Maury, Virginia, US |
|
| Usual Difficulty | III+(IV) (for normal flows) |
|---|---|
| Length | 5 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 48 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 71 fpm |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAURY RIVER AT ROCKBRIDGE BATHS, VA | ||||
| usgs-02021500 | 350 - 20000 cfs | III+(IV) | 01h03m | 203 cfs (rc= -0.8 ) |
News and Notes:
See the Safety Note below about the wood in Devil's Kitchen.
Shuttle Description:
This run is almost entirely a roadside trip. Route 39 runs
basically beside the river for almost all of the run. Above Indian Pool the land is state property - the Goshen Pass Wildlife Management Area. There
is private land below Indian Pool, but still plenty of access. Walking, jogging, biking, or
bumming a shuttle are options. Put-in and take-out options abound.
Take-out: Many folks still take-out at the old General Store along Rt. 39 in
Rockbridge Baths. Proceeding upriver, the other take-out options are as follows: The Ledges, The
Springs, Indian Pool, and Laurel Run Picnic Area. Bike off as little as you want; or do laps on
the meat.
Put-in options: The standard put-in is at the swinging bridge at the head of the
Pass. To reach this area head west on Rt. 39 through the Pass; you'll see Laurel Run picnic
area on your right. Drive about 1-1.5 miles past the picnic area and then begin looking for a
gravel road heading off to the right. The road is immediately after the river swings away from
the road. Turn right onto the gravel road and drive about 100 yards. There is a large dirt
parking area here. Plenty of other options available.
Since 2007, this section of the Maury River has hosted an grassroots annual downriver
race - The Great Goshen Race. The race typically occurs the first
weekend in March, or afterward, in which there is flow over 600 cfs at 6 a.m. (Unless
there is good local creeking going on!) For details on this year's race check the
"Comments" section of this webpage or watch BoaterTalk.Com and the Coastal Canoeists
website: http://www.Coastals.org .
Trip Description:
This is probably the most "classic" run in the state of Virginia - and for good
reason: The Goshen Pass section is several miles of quality roadside intermediate whitewater
- with plenty of play spots and creeky slot-moves for the more advanced paddler - if you know
where to look. The scenery is superb and the river running is always enjoyable. See also Ed
Grove's , "Classic Virginia Rivers" (1992, Howling Wolf Publications).
Basically, the main rapids go like this:
"Undercut Rock": A large undercut boulder rests near the right bank with
most of the river passing to the left over an almost-river-wide 2' ledge. Most boaters
run one of several lines down the river-left. The large undercut has had wood stuck up in
it's maw for almost all of 10 years now. "Wigwam" is the large
loaf-shaped splat rock below this rapid.
"Roadside": makes a small surfing wave, or two, or three, at certain
water levels. Here the river necks down against the road embankment while dropping over shallow
shale.
"Bikini Row": ...named for the lovely college women from Virginia's
finest university ("dubyuhnell", of course) who decorate the riverbank here in the late
spring and summer sessions. This class III section has several pools, big boulders, and a few
mellow slot moves. A word of advice: the girl sunning on the rocks doesn't think splatting is
as cool as you think it is. (In fact she wonders why you keep bumping into that rock like an
idiot). "Mogwai" hole is the small but loopable hole near the end of
Bikini Row.
"Devil's Kitchen": After Bikini Row the water slows down (at most
levels) at a large pool before entering a tilted boulder garden known as Devil's Kitchen. The
Kitchen is the signature rapid in the Pass and there are many, very many, options for lines. The
classic line is to catch "Cadillac eddy" behind the large rock on the upper left, then
chart a course pointing 45-degrees towards the opposite (right) bank, negotiating small ledge
holes on your way. This line should take you far away from the two undercut rocks which are below
"House Rock" (the biggest squarish rock near the middle-top). Alternative lines are
everywhere for the creative paddler, so catch an eddy and look for something new if you need some
variety. Award yourself one point for every eddy you catch through Kitchen. The record is around
40-45 eddies. The previously reported wood hazard in Kitchen
has been reduced to a log/stump that is downstream and to the left of House Rock, as of August,
2011. A crew of boaters sawed-up the huge tree/rootball that had been lodged against House Rock.
The wood is not visible at some water levels.
From Alicia J. on Coastals.org (8/2011): "I
also wanted to pass along that the denuded root ball has moved in
Devil's Kitchen from just left of House Rock to nearly the center of the rapid. I ran the
river right line both days, & it was not in play. A friend said it was also not in play when
running the left to right line. But just be aware that it's likely to move downstream w/ the
next high water."
Below Kitchen: There is a series of distinct two-foot ledges jutting out from the
right bank; then a jumbled rock garden, called "Double Pin." The rapids then quickly
taper into a pool just above Laurel Run picnic ground.
Laurel Run Picnic Area: A long flat stretch of water with a developed picnic area
on the right bank. Rest rooms (open in summer). Alternative access is possible here. Open-boaters
can be seen here taking long drags on their cigarettes, to calm their nerves.
