Tallulah
4 - Middle - Old Hwy 441 to Tallulah Falls Lake(Mathis By-Pass)
| Difficulty | II-III |
| Length | 5.7 mi |
| Avg Gradient | n/a |
| Gauge | Tallulah R at Terrora Pwrhse, Nr Tallulah Falls,ga |
| Flow Rate as of 59 minutes | 45 cfsbelow recommended |
| Reach Info Last Updated | January 11, 2005 |
River Description
On January 20th, 2002 a group of 11 boaters from the Atlanta Whitewater Club and the Georgia Canoe Association paddled a seldom run strech of the Tallulah river upstream of North Georgia's now famous Tallulah Gorge. Like the Gorge, this stretch is typically dewatered by an upstream dam and diversion tunnel. Only when strong rains bring up a large tributary is this section runnable.
In the fall of 2001 a group of Georgia boaters hiked the bypass reach, known as the Mathis Reach, with American Whitewater staff and volunteers. The group decided that with water, the section had potential as a beginner/intermediate paddling resource. Later that evening, American Whitewater met with Georgia Power and Georgia DNR and discussed the possibility of conducting a flow study on the Mathis Reach as part of the mandated review process for the Tallulah hydro license. Georgia power stated that there was no physical structure in the dam to provide releases so a flow study was impossible. We were still interested in studying the reach, since releases structures can be added at dams through relicensing.
It was decided that the most cost-effective and reasonable way to proceed was to offer to try to do a feasibility study with the limited natural flow from a tributary. It was agreed, and we contacted the boaters from the hike requesting that they attempt a descent this winter and document their experience with photos and a written report. On January 20th, after a heavy rain, they followed through on their promise.
Their descent was a low water one, but gave them an idea of what the run is like. They described the first couple miles, from the dam to the first 441 bridge as 'completely flat, and probably not worth doing, even with alot of water.' The next section, between the two 441 bridges, was more fun with a couple of small Class II slides and shoals and a decent surfing wave. Between the second 441 bridge and the lake was a 1/2 mile section of Class III whitewat
...River Features
Put In
first ledge
The first ledge gives you an idea of what the rest of the run will be like. If it is low the other drops will be low. If you get chundered in a hole the rest of the run will be big.
third ledge
The third ledge is the only true vertical drop.
Take Out
Trip Reports
Log in to add a reportRan today at 630 cfs. First time down. Was a fun run. Good level. I think 750 would be ideal. There is a tree in the last rapid, the remnants of an old dam. It's on the right side. Line seemed to be running 5 foot to the left of the root ball. The bride rapid upstream was pretty great. Definitely a class III+ at this level.
We ran this stretch in the spring, during Covid quarantine. We put in on Tiger Creek, and paddled on a flow of 730 cfs. The first half of the run is flatwater. After the first 441 bridge, there are some class II slides. After the stone bridge, the last 1/4 mile or so of the run is a continuous class IV rapid that looks nothing like the pictures. It was kind of like a rapid that would be at home on the gorge downstream. The last rapid is fun to do if you’re driving by, and looking for something different to do.
Ran it today when Chattooga was over 6 feet, Upper Tallulah was over 4000cfs, Tallulah gorge was over 2000, it was huge class 4+ if not 5 above below the bridge above the Lake. The Dam right before lake is dangerous we ran it center and far right. Far right has Metal Sticking up that punctured boat be careful scout before doing it at high water.
So, seven years later, what became of the study and its recommendations? This looks like a cool stream, it's close and I'd like to run it.
These are the ledges just below the bridge seen in the other pics.
The first of the ledges below the bridge.
The third rapid on the Middle Tallulah