Niagara, New York, US |
|
| Usual Difficulty | V+ (for normal flows) |
|---|---|
| Length | 7 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 65 fpm |
Ain't no legal putin on this here stretch of water. 'Tis a pity.
Lat / Longitude data are very approximate.
The New York State Department of Parks, by regulation, prohibits launching a boat from park property, which is the only feasible access from the US side to the rapids above the whirlpool. The old regulation provided for the issuance of permits and it was that regulation that boaters exploited to gain access in 1987. Subsequently, the regulation was modified to adopt an absolute boating prohibition above the whirlpool. American Whitewater was unsuccessful in our challenge to that regulation. There have been some efforts to secure legislation or a revised regulation that would permit limited access, but, to date, they have been unsuccessful.
History of river-running in the Niagara Gorge: Captain Joel Robinson navigated the first Maid of the Mist steamer through the rapids on June 6, 1861, as he had a date to sell the craft if he could get it to Lake Ontario. In those pre-hydro days, the flow was 250,000 cfs.
In 1976, two intrepid entrepreneurs began commercial rafting in the Gorge. This enterprise came to a halt when a raft flipped on their twelfth run. There were four drownings.
In October 1982, for a taping of The American Sportsman, Chris Spelius, Don Deedon, Carrie Ashton, and Kenneth Lagergren managed a run (watch the video).
In October 1987, permits were issued for four groups. The first included Pete Skinner, Bob Baker and his brother Al, Bob Glanville, Gibbs Johnson, Chris Koll, John Maxwell, and Marty McCormick. One had Skinner and Maxwell joining Nolan Whitesell's open boat. Another included Risa and Woody Callaway; and the last group included Spelius and Davey Hearn. (This from a report in the Nov/Dec 1987 AW Journal.) Access was then denied, and there has been no resumption.
Pete Skinner wrote up a run of the Gorge in First Descents: in Search of Wild Rivers (Cameron O'Connor and John Lazenby, eds., Menasha Ridge Press, 1989).
Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls is unrunnable, but people are always wondering about it and asking questions about
it. So here goes:
In 1990, Jesse Sharp attempted to run the Falls in a C-1. His effort resulted in a very public
disaster. Here's a link to the
AW accident report in the AW Safety Database.
Photos of his run can be accessed by clicking here.
The "First Descent" of Niagara Falls is credited to Annie Edson Taylor, a schoolteacher who dropped over the Falls in a barrel on October 24, 1901. Click here for one of the many versions of her story. Many daredevils have followed; most have survived, but many have not. On July 9,1960, 7-year-old Roger Woodward was swept over the Falls (in a PFD) following a boating accident. He miraculously survived; read about it by clicking here.
| When | River/Gauge | Subject | Level | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Niagara [NY] |
Running the falls |
n/a | Jonathan Janicki | |
| 3y192d08h10m | Niagara River [ON] |
Upper Rapids |
100,000 cfs | Jason Kleebeger |
| 6y210d16h10m | Niagra [NY] |
Running American Falls |
125,000 cfs | Jim Wei |
| 6y307d16h10m | ??? River [??] |
What's this Rapid? |
standard | Matt Muir |
| > 10 years | Niagara [NY] |
Big-ol' Boof |
n/a | Matt Muir |
User Comments
the TOP of the waterfall and 2) even if you manage the drop you'd never survive the undertow at the
base of the falls (think the harder bits of the Rogue River times twenty!) Edit
what you are in, kayak, tube, raft, ducky... (that would be interesting to watch). You are going to
get torn out of your boat on or before impact and if you are lucky they might find your body. Jesse
had guts but that is just suicidal.
<br>
<a href="http://broadbandsports.com/node/3521">Video Link</a>, <a href=
"http://www.exchile.com/chrisNiagaraStory.htm">Story Link</a> Edit
under the bridge you have about a half mile long rapid. A few guard holes on the top right, but you
pretty much want to be in the middle. From there, no more holes. Just huge water. Lots of massive V
waves, that cycle, build and explode from time to time. A lot of the run is going to be about luck
and timing. All the rest is just hitting your roll and not even thinking about taking a swim. There
is a slight lull between the first rapid and whirlpool. From the scout whirlpool would be best
taken left to right. You definatley DO NOT want to be on the left at the bottom or you will get
slurped by one of the most evil whirlpool boil thangs you have ever laid eyes on. Around the corner
from whirlpool is one more wave train and then some smaller rapid. According to the park, the
gradient is 54 feet per mile and the run is 1.6 kilometers.<br>
<br>
As a side note, the rapids above the falls would be a hoot, but missing the last eddy would
re-define "SUCKS".<br>
<br>
If you are ever stupid enough to run the falls, the mad dash from the canadian side would be the
way to go. You can get a car with in 100 feet of the water, and only have to hop a 4 foot tall
fence. From there, peal out and you'll have about 75 feet of fast moving flatwater before the
bottom drops out.