rock, you should have a great start to the trip down the Sawyer.
Take Out
Trip Reports
Log in to add a reportNate Warren at House Rapid
Nate Warren at House Rapid2
Attacking the Death Star
Re: the currently painted gauge on the upstream side of the bridge. Probably the same one you're referring to. Ran it at almost 4' today, that's really high. Be on your game and be prepared to portage or at least set safety at least once. 5' is probably nuts, although hard to say for sure.
Drove by and noticed a new gauge rock on the Sawyer (26 Aug 2008), river right upstream of the 302 bridge. Looks like 0 is around minimum and 5 is fairly high. Thanks to whomever!
Don't take the rapid name seriously, the entire river is continous with no way to define every drop.
Don't take the rapid name seriously, the entire river is continous with no way to define every drop. Only micro eddie seperate one drop from the other.
Don't take the rapid name seriously, the entire river is continous with no way to define every drop. Only micro eddie seperate one drop from the other.
Don't take the rapid name seriously, the entire river is continous with no way to define every drop. Only micro eddie seperate one drop from the other.
The Put IN
Bones Down the Line