Savage, Maryland, US |
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| Usual Difficulty | II(IV) (for normal flows) |
|---|---|
| Length | 12.5 Miles |
| Avg. Gradient | 55 fpm |
| Max Gradient | 100 fpm |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAVAGE RIVER NEAR BARTON, MD | ||||
| usgs-01596500 | 300 - 2000 cfs | II(IV) | 00h52m | 31 cfs (rc= -0.2 ) |
| Name | Range | Difficulty | Updated | Level | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAVAGE RIVER NEAR BARTON, MD | ||||||||||||
| usgs-01596500 | 300 - 2000 cfs | II(IV) | 00h52m | 31 cfs (rc= -0.2 ) | ||||||||
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User Comments
rained hard in the area overnight. Based on the 500 cfs reading at Barton at 1pm, we put on around
4:30pm. By the data here, at 6pm which was the halfway point for the trip, the gauge had fallen to
around 350 cfs. The water we had was entirely too low. We scraped nearly the entire time with some
parts literally unboatable. I'm very forgiving of scrapey rivers and this was way too low even by
my standards. The run seemed like it would definitely be entertaining with more water.
delight. We were also accosted at the put in by one of the land owners, who warned us not to put in
from his property. His complaint is that DNR refused to stock the river, so in retaliation he is
barring access to everyone. But his neighbor across the road, by the commercial place, was away,
and he expressed no views about our putting in there, so we did. The run is mostly class II, with a
few spots low class III. Then, about 2/3 of the way through, we came across the class V, which is
not too hard to spot in advance (there is a big eddy above it, and a huge boulder in the middle
guarding the first drop). It was quite a treat watching Sean Chapelle run it, so smoothly that it
almost made the rest of us feel that we could handle it too. He entered on the left, caught an eddy
quickly on the right, boofed sideways over the big drop, and turned sharply to slip between the
undercut wall and the roostertail. The rest of us portaged various distances on the right. Our flow
was 300 cfs at Barton, which was fine for most of the trip, but actually a bit low towards the end,
where the creek widens out -- plus the level was dropping, as we were moving more slowly than the
water. Edit
avilton-lonaconing. Some stats: Barton gauge was at 650 cfs and steady, and there was plenty of
water. Higher or a little lower would have been good too, but 650 is lots of water. Also, it's a
short distance on the map but a much longer distance on the water. The creek takes a *lot* of
twists and turns (check it out on Google Maps). It took us 2.5 hours from put-in to take-out, with
no breaks and the creek screaming along the whole way.
Avilton-Lonaconing Road crosses the Savage. Signs read "DNR and everyone else keep out". They own
both sides downstream, one side upstream, and act like they own everything else! We had an entire
family screaming at us as we attempted to launch from an unposted stretch of river across the
street from them,and they continued when we moved to put in along the bridge right if way.
<p></p>
<p>
We were probably in the right, but we didn't want to risk my buddy's unattended shuttle truck. We
continued across the bridge towards Lonaconing and took a left turn following signs towards the
Savage River Inn. There is parking on state-owned property where the road crosses the river. It
adds a few miles of fast-moving flatwater to the trip at 750 cfs at Barton.
</p>
<p></p>
<p>
It's a beautiful run through one of the prettiest gorges I've seen. It's isolated, lush, and
unspoiled. There are high cliffs, beautiful waterfalls, and interesting rock outcropings.
</p>
<p></p>
<p>
Watch out for strainers! We carried the "strong class IV" towards the end of the gorge. There's
lots of fresh rockfall and large boulders block many chutes. We took out at the Westernport Road
Bridge.
</p>
<p></p>
<p>
The gorge is Class II-III with one IV++ drop. The person who says it's Class II is referring to
the section below our takeout. The river here is milder and less scenic.
</p>
as previous commenter indicated. Julie Fitzpatrick
attracted many boaters who like scenic flatwater.
of it Jacobs Ladder by locals.