White Water Rafting, anyone?
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Gauley River, West Virginia. Labor day til end middle of october. |
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Steve |
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I was a raft guide for several years as well as a kayaker for 17 years. I would have agree with Ladd that the Gauley is one of the best rafting trips to get on. I would also highly recommend the upper Yough and the Russell Fork (which is very close to the Red River Gorge). Out west, I would say the Gore Canyon. |
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I went with my family a while ago on a Grand Canyon rafting trip down the Colorado river and had a great time we went with Crate. I highly recommend it to anyone wanting to see the Grand Canyon up close and personal. It was nice because we just brought our clothes and they took care of the rest, and the food was excellent. I remember some really good rapids when I went.. I think it was in the spring? I want to go again soon, but I have 3 little kids now so it makes it a bit harder to find time lol. That being said maybe as they get a little older I will give it a shot again. |
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I white-water paddled (C-1 and Open Canoe) for nearly 20 years and did the Middle Fork of the Salmon in ID 3 times, each time when we got to the take out (confluence with the Main Salmon) I felt I could have thrown my paddle onto the ground and walked away from my canoe and never paddle again because I just "knew" I'd never be on a more beautiful river! (Including the Grand Canyon, but that's also on any paddler's "must do" list.) |
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The best known challenging trips on earth are: |
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It is hard to plan a long ways out because of fluctuating river levels but if we are mentioning awesome white water rivers, the Illinois river in Oregon is 30 miles of world class hard but not too scary rapids. Lots of cool 8-12 ft drops, great scenery and low crowds. |
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The Snake through Hells Canyon for big water. Take your time, though. Many people do it in one or two nights. I like to take 4 or 5 and enjoy it. Don’t do a “jet back” either. That is a good way to erase a good trip. |
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Jaren Watson wrote: Rafting and kayaking were amazing sports until around 1995. Now they’re like to the DMV. Despite the mp norm, this is the ONLY worthless contribution to this thread (and now mine is the second). Seems boaters don't uphold a similar ygd, get out of my sport, I have nothing better to do than troll mentally. I have dreamt of kayaking for years, but can't seem to manage the initial leap while maintaining climbing, biking, skiing. Thanks for the stoke and trip recs everyone else has provided! |
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Jaren Watson wrote: I didn't say I knew. Based on this thread which is 30 nice comments to your 1, vs the normal mp beginner climbing thread that is typically the opposite ratio, plus comments in this thread explaining the boater comradery, it's a reasonable observation to make as someone interested in the sport. Next time just start with the useful info explaining why your bitter and try to minimize the whiney back in my day complaining. |
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Thanks for sharing your thoughts and some reasons behind them. I think that sublime moment can sometimes outweigh all the hurdles. Conversely I am very adverse to crowds in my outdoor recreation. It's a good point to be considere since it's not feasible to hike in a kayak. Maybe pack rafting is the answer? |
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The boating community in Oregon is super freindly. More so than the climbing community which is already really good. I solo world class creeks even on the weekends. If Some folks are there already it feels like its assumed we will all boat together. |
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Hello, I just created an account on Mountain project website. I live In Louisiana. I'm looking for a group to go whitewater rafting with. Can anyone point me in the right direction? |
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Robert Hall wrote: Cheat River Outfitters are the go-to folks for northern WV. The Cheat Canyon is a 14 mile wilderness run with 30-some named rapids. The Cheat Narrows are a super fun, but short, run—and the Dry Fork of the Cheat (not to far from Seneca Rocks) is a surfers paradise. Really anything on the Cheat is going to be a blast. I have the RMR Storm and it seems like a perfect size for the local runs around where I live. The North Fork of the South Branch and the Smokehole Canyon aren't too crazy, but incredibly scenic and we do a lot of overnight trips on them. |
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Anyone else ever boated the Lochsa River in Idaho? Made a trip each of the last four years for high water pre-guiding season and its mega! Low consequence (unless you find yourself in Wolf Fang Falls or Hospital Hole) massive class 4 wave trains. |
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Kyle Mills wrote: Any chance you've run the North Fork of the Blackwater downstream from Thomas? It looks super fun (and super technical!) when the water is running high but I've never been brave enough to give it a go. |
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ubu wrote: Nope, that's well above my paygrade! I don't really kayak much at all. If it's to stout for my WW canoe I jump in the raft lol. |
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Just be careful not to get too addicted. Don't be like me and spend all spring, summer, fall raft guiding and losing everything I gained climbing over the last 3 years. |