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(Chris Bell)
Typed in Message-ID: Not to quibble . . . but neither the Watauga nor the Upper Yough are class V rivers. The AW site rates both as IV-V, but if you check the ratings of individual rapids you'll find that the Upper Yough has a single low V and the Watauga two low V's. Like the Upper Gauley, which also has a handful of very low V's in AW's opinion (indeed, they defend their rating of Insignificant as class V by saying "Class V has to start somewhere . . ."), folks who frequently paddle Eastern Class V would be unlikely to consider any of these "Class V Classics" class V rivers. Have to agree with Chris on this one. While these were cutting edge streams 10 years ago, there are not the extreme end of Eastern WW now. I would have to give that to runs like Deckers, Otter, Manns and some of the really tiny and steep stuff coming off the Walden's Ridge in Tennessee. What differed was what paddlers in the various regions without much experience in other regions found challenging. Less traveled Eastern boaters often find high water honking big water bob down the middle challenging, less traveled Western boaters often find tweeze through the boulder garden then land on the rocks challenging. I've also found that true. I once ran the New at reasonably high flow, about 4.5' at Fayette Station with a group of reasonably skilled Tennessee Creek Boaters. Several very good boaters had repeated swims because they weren't use to dealing with the big water. I've had Western boaters tell me that the Little in the Smokies wasn't runnable at 1000 cfs (which is a pretty decent level BTW). SYOTR Larry C. |
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