Elkhorn Creek
Forks of Elkhorn, Church lot below US460 Bridge to Knight's Bridge on KY1900 (6 miles)(Elkhorn Gorge)
July 26, 2011
Trip Report
| Reporter | chris stoops |
7/25/11 600 CFS Trip Report.
The night before Elkhorn was running at 1000 CFS and so my brother and I made plans to run Elkhorn the next day. We thought the level would be around 700 CFS by the time we put in. I have run it at 700 CFS and Surf City was pretty good at that level. We ran it a few days later at 800 CFS and Surf City was great at that level. I once ran Elkhorn at 500 CFS in a Coleman raft and swore I would never run it at that level again. Much later I ran it at 350 CFS and had a blast, which made me think 500 CFS might be a good level as long as you're in a kayak.
We decided to use Canoe Kentucky for a shuttle. They charged us $25 for two kayaks and at 1p.m. they have you follow them to the AW takeout and then haul you and your stuff to the put-in. We figured the campground charges $4 for parking, and so subtract that from the $25 and you are left with $21, which is about what we would have spent on gas bringing another vehicle anyhow(it's 100 miles of driving including the shuttle).
Church Wave was a total bust, but we found a couple rope swings before the dam and had a good time with that. It had rained earlier and I said I bet Elkhorn will be at 1000 CFS tomorrow, and it turned out I was right. Before the dam there is a cool cascade on river left and we decided to hike up it. The cold water on our feet felt great and eventually we got to a spring. I washed my face in the water and it smelled like gasoline, my brother thought so also.
The surf wave on river right after the dam was at it's prime in a way. It gets bigger at higher levels, but at 600 CFS, not only was it big, but it also had eddy service. It required a very strong brace to keep you from turning and flushing out of it.
There was a cool waterfall that was about 10 feet wide and 30 feet tall. It only took us 30 seconds to hike up the hill to check it out, and it was so cold that I'm sure it's spring fed.
S-turn was pretty weak, but at least the lateral wave was in, which I surfed all along as it flushed me out.
Lunch Stop was also a bust, and so was Surf City. We hung out at Surf City anyhow just to lay in the creek and cool off. There was a tiny surf wave on river right, but it wasn't much at all. The Angioplasty side had more water, but Angioplasty was not in at all.
The wave directly after the large boulder on river right(this rapid needs a name and it needs to be added to AW) was in. The level was low enough that I could finally see what causes this wave; a large drop forces a ton of flow directly at a V shaped 2 foot ledge. This wave gets huge at higher levels, but at 600 CFS it was almost more of a hole than a wave. I tried surfing the wave and water from both sides of the V filled me up and it took a lot of effort just to get out of it.
The 2 mile section through the woods moved along great for the first half, but the second half is so slow. As slow as it was, we were still able to just lay around in our boats and let the current do all the work. By the end of the trip we were pretty exhausted due to a climbing and caving trip we did the day before.
All in all it was a great trip, escaping the summer heat, and at least we got to surf it up at the Dam Rapid. During the flat water stretches we took lots of swims and we would float down the creek letting our PFDs do all the work while we put our feet on top of our boats, our bodies in a hammock like position.