Plum Creek - 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles)


Plum Creek, Kentucky, US

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1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles)

Usual Difficulty II(III) (for normal flows)
Length 5.37 Miles
Avg. Gradient 22 fpm
Max Gradient 30 fpm

Surfing Below Buddy's


Surfing Below Buddy's
Photo of Richard Millea by Kyle Nicholson taken 5-26--2004 @ 1.5 ft



River Description

Plum Creek is the best play run for Louisville area boaters. 5 miles with over 50 playspots. Point your bow up stream and catch a wave, if you miss one another will quickly follow. Flowing along the Bullitt and Spencer county line the creek runs only a few days a year. Look for thunderstorms bringing 1.5"+ of rain to the area. Before the rain stops head to the river as the water will not last long.

As far as hazards, it's a narrow stream that is pretty much a flush from top to bottom, with very few eddies, strainers are a possibility. There are 3 bridges on the run and each of these should be approached with caution since the pilings can trap logs pretty easily. Class II-III skills are adequate if you are comfortable reading water on the fly.


StreamTeam Status: Verified
Last Updated: 2006-03-15 08:12:51

Editors



Plum Creek Access Map

Detail Trip Report  Plum Creek Access Map  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (62.03KB .jpeg)

Great Surfing Wave

Detail Trip Report  Great Surfing Wave  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (9.24KB .jpeg)

Plum Putin Parking

Detail Trip Report  Plum Putin Parking  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (21.71KB .jpeg)

Lower Buddy's

Detail Trip Report  Lower Buddy's  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (12.07KB .jpeg)

First Bridge Waves

Detail Trip Report  First Bridge Waves  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (10.71KB .jpeg)

First Surf Wave

Detail Trip Report  First Surf Wave  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (12.36KB .jpeg)

Photo#13801

Detail Trip Report    @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (12.05KB .jpeg)

Takeout

Detail Trip Report  Takeout  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (11.72KB .jpeg)

Bottom of Sycamore

Detail Trip Report  Bottom of Sycamore  @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), (7.96KB .jpeg)

Upper Hole Buddy's

Detail Trip Report  Upper Hole Buddy's  Plum, KY(12.43KB .jpeg)

Ben Surfing

Detail Trip Report  Ben Surfing  Plum Creek, KY(75.20KB .jpeg)

The Jim Gunn Show

Detail Trip Report  The Jim Gunn Show  Plum Creek, KY(10.77KB .jpeg)

Buddy's from the top Eddy

Detail Trip Report  Buddy's from the top Eddy  Plum Creek, KY(116.98KB .jpeg)

Surfing Below Buddy's

Detail Trip Report  Surfing Below Buddy's  Plum Creek, KY(17.34KB .jpeg)

High Water Plum Wave

Detail Trip Report  High Water Plum Wave  Plum, KY(1.97MB .jpeg)


Gauge Information

Gauge Description:

The gauge is on the Rd. 1633 bridge. But is best to drive to the putin, and if it looks fun putin. 6" is a scrape. 3 - 5.5ft is a blast. Over 7 then watch your head on the bridges.

Report - Reports of Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles) and related gauges

Reports give the public a chance to report on river conditions throughout the country as well as log the history of a river.

Reports

When River/Gauge Subject Level Reporter
Plum Creek [KY] Ben Surfing 1.5 ft Kyle Nicholson
Plum Creek1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles) [ ] Bottom of Sycamore n/a Kyle Nicholson
1y217d12h45m @Plum Creek 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles) [KY] Dropped by plum creek to see after storm 4 inches Gene Stapp
7y196d15h15m Plum [KY] High Water Plum Wave 10ft? Very High Kyle Nicholson
7y286d15h15m Plum [KY] Upper Hole Buddy's 2 Ft Kyle Nicholson

