The river starts off with a two-foot drop at an old broken dam. There is a large standing wave and play hole at the bottom. We all ran the drop, but only Andrew ventured into the play hole to try his luck at surfing – his luck was good.
As we headed downstream, the river twists and turns though a pretty hemlock forest. We enjoyed the class II waves and rock-dodging down to the Springdale Mill. At the Springdale Mill site, the action picks up a bit with a class III rapid at another broken dam. The easiest line though this rapid is to stay left and catch the big eddy just downstream of the dam. I went through last, and just caught the tail-end of the eddy.
Below Springdale are more class II rapids down to the Interstate 190 crossing, where there is an abrupt 3-foot drop. The kayaks ran this drop down the middle, blasting through the large standing wave at the bottom. I found a drier line on the right, which avoids the big wave. It’s a short run, so we were done in about an hour. I opted-out of a second run, but I shuttled the crew back to the put-in before heading home.
Few pictures here:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/eckilson/albums/72157706785648151
River Description from American Whitewater
https://www.americanwhitewater.org/content/River/detail/id/5216/
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