josh lerner you can run this creek at lower water and only have to portage elephant ear which lands
on rocks. seems clean at the right level Edit
2009-03-05 05:51:24 (1072 days ago)
In the the early 1980s, (84?) David Huntley and I (Gary Mims) paddled most of this section. I was
in a Perception Mirage. On the day of our run Wilson Creek was running 3 feet plus on the old metal
bridge. We wanted to do Lost Cove, but couldn't figure out a put-in. We looked at a topo map &
decided to give N-Fork Catawba headwaters a shot. It was steep and gnarly, more trouble than fun,
and I never figured anyone would ever go in there again. I do remember running a few high clean
drops and a stair-steps type rapid. I don't consider the runs in those days real "first decents,"
because we usually portaged everything that at the time looked class V. Similarly, we ran Upper
Green back then, and portaged/cheated about all the "Dirty Dozen" rapids in the Narrows except
Frankenstein (unamed then and easier because you could paddle through the cave, right of the
undercut, the area now clogged with deadfall.) and Hammer Factor. At that time HF was called "Fish
Top Falls," and had been run by numerous kayakers who carried up from the lower green put-in.
Things do change. Edit
Southeast<br>
Upper Fork of the Catawba<br>
<br>
As of press time, the Upper North Fork of the Catawba near Linville Caverns, N.C., had only been
run five times, most of the descents taking place in spring 1998. And for good reason. The section,
which starts two miles from Linville Falls, occupies the extreme upper reaches of the Catawba and
rages towards sea level at a whopping 450 feet per mile. With the entire Catawba watershed
beginning only a mile upstream, the section runs maybe twice a year, requiring at least seven or
eight inches of rain.<br>
<br>
The run was pioneered in the fall of '97 by Banner Elk, N.C., locals Doug Helms, Brent Meadows,
Franklin Smith, Jim Little, Quinn Slocumb, Chris Sumrell and Sherwood Horine. The group put in
below the first falls, a 50-foot slide into an undercut wall and large hole, which was run last
spring by Daniel De La Vergne, Brad Kee, Eamonn McCullough, B.J. Johnson and Katie Nietert. The
main gorge below the 50-footer includes four series of falls. The first is called Shotgun Willie,
consisting of a four-foot entrance drop into a six-foot slide into an eight-foot slide into a
12-foot vertical drop into a 20-foot stairstep drop. As if it needs more, the river then courses
through a log-strewn boulder garden before entering the next rapid, Elephant Ear, a 15-foot drop
into a must-make eddy. Colt 45 comes next, the section's only unrun rapid, which local Spencer
Cooke describes as "a big meat cleaver with a bony entrance and a recirculating hole at the
bottom in a four-foot-wide area in a cave." The section's final waterfall is THC, featuring a
six-foot-wide entrance into a 25-foot drop. --edb<br>
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User Comments
on rocks. seems clean at the right level Edit
in a Perception Mirage. On the day of our run Wilson Creek was running 3 feet plus on the old metal
bridge. We wanted to do Lost Cove, but couldn't figure out a put-in. We looked at a topo map &
decided to give N-Fork Catawba headwaters a shot. It was steep and gnarly, more trouble than fun,
and I never figured anyone would ever go in there again. I do remember running a few high clean
drops and a stair-steps type rapid. I don't consider the runs in those days real "first decents,"
because we usually portaged everything that at the time looked class V. Similarly, we ran Upper
Green back then, and portaged/cheated about all the "Dirty Dozen" rapids in the Narrows except
Frankenstein (unamed then and easier because you could paddle through the cave, right of the
undercut, the area now clogged with deadfall.) and Hammer Factor. At that time HF was called "Fish
Top Falls," and had been run by numerous kayakers who carried up from the lower green put-in.
Things do change. Edit
filmed when B.J johnson and his group ran it.
Upper Fork of the Catawba<br>
<br>
As of press time, the Upper North Fork of the Catawba near Linville Caverns, N.C., had only been
run five times, most of the descents taking place in spring 1998. And for good reason. The section,
which starts two miles from Linville Falls, occupies the extreme upper reaches of the Catawba and
rages towards sea level at a whopping 450 feet per mile. With the entire Catawba watershed
beginning only a mile upstream, the section runs maybe twice a year, requiring at least seven or
eight inches of rain.<br>
<br>
The run was pioneered in the fall of '97 by Banner Elk, N.C., locals Doug Helms, Brent Meadows,
Franklin Smith, Jim Little, Quinn Slocumb, Chris Sumrell and Sherwood Horine. The group put in
below the first falls, a 50-foot slide into an undercut wall and large hole, which was run last
spring by Daniel De La Vergne, Brad Kee, Eamonn McCullough, B.J. Johnson and Katie Nietert. The
main gorge below the 50-footer includes four series of falls. The first is called Shotgun Willie,
consisting of a four-foot entrance drop into a six-foot slide into an eight-foot slide into a
12-foot vertical drop into a 20-foot stairstep drop. As if it needs more, the river then courses
through a log-strewn boulder garden before entering the next rapid, Elephant Ear, a 15-foot drop
into a must-make eddy. Colt 45 comes next, the section's only unrun rapid, which local Spencer
Cooke describes as "a big meat cleaver with a bony entrance and a recirculating hole at the
bottom in a four-foot-wide area in a cave." The section's final waterfall is THC, featuring a
six-foot-wide entrance into a 25-foot drop. --edb<br>