Conasauga Creek, Tennessee, US
|
|
FR 341 to Holly Springs Rd Bridge
| Usual Difficulty |
III-IV(V+) (for normal flows) |
| Length |
3 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient |
130 fpm |
| Max Gradient |
280 fpm |
Gauge Information
River Description
It is rumored that Conasauga Creek was run first by Mike Lewis of USA raft
The run is 1.7 miles of whitewater and 1.3 of flatwater, due to a lack of an earlier takeout at
this point. From Tellico Plains, go 2.5 miles south on Highway 68. Turn onto Holly Springs Rd.,
which has a sign for Towee Falls Church. Proceed through this quiet mountain valley for 3 miles,
bearing right at a Y, thus not crossing the creek. Continue just under half a mile to a bridge
that crosses the stream. Park in the spot on the downstream river right side of the bridge just
out of the way of traffic. This is the takeout and the gauge. To the putin, go back to 68 and
after turning right, immediately turn right on to FR 341 to Conasauga Falls. 2.5 miles down the
road there is a right turn for the Falls Trailhead. One can scout the creek from this trail. To
the putin, continue past this turnoff another 2 miles to where the creek is. Putin here. There is
limited parking at the putin and takeout.
Description: The creek starts right off with a 5 foot ledge best run on the right, though
a more interesting line is on the left. The creek is non stop 3-3+ moves and boofs for the next
4/10 mile. The gradient for this stretch averages to 280ft/m There is an undercut half way
through this section. The wood is cleaned out for now. A brief respite ensues, followed by an
island. Go left, but avoid the log at the end by beaching up on the shallows on the right. Some
more bends and isolated class 3 brings the paddler to the takeout eddy for the falls. If you
haven't been here before, err on the side of caution.
The falls is a 35 foot cascade called Conasauga Falls, and is definitely 5+. It is a drop of LVM
type nature. It can be run, but I will not explain it. Below here is a series of slides that is
called Chutes and Ladders. There is a 7,12,8,and 15 foot series here, which is overall gradual in
nature but still very horizon-lined and intimidating if you haven't scouted. Easy big fun
though.
After the slides, look around and notice this previously unnoticed beautiful gorge. Appreciate
the lack of roads and human impact. It's rare. Next the stream kicks several class 3 rapids and
3-5 foot complex ledges your way all the way to the flats in the valley. At higher levels this
run is definitely solid class 4 and only a couple of inches at the gauge will make a big
difference in the gorge, due to it's channeling effect. The valley is beautiful and there are two
beaver dams, one you run and another that is a walk. The farmers will probably give you some
weird looks but they seem friendly. Since this is such a new run please takeout at the county
bridge, as this is the only public area to takeout at this point. We don't want access
jeopardized for future paddlers.
For more information please click on the link below:
http://www.waldensridgewhitewater.com/tellico/conasauga.htm
StreamTeam Status: Not Verified
Last Updated: 2010-09-27 16:52:35
Editors
User Comments
grounded and trustworthy, told us that 14" was a good low. They had apparently been pulling beta
off of this page using their iPhone and I still don't understand how they misinterpreted this beta.
None of us had run Conasauga before and we were looking forward to paddling a new creek. During the
paddle I remember thinking, "This feels below minimum" .... several times. I agree with Kirk. 14"
should be considered a bare minimum. I don't think I'm ever putting on below 16-18" and I'm no high
water snob. We ran Coker at a nice low or medium low level later that day. I strongly recommend
that you go there if Conasauga's gauge is below 14" Otherwise, this was a damn fun run. Can't wait
to paddle it when there's actually water.
http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=PincheLocoGringo#p/u/0/fvnBcBC6Wqs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpscrRAtvIw&feature=channel Edit