"School Bus Boof:" A 3' ledge on river-left forms a very nice boof
onto a shallow rock shelf at levels of 800+ cfs. Immediately below is...
"Laurel Run wave:" This was once a wide retentive hole. Now it is a small
surfing wave at lower levels. Tiny, brushy Laurel Run enters from the river-right
through a scenic stone bridge arch. After the wave, some class II-III water wraps around the
corner toward...
"Corner Rapid:" Although Kitchen is longer and more technical Corner
seems to cause more carnage. You'll know you're reaching Corner when the river turns
sharply left and a concrete-and -rock buttressed overlook is visible high above the river. Those
are northern rough-winged swallows buzzing above you in the spring and summer - but you won't
notice. Tourists and shuttle bunnies lurk far above the river, hungry for your carnage. Will
you deliver? A sizable pourover dominates the center of the river. At low to medium flow, the
sides of this pourover make a great boof. Some folks opt to run to the
left of the boof rock and then cut quickly back to the right in order to miss "Hematoma
Hole," an aggressive chunk of barely-submerged sandstone that is a few boat-lengths below
the pourover/boof rock. Other route options exist, including "the meltdown,"
"Hoffa Slot," and "Hoffa Jr." - all of which are to going farther to the
right of the boof respectively. Hoffa Slot is a thin line into a hidden room where you can
disappear like Jimmy Hoffa... but hopefully not for as long as old Jimmy. "Hoffa Jr."
only appears when flows are solidly into the thousands.
"Wall Rapid:" (aka, "Sliding Rock rapid") Here the river is
pushed to the right against a bare, sloping rock wall. Run against the sloping rock for the
deepest water. Rock spins!
"Indian Pool:" After "Wall" and a few more small rapids,
you'll reach a quiet stretch known as Indian Pool. Access is possible here if you want a
shorter run of just the meat. This is the spot to take-out if the water is low or you want
to do multiple laps on the best drops on the river. The small rapid above Indian Pool
reportedly has a nice eddy line for squirt boaters. The last hole becomes a primo playspot at
4000 cfs.
Below Indian Pool: Below the pool, there is a playful stretch of class III water with
several workable playholes. Along the left bank, in the middle of more class II-III water, three
ledges in a row stick out from the left bank. All three are retentive, but shallow. Access is
possible at "the springs" - look for a pipe sticking out of the woods above a creek.
You may note the sign, "Water Not Safe For Drinking." Park in the gravel pull-out
there.
"The Ledges:" Another stretch of class II-III water leads into The
Ledges. Here, in typical Goshen fashion, a rock ledge juts from the left bank. The ledge creates
a river-wide surf hole big enough for at least five boats. The surf is best here at 1000 cfs or
above. Look for a blue house with a concrete retaining wall rising from the river. Access is
possible immediately after The Ledges on the river-right.
"Lava Falls:" There is no "lava," and this is not a
"falls." At most levels this rapid is pretty mundane, but in the very rare high
flood this rapid is transformed into possibly the biggest hole on the river - a huge standing
wave/hole reminiscent of the "real" Lava Falls on the Colorado. I kid you not, this
little thing comes alive in big water.
Brillo: An easy class II-III drop runnable on the right, or down a middle line.
There is a jumble of rocks on the left.
After Brillo you'll soon paddle under the Route 39 bridge; and soon after that a swinging
footbridge on your way to the old General Store and Post Office in Rockbridge Baths. Enjoy.
In general, 400 cfs is a decent "minimum recommended flow", especially if you to travel far. You can certainly have fun at lower levels than this if you're horny.
Lately, a flow of 300 cfs or even lower has still been plenty of fun for local paddlers on a nice warm day. Folks - especially open boaters - run this river down to 150 cfs or less. The after-work-weekday crew can be found here on more days than not if there's 400 cfs or more. Look for at least 14-15" or more on the painted gauge on the Rt. 39 bridge at the intersection with Turkey Hill Rd. (on the downstream side of the river-right piling).
A Tip: Goshen probably has more play at lower levels (500-1,000 cfs) than at some of the higher levels. At skinny-water flow there are a bunch of tight surf waves, splat rocks, and stickyholes. Good play - just on a "snack-size" scale.
Old Nooz:
The old stick-gauge behind the Rockbridge Baths store has been missing since summer, 2000. This gauge was often referred to in old guidebooks and was it used by most boaters "back in the day." The old stick gauge should not be confused with the stage (foot/inch) data provided by the USGS. There is a new gage on the Rt. 39 bridge at the intersection of Turkey Hill Rd. Downstream river-right side of the right piling. It seems to *roughly* correlate to the old stick gage - at least at low flows. The best gauge for this run is the USGS web gauge (shown above). Consider 500 cfs(currently about 2.5 feet, USGS stage) to be a minimum level worth travelling for, - but you can have fun with even lower flows. A flow of 500-600 cfs is around 17-18" on the new bridge gauge, and is this about the same as 18" on the old stick gauge that most of us used for years. Confused yet? Then just use the USGS cfs information and consider 300 to 500 cfs a minimum flow.