WXPort

News





User Comments


2007-12-08 04:52:46 (1527 days ago)
Chris StoopsDetails
Best rafting day of my life: Ran Plum at 1 foot as it drained down to 6 inches. Hazard to include:
Below KY 155 about a third of a mile is a low water bridge. The 3 foot ledge wasn't runnable on
right at such a low level, but we were able to climb up that side to re-run this rapid, which I did
4 times. Left middle was the most fun, and far left is broken in to two ledges with no hydraulic
whatsoever. The only bad experience I had was on this 3 foot drop: The main current flushes out in
the very middle and creates a very nasty keeper hydraulic that tossed my raft like a raging bull,
and I only escaped thanx to my throw-rope and my brother pulling me out. We also encountered a
ledge that was very sticky; we fell in the middle and we were only able to escape this hole by
eventually making are way to the very left of the creek. Another ledge had a very sticky hole on
the middle right. There were tons of eddies at 1 foot, and if your inexperienced this is a great
level for you. If you ever get scared just stay to the left EXCEPT for the class III rapid under
the forth bridge, run it far right. -Note- To view the pages below: Copy the
URL(http://www.whatever.com) and paste it in your web browser's Address bar, and press Enter. I
have invented two different ways of figuring out whether it's runnable. The first is a gauge of a
creek named Cedar Creek, a high-water stream (that is, streams that can only be run after
exceptionally heavy rains) just like Plum Creek is, and with a similar gradient as Plum (17 FPM
average, 35 FPM max). The only difference is that Cedar Creek isn't as wide, and it has a gauge.
But since both of these creeks are highwater creeks, with the same gradient, and the gauge is
located 10 miles west of Plum Creek; it's a great way to see if Plum is running. The next method is
to look at the precipitation gauge at the Ohio river. If 1.4 inches of rain falls in 4.5 hours,
plum will be running as long as the same storm that hit downtown by the Ohio has hit Plum Creek,
then this method is very accurate I think. Or you can just watch the weather channel to find out
how much water has fallen. I think it flashes up super quick at the very bottom during your local
on the 8's. This is a picture fully explaining everything using USGS charts and some explanations,
and it is to be used as an example to see what it is going to take rain wise to get to run Plum:
http://img127.imageshack.us/img127/949/plum0pl.jpg Below is the URL to the Cedar Creek gauge and
you can check it all the time after every storm and you will soon learn that it is definitely a
highwater creek just like Plum. If the creek were 5 or 10 feet wider it would be Plums exact clone
as far as the way it fills up and drains water. If this gauge said that Cedar Creek maxed out at 3
feet and it's currently at 1.6 feet, then plum should be at 1 foot(as long as the storm hit both
creeks, there only 10 miles apart). It would be even better if you got in Plum when Cedar was at 3
feet of course. I wouldn't recommend running Plum just cause Cedar maxed out at 1.5 feet, because
Plum and Cedar would loose that amount of water very quickly. I have found my cedar gauge to only
be accurate up to 1 foot, if cedar says one foot then plum should be at half a foot. This has been
tested on four different occasions or more, and all of the tests were in my theories favor. Here is
the URL address to the Cedar Creek Gauge:
http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ky/nwis/uv?cb_00065=on&cb_0006
0=on&format=gif&period=2&site_no=03298250 To find out how much it has rained at
Downtown Louisville, use this URL address to the Precipitation in inches gauge, it is at the bottom
of the page: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?cb_00065=on&cb_00
045=on&format=gif&period=2&site_no=03294500 UPDATE: Here is a link to tons
precipitation gauges all around Louisville: http://www.msdlouky.org/aboutmsd/rainfall.cfm If the
storm is going from west to east, then TR08 (Fern Creek) plays an important role in finding our if
Plum is runnable, especially if the storm is heading north east. TR07 (Floyds Fork) also plays an
important role, if both of these gauges say that there has been a total of 1 inch of rain, Plum
might be at a low runnable level, but if they say 1.4 inches, and if it's wet season, and if all of
that rain fell in 4 hours, and the storm is heading in a western direction, then you can bet it's
running. TR15 might also play an important role, I forgot I'll have to go rummage through my notes
and give a more in depth explanation later, and yes I'm serious lol.

2004-11-02 19:50:28 (2657 days ago)
Kyle NicholsonDetails
*Important put in instructions*<br>
The property owner at the put in asks that paddlers take the gravel drive down the shore line and
park at the second barn on the right. Pull into the fenced area outside the barn and park along the
fence. DRIVE SLOW ON THE PROPERTY. The property owner has many dogs, and kids. Plus wet ground
causes ruts. Obey her rules or don't park on her property.<br>
<br>
<br>
*Take out instructions<br>
Make a left onto HWY 44 and cross Plum Creek. Park at the Baseball/Soccer/Playground area on the
left.<br>
<br>
There is plenty of parking at the takeout try to leave as many of your vehicles here. Please do not
loiter, litter, drink at the put in. The owner is very nice, and we do not want to cause any
hardship that may lead us to losing these privileges.<br>
Users can submit comments.

