Stonyboater Boatercross results and pics

Sorry about the delay in getting this up, but life has been interesting to say the least over  the last week or so. So here are the brief results. I’ll have cmoprehensive results and standings after this weeks, Immersion Research Giant Slolam.

Results:

Overall:

1) Jesse Shimrock

2) Brian Homberg

3) Dustin Stough

4) Paige Teegarden

Top 2 by class:

K1 Expert

1) Jesse Shimrock

2) Brian Homberg

K1 Intermediate:

1) Dustin Stough

2) Scott Stough

K1W

1) Paige Teegarden

2) Chara Whittemore

Ducky

1) Matt Fithian

2) Chuck Stump

IR King of the River Standings after 2 Events

1)Paige Teegarden 297 points

1) Matt Fithian 297 points

2) Jesse Shimrock 200 points

Here are a couple pics from the evening’s fun

K1 W in the turn

K1W in the Upstream

 a

 Matt Fithian Coming through the Feature “A” wave

The ducky class headin into Feature “A”

THanks to Stonyboater.com for taking these picture and maintaining the Event Series website.

You can find more pictures of the event here

Hidden Creek Treasures of Western MD

The 90 degree weather today made me think about the cooler weather of winter and creeking. So I figured I do the first of three creek posts. Here is info on Laural Run south of Oakland MD

Laurel Run
Laurel Run - FromPotomac
State
Forest to N. Branch of the
Potomac below Rattlesnake

1.6 miles 360 feet of drop

7 major rapids/drops

Rating: IV+/V- ( V in high water)

 

Runnable Levels: N. Branch 5 ft and rising or over 6.5 ft. It may run at lower levels when there is a difference of 300 cfs between Steyer and Kitzmiller minus the flow from theStony
River in WV. This accounts for the addition of 4 tributaries between the two gauges

 

How to get there:

From Loch Lynn, MD (just east of Oakland) Turn at light go across RR and turn Left at the stop sign going South toward Gormania. A few miles down the Road   turn left onto






White Church Road

(there is a sign for a

Methodist
Church camp) go back until the road makes two sharp 90 degree turns at the second go straight on the turn. Follow this road (still paved but not as nice as the road you just left) until you pass a sign saying end county road maintenance stay to the left as the road turns to gravel. Continue down hill (that little stream on the left is Laurel Run) stay to the left at the next Y as you travel down hill you will see the stream get bigger on your left. When you get to the bridge your at the put-in (you can put in hire if you like). Follow the road until it ends and you at Think-Twice, this is where you park the car for the take out.

 

Overview of Run Laurel Run is a small micro creek tributary to the N. Branch of the
Potomac. This seldom run creek is located in 
Potomac State Forest with the unique benefit of roadside access that was established by the replacement of a bridge in 2002. The last three rapids/drops where run prior to 2000 by at least a few paddlers who had seen the drops from the N. Branch of the Potomac at high water and walked up to run them. However the full first decent was completed in May of 2000, by Shannon Mullen and Nathan

 

 

Blatchley. Since then it has been run only a couple other times but some observations of water levels has resulted in a rough correlation to predict when it would be runnable when the N. Branch is over 5 ft and rising or over 6.5 ft regardless of direction.

 

The run is very small, so groups of more than 4 boats are strongly discouraged (three is better). Also there is frequently wood on the run so take the time to drive along river and identify potential problems. It is a good time to look at some of the major drops including Slip-and-Slide (IV+), Hole (IV), Amphitheatre (III+), Appletree Falls (IV), Rooster Tail (IV), and Bear Left (IV+).

 

Slip-and Slide main drop medium water
 The put-in

As you drive down the gravel access road,
Laurel starts as a little trickle until you get to the lean-to camping area. The usual put in is at the bridge. If there is enough water to put in and run the two rapids above the bridge the creek is running high. The first decent was made at minimum level where there was barely enough water to float the boat and the top half included a lot of ELF (Extremely Low Volume) bump and grind. After about .75  miles of Class III bump and grind at 100 ft per mile,  the creek starts to get steeper and a shallow slide with several surfing holes  and the riprap left bank with chicken wire are the warning you need to get out and scout. You have arrived at Slip-and-Slide. At low water there is a river left eddy just about the first part of the drop which allows you to scout from the left. At high water get out on the river right bank and work your way down to the drop.


