Z Test River #1, California, US |
|
| Usual Difficulty | IV (for normal flows) |
|---|---|
| Avg. Gradient | 4500 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 1500 fpm |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clavey Near Hunter Bend | ||||
| dream-093 | 150.0 - 5000.0 in/yr | IV | in/yr | |
| KINGS CREEK AT BLACKSBURG,SC | ||||
| usgs-02153590 | 10 - 15 cfs | IV | 00h38m | 12 cfs (rc= 0.4 ) |
Hey, if I am going to create a fake river for testing, might as well make it look impressive!
This fabulous river is especially good for testing out pictures, html code, display graphs and such.
http://www.americanwhitewater.org/content/Photo_detail_photoid_30425_
This format is from the template tool. On the top row of tool icons, the 6th one from the left shows a page with a T on it. Be careful as t will erase the rest of your page and overwrite with a simple template. The code does create this wrap around text, however, so is worth looking at in a safe page.
This format does give a nice border around the image and has the text wrap to the side and below. The code that does this is:
<img width="100" height="100" align="left" style="margin-right: 10px;" alt="" />
Sometimes things do work out.
Not really sure what this is
about.
Type the title here sthaurrr th entheu snthaur hnht ost sthnthnthth ueothtnoehut rcgcgl ntth ulue This is the big mother, and where you can go nuts. Do not plagiarize! Ideas include: a general description, description of rapids, playspots, logistics, hazards, portages, water quality, scenery, solitude, camping, paper maps, suitable crafts, run time, drainage area, geology, morhpology, elevation, history, similar nearby runs, runs of similar difficulty, references to guidebooks, and links to government or personal (non-profit) webpages. Descriptions are stored as HTML (anything that would normally go between the body tags), and you may enter them as such to provide you with greater flexibility. Make sure your HTML is correct. Note that extra '&', '"', '<', and '>' characters can really screw things up. If you do not know html, then choose text, but if you are editting a description with existing html tags, you may want to just cut and paste the description as it appears in your browser window when looking at river descriptions, because the html tags will not display properly if resubmitted as text.