Rapid Summary

Mile Rapid Name Class Features (Legend)
0.0PutinPutin Photo
0.11st LedgeII+Photo
1.9The SlideII+
2.0Surf CityII+Playspot
2.8First Bridge WavesIIHazard Playspot Photo
3.4SycamoreII+Hazard Photo
3.6Little Plum HoleIIPlayspot Photo
3.9Feather BedII+Playspot Photo
4.1Buddy's HoleIIIHazard Playspot Photo
4.1Lower Buddy's Play SpotII+Playspot Photo
5.4Take out PlaygroundTakeout Photo

Rapid Descriptions

Putin

Plum Putin Parking

Plum Putin Parking

The property owner at the put in asks that paddlers take the gravel drive down the shore line and park at the last barn on the right. Pull into the fenced area outside the barn and park along the fence. DRIVE SLOW ON THE PROPERTY. The property owner has many dogs, and kids. Plus wet ground causes ruts. Obey her rules or don’t park on her property. On a side note: The stone house is on the National Register of Historic Places.

1st Ledge (Class II+, Mile 0.1)

First Surf Wave

First Surf Wave
Photo of Todd by Kyle Nicholson

As soon as you put in, you will see some waves popping up on the river left side, shortly after that, you'll come to the 1st ledge. Run this ledge about 15 feet off the river left side to miss the worst of the hole. You can skirt it completely by hugging the left shore. Photo is the first playwave above the ledge.

The Slide (Class II+, Mile 1.9)
When the swinging bridge is in sight, be ready for "The Slide". At 2.0 feet, it feels like sliding down a sliding board, at 2.5 and higher, it feels like you're on a really fast conveyor belt. Don't worry, though, there's no hole at the bottom... Left Side is usually deeper.

Surf City (Class II+, Mile 2.0)
A series over 10+ Surf waves back to back.

First Bridge Waves (Class II, Mile 2.8)

First Bridge Waves

First Bridge Waves
Photo by Kyle Nicholson

Another series of surf waves. Be sure to check the bridge below for wood before you surf.

Sycamore (Class II+, Mile 3.4)

Bottom of Sycamore

Bottom of Sycamore

A rapid with a hole on far river left, and far river right. River left flows into several trees and a large tree over hangs river right. Best move is middle left to middle right.

Little Plum Hole (Class II, Mile 3.6)

Photo#13801

Photo of Start of the Lower Plum

Little Plum Creek adds more water to the creek after the 2nd bridge. A strong hole on the left after the bridge starts another nice series of play waves.

Feather Bed (Class II+, Mile 3.9)

Great Surfing Wave

Great Surfing Wave
Photo by Kyle Nicholson

The best wave/hole at medium to high water. Wide, with a huge foam pile. No eddy access but you can walk back up on river right shore. Those not wanting to surf run on far river right or left.

Buddy's Hole (Class III, Mile 4.1)

Upper Hole Buddy's

Upper Hole Buddy's
Photo of Kyle Nicholson taken 05/02/04 @ 2 Ft

"Buddy's Hole" lies in wait (waiting to put the munch on you) under the 4th car bridge. Eddy out on river right above it and run either right of the bridge support at higher water or left of it the rest of the time and skirt the hole. If you're feeling froggy, jump in the hole, although, it may keep you for awhile. A great play wave with eddy service is just below.

Lower Buddy's Play Spot (Class II+, Mile 4.1)

The Jim Gunn Show

The Jim Gunn Show
Photo of Jim Gunn by Kyle Nicholson taken 5-26--2004 @ 1.5 ft

Best Play spot with eddy service on the river. Great Park and Play spot if you don't have a shuttle.

Take out Playground

Takeout

Takeout

Waterford Park is the takeout on river left before the Hwy 44 bridge. Enjoy the Swingset.


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 1319 to Hwy 44 (5.37 miles), Plum Creek Kentucky, US (mobile)