Maximum levels will vary according to your skill and daily disposition. We ran the Pass well nto the 17,000 - 20,000+ cfs range several times during the 1995-1998 floods, but that kind of flow rarely occurs and it is very BIG water. At 18K I felt like the whitewater was every big as big as the Colorado in the Grand Canyon.
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAURY RIVER AT ROCKBRIDGE BATHS, VA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| usgs-02021500 | 350 - 20000 cfs | III+(IV) | 01h03m | 203 cfs (rc= -0.8 ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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User Comments
than that. The margins running through Devil's Kitchen are extremely tight and the rapids below
what I call "Wall Rapid" are so rocky you can barely get through. No doubt Devil's Kitchen gets
somewhat easier at higher flows as the passages open up a bit. Edit
was gone. Confirmed by the locals that the removal attempt was successful, and it was totally gone.
Several of our group ran that slot directly on the left side of House Rock with no issues,
including one who ran through it upside down :) Edit
confronted with a new sign. Starting January 1, 2012, the VA State Department of Game and Inland
Fisheries will require a permit to launch there. In fact, anyone accessing a Wildlife Management
Area or public fishing lake must purchase an access permit; the cost is $4 daily, $23 annually for
both residents and non-residents. Those possessing a valid Virginia hunting, freshwater fishing, or
trapping license, or have a current Virginia boat registration will not need to buy one. You can
order on line; here's a link: http://www.dgif.virginia.gov/access-permit/.
recently. As of this writing there are three large logs around ten feet long semi-floating in the
small pool below. While they should wash away at the next significant water event, two of them are
wedge-shaped and could lodge anywhere. While this should go without saying, don't run anything
blind and at least take a look at it from the road! Ken Dubel Edit
large flat rock in the middle in the next ledge below house rock (I have heard a name for this rock
but don't remember it). This is the pile of rocks that people who 'sneak' go to the right of,and
that line is still clear. The tree is mostly hanging out about 10' to the left of this pile of
rock. The log is obvious from the road at lower levels but I think it is just under water at normal
flows (>600 cfs) or we just didn't notice it.
it this morning anyways around 240cfs (1.9 feet) and even though this level is considered below
recommended, it is definitely runnable. You scrape a little on the boulder gardens right after the
put in, but after that you are good to go and if you look for the lines along the main flow it's
actually pretty good water. The water isn't pushy enough through the kitchen or any other rapids to
make any good boaters end up in bad spots, but there are a few more sieves and undercuts that you
need to watch out for. Definitely some must make moves in the kitchen. There's really only one or
two lines available, but they both require a mid-rapid ferry all the way across the kitchen in a
skinny/flushy pool, and if you over-launch your boofs then you're doomed to end up stuck in some
manky stuff or caught up against some of the more unfriendly rocks. The rest of the way down was
really fun and clean with good boofs and nice lines. I won't hesitate to do it again at this level.
Just wanted to let everyone know that it's still do-able around this level (however, I wouldn't try
it any lower). Message me if you wanna know more.
paddlers. There is log in a slot in the top/middle of the rapid but almost no one goes there
anyway. The strainer that had been the site of a fatal accident last spring is gone. Props to the
Kline family for their efforts!
rd.) lower maury take out on 5/28/07!
and thefts reported at Goshen Pass section of the Maury as well as the Balcony Falls section of the
James which is another run close to Goshen. Thefts were reported to local law enforcement and it
appears that they have stepped up patrols at the local runs. Thefts appear to be classic 'snatch &
grab' as Johnny Law calls them so they ain't professional theives by any means. Just a heads up for
those that frequent the areas.....hide your valuables or better yet, leave 'em at home.
higher flows. See http://coastals.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3116 and scroll down a bit for details.
================================== The USGS recalibrated the gauge stage / cfs relationship in
November of 2005. The river has run so seldom since then it took me this long to notice the
discrepancies. From what I can tell, for example, at USGS 2.6 feet what used to be 638 cfs is now
reported at 511 cfs. Seems like a minor difference but if your zero is 600 then it makes the
difference between a day at work and a day digging the Pass!
From Glenn Rose (April, 2004):<br>
> There is nothing concrete on who broke into my van last week, but the prime suspect is a local
boy who lives only a few miles away. He drives around the neighborhood in a red Chevy pickup with
"Farm Use" tags, the type one buys at the co-op, not state issued. I think it has a 6 ft.
bed. He also travels with another low life in a tan 1980ish pickup with an 8 ft. bed, a darker
colored tailgate, and tags that end in something close to "1033". He may travel in his
mother's pick up which is around a 1970 Ford two wheel drive dark vehicle also with store bought
"Farm Use" tags. I know the names of both of these punks and where the prime suspect
lives. There's not enough yet for the law to move, though. Keep an eye out when you're boating. The
prime suspect is 18, long haired and bearded with no job, so he steals to make ends meet. The other
fellow is early 20s. He may also be bearded and long haired. Both fellows are slight in build from
what I've been told.