 The Major rapids  

 Slip-and-Slide is a slide that drops between 20-25 feet over 60+ feet. At low water the drop involves an S- move including banking off the 3ft high pillowed rock on the left before dropping down the main slide and launching off the 4ft ski jump 3/4s of the way down. 

The rapid begins with a 2ft ledge run on river right followed by a sloped ledge which slopes from left to right into an undercut bank with exposed roots of a tree reaching out to greet you  about a boat length down stream. The current then changes directions heading back to river left before making a 90 degree turn off a rock shelf and dropping the final 15+ feet to the pool below along the quickly narrowing 15 degree slide. About 10 feet down the slide is rock shelf which is sloped up in such a way to launch you into the air for about a boat length before you finish your ride. At high water the drop looks much worse but the line is more straight down the center before bearing left and riding the slide out.

The very next drop is Hole, this ledge is a 6 foot drop into a substantially meaty hole. It would appear to be a simple boof over a drop except for the fact the shape of the ledge means the only option is to punch it after dropping into it at almost 90 degrees. The high water sneak is a boof far left.     After an extended period of tight drop-pool class IV rock dodging, the river leaves the road and the river narrows and drops through several tight rapids which include limited eddies, blind boofs and narrow slots.   As the stream returns to the road, Amphitheater appears. Named for the way the stream has worn through the rocks to create straight forward 6 foot slide, this drop is a simple run except for the extremely undercut bank the main flow hits about 20 feet after the drop.

The river continues until you get to the final three drops (you park your car just below the first of these). Think Trice is a U-shaped 10ft vertical drop into a deep pool. The obvious line is hard river left hitting the clear launch pad for a boof. Don’t do this at anything but low water. Due to the shape of the hole a strong boil forms just to the right of your landing pad. This boil strongly pushes boaters under the undercut left bank. Instead the best line is river right which can be cleanly run with or without a paddle, front or backwards.

After the pool, the stream crosses what use to be a low water crossing and than drops down a 4 ft slide into surprisingly sticky hole. Next is Rooster Tail, this is a 12 ft vertical drop with no pool requiring a boof off the right-hand upturned lip that gives the drop its name. The boof is required as you are landing on a shelf which can piton you if you run the left side.  The run out from the drop is interesting   with a 20 foot pool before you get to Bear Left.

Bear Left is a slide which slops left to right depositing you into the right back at high speeds (causing a very unceremonious halt to your momentum) if you just ride out the drop. Instead as you move from left to right over the first half of the slide slowly turn your boat to the left so you can bear left at the bottom of the drop. You can see the Potomac from the top of the last drop less than 100 feet down stream. 

Laurel Run drops 45-50 feet in the last three drops.  Despite some undercuts in bad spots, one of the nice things about Laurel run is that almost all of the rocks and ledges point downstream. If even one quarter of the key rocks pointed upstream this would be a solid V run. But with guaranteed wood in places where it makes things dicey this run is V- at any level above minimum.    

Top of Slip and Slide

Bear Left

Apple Tree Falls AKA “Think Twice”

Next

Next event - Immersion Research Giant Slalom on 6/20

Yes this is another plug for the Friday Night Fun Series – Immersion Research Giant Slalom
July 20th

