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sparks January 18th 05 07:26 PM

Kentucky/Tenessee Paddling Trip
 
Greetings!

You guys were the greatest help with my question regarding cold water
kayaking!!! I figured this may be a great place to post this question as
well...



I am planning a paddling trip in Kentucky or Tennessee for this coming
spring. There will be four of us in a group of beginner-intermediate
paddlers from Indianapolis. Can anyone suggest a trip for us? Here is what
we are trying to plan out in our heads and are looking for advice to make it
happen.

We will have 3 cars. a truck to drop off/pick up our kayaks at the end of
the trip. A car to leave at the ½ way point with supplies and a car to drive
us to the launch site. We will carry enough supplies for two days then re
supply and paddle to the pickup point.

I guess ultimately, we need advice from some folks with experience with the
area to suggest a river to make this happen.

Normally in the summer we do a lot of day trips around 20-30 miles long
sometimes camping overnight.

I looked at a few websites from a google search and see alot of outfitters
offering shorter 'day long' trips. I think we are wanting to steer away from
these places since we already have our own kayaks/gear and transport. I will
keep searching for more websites that describe the rivers but hopefully
there may be a local who can help us out : ) I can provide more
information if needed!!!

Any help/information/advice you can give would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks!!!!!!

Sparks



Stevescarb January 27th 05 11:40 PM

Checkout the Big South Fork, Leatherwood Ford to Blue Heron mine. Water levels
in the Spring can be anything from Biblical to drought so be wary.

Steve Scarborough

Robert Arnett March 13th 05 02:31 AM



On 27 Jan 2005 23:40:13 GMT, (Stevescarb) wrote:

Checkout the Big South Fork, Leatherwood Ford to Blue Heron mine. Water levels
in the Spring can be anything from Biblical to drought so be wary.

Steve Scarborough


Yeah, Steve's advice is my first thought, too, unless you want to
consider the Chatooga in SC/GA. Sections 3/4 would be a 2 day trip
and there's access.

Larry C March 15th 05 12:45 AM


Robert Arnett wrote:
On 27 Jan 2005 23:40:13 GMT, (Stevescarb) wrote:

Checkout the Big South Fork, Leatherwood Ford to Blue Heron mine.

Water levels
in the Spring can be anything from Biblical to drought so be wary.

Steve Scarborough


Yeah, Steve's advice is my first thought, too, unless you want to
consider the Chatooga in SC/GA. Sections 3/4 would be a 2 day trip
and there's access.



I have a couple other suggestions.

Green River through Mammoth Cave is a nice float. No Whitewater but
some nice scenery and lots of wildlife. If I were trying to make it a
longer trip, putin upstream of the Park and spend the first night in
the eastern edge of the park.

North Fork Cumberland above Cumberland Falls. You could stretch this
one out to three days, Sheltowee Trace will run shuttle for you.

Rockcastle River below Hwy 80 to Bee Rock. There is some significant WW
in this section, but the hardest stuff is a pretty easy portage. Above
Hwy 80 gets a lot of ATV traffic.

Clear Creek (Emory/Obed River System) from Clarkrange to either Barnett
or Jett river Access. This is water dependent, I would guess you would
need about 2000 cfs on the Emory gauge to make this a decent trip with
a loaded boat.

BTW, both Mammoth Cave and BSF require backcountry permits now.

Larry



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