Adventuresports
Center International in
McHenry, MD
So what is Giant Slalom? Its our attempt to spice up things and make slalom more accessible to more people. To that end, there are classes fop boats under 8′ 6″, plastic boats over that length, a ducky class, and a slalom boat class. These are then divided by boat type, gender, and experience/skill level. Format: A head-to-head, knock-out format with parallel courses resulting in 2 boats racing directly against each other. Each racer gets a run on each course with combined time and penalties determining who goes on to the next round. Penalty points will be given for hitting a gate (1 second) or missing a gate (10 seconds). If we have a large number of registrants we may have to add a qualifying round to keep the event running within the time available due to light. If numbers are lower we may add a consolation bracket to race back into the main competition. The courses will be roughly 300 yards long (from the pool through adjustable feature “A”). It will have no more than 11 gates and either no up streams or 2 up streams (a right and a left) in each course (I’m working on the specific course layout still). It will likely be hung using a single color for each course regardless of upstream or down stream. Also, to ensure fair courses, they will likely cross each other at least once. Runs should be right around 60 seconds in length. Schedule Registration 5:00 - 6:30
Course opens for practice at 6:00
Athletes meeting at 6:30
First runs start at 7:00
Any questions please post or email me directly at: westernmddem@gmail.com If you are planning on coming to ASCI to compete in the Closed-Boat Nationals, consider coming on July 20 to the Giant Slalom Race. It will be the first time gates will be available on the course (gates will be up for the week before Nationals too). The timing system that will be used for Nationals will be in use as well. The Giant Slalom Race will be held on the upper more difficult section of the course.

A quick post with results of the Stonyboater Paddle Wax Boatercross

The second round of the Friday Night Fun Series was the Stonyboater Paddle Wax Boatercross. The race took a distictive local feel with all of the racers being “local” boaters. Comparatively, the Freestyle event had over half the contestants from outside the area.

 Here are the results:

Here is the basics:

Overall

1) Jesse Shimrock

2) Brian Homberg

3) Dustin Stough

4) Paige Teegarden

Top 2 by class:

K1 Expert

1) Jesse Shimrock

2) Brian Homberg

K1 Intermediate:

1) Dustin Stough

2) Scott Stough

K1W

1) Paige Teegarden

2) Chara Whittemore

Ducky

1) Matt Fithian

2) Chuck Stump

Immersion Research King of the River Standings after 2 Events

1)Paige Teegarden 297 points

1) Matt Fithian 297 points

2) Jesse Shimrock 200 points

I had put together a much better results that included overall standings for the Friday Night Fun Series for each Class and King of the River Standing , but after 3 hours and forgetting to hit save, my computer crashed losing it all. I’ll try and get that recomputed this week.

Stonyboater Paddle Wax Boatercross in 2 days

The Yough Paddling Club would love it if you and your friends will join us for the Stoneyboater Paddle Wax Boatercross this Friday. Yes, in two days the second of seven ASCI Friday Night Fun Series gets underway with registration at 5:00, athletes meeting at 6:15, and racing beginning at 6:30.

There is a boat length limit of 8’ 6” for all boats except the “long boat” and OC1 classes. To save you the trouble of measuring your boat I have compiled a list of all “legal” boats in production since 2001 by manufacturer here: boat list

Also for those who are not familiar with boatercross here is a link to some information from the series website:  ascikingoftheriver.com

Registration is onsite at the Adventuresports Center International, as this is a club sponsored event and not an ASCI run event we can only take cash and checks to pay for registration.

Cost: $10 per person, $8 for ASCI season pass holders, $5 for Yough Paddling Club Members, and $50 for the remaining 6 events.

Thanks again to the sponsors who make this possible: Wavesport, Stonyboater.com and Stonyboater Paddle wax, Immersion Research, Riversport School of Paddling, and Starkkmoon Kayaks.

If you are interested in joining the Yough Paddling Club we will have membership forms available on Friday, cost is $10 for individual, $15 for families, as well as the expectation that you will volunteer at least 5 times to help with YPC events, trips, activities, or club functions.

 

The Friday Night Fun Series take a week off next week but returns on July 20th with Giant Slalom a unique take on traditional slolam racing with a shorter, but more open course than found at a slolam race. Plus if we can figure out how to hang a fair course we will set it up in a head to head duel format which will pit racers 1-on-1 on the course at the same time. Should be exciting.

FFS: Wavesport Freestyle

What a weekend! Friday was the Friday Night Fun Series debut with the Wavesport Freestyle Rodeo. 19 Competitors and over 50 people watch saw a “causal event that ran professionaly”   according to Scott Barnes’ post on Boatertalk.

Team Wavesport served as Celebrity judges, and fun was had by everyone.

Results:

K1 Mens Expert - Jesse Shimrock  
K1 Mens Intermediate - James Quigley  
K1 Mens Beginner - Frank Lands  
K1 Womens (combined class) - Paige Teegarden  
OC1 - Greg Wells

Full results are available at:
http://www.adventuresportscenter.com/images/stories/Events/Friday_Fun_Documents/results_6-29_freestyle.pdf

We’ll see what we can do to make the hole a little deeper in the green slab. True vertical trick were available, but only if you were in a really short boat or up on the pile. So for the next freestyle in August we’ll either get it a little deeper or move it up to Feature “A” where Freestyle Nationals will be held at the end of September.

A huge thanks to Team Wavesport for Judging and providing prizes.

Hopefully we’ll see everyone back (and more) for this week’s

Stonyboater Paddle Wax Boatercross (5:00 registration)

I post another entry for that event shortly with lots of details.

ASCI Friday Night Fun Series starts on Friday

I’ve been rushing around trying to get all the details covered for the first event and I forgot to even post about it. As you may know, I am a volunteer coordinator for the seven night, ASCI Priday Night Fun Series. It will include freestyle (Friday), Boatercross, and Giant Slalom.

 The newly formed Yough Paddling Club decided to take on the task of organizing and hosting a summer-long local-level series of competitions. I had significant help from Paige, Chara, Chuck and others in the club in designing the competions and their framework. Chuck’s wife designed the poster for the series.

ASCI Friday Day Fun Series poster 

The ASCI staff helped with finding prize sponsors and site logistic. Thaks especially to Jesse, Nancy, Brian H, and Matt.

Our sponsors have been a great help too. Jason Rigby at stonyboater.com and Stonyboater Paddle Wax is maintianing the event website, providing wax for prizes, and taking pictures and video taping each event to put content on the website shortly after each event. He’s really been a big help, and he is donating one of his new stonyboater paddles for the end of the series prizes.

Wavesport stepped up big with a donated a boat of choice for the ASCI King of the River prizes, schwag for nightly prizes, and two of the Team Wavesport paddlers will be helping with judging at Friday’s Wavesport Freestyle Rodeo.

Immersion Researchis giving 2 drytops, as well as rash gaurds, backbands, overthrusters, and other schwag for prizes.

 Riversport School of Kayaking  stepped up wit h ~$1500 in in prize from the school and the Mad Dog Cafe next door.

Last but not least Brad at Starkkmoon Kayaks shipped me 2 boxes full of a bunch of stuff to giveaway for prizes and nightly raffles. These sponsors have put up over $6,000 in prizes

 So after much work over the last 5 months its finally here. For more info go to ascikingoftheriver.com

SAVAGE RELEASE ON JULY 1!

In case you can’t tell, I’m pretty excited about this. It seems that ASCI, the DNR and the Upper Potomac Comission came to some kind of arrangement to secure the unscheduled summer Savage releases that were on the books for years.

Here is the link that confirms a 4 hour release on Sunday july 1, 2007 from 9AM -1 PM

http://www.nab-wc.usace.army.mil/projected_Q.html

Here is the key text

Whitewater releases from Savage River Dam are sponsored by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources and Adventure Sports Center International in cooperation with the Upper Potomac River Commission. The first release is scheduled for Sunday - July 1, 2007. Due to ongoing low flow conditions in the North Branch Potomac basin, the whitewater release will only extend from 9AM to 1PM at a flow rate of 800 cfs. Additional whitewater releases from Savage River Dam may not be made this year unless conditions improve. Check this website regularly for updates, or call a telephone recording at (410) 962-7687.

So get on it in two Sundays because its just not raining enough to count on that August Release! I know where I’ll be next Sunday.

My suggestion is to run the river down to the first bridge and take out there to get 2 runs in before the water is gone. You won’t miss a whole lot in the lower section anyway. After that head up to ASCI to play on their water for the afternoon as a way to say thanks for making this happen.

TR: Yough Loop - Sunday Evening Special

I spent an hour of last Sunday Evening enjoying the solitude and fun that only being the last boat on for the day can bring.

River level was 1.8, and it was 8 PM. The evening sun was fading off to Sunset and the dusk was moving into the valley creating lighting for a fall like run. First up was a quick couple spins in the top wave to warm up, then on down to the practice hole in entrence. Here I did some surfing with spinning and a couple failed attempts at sinking an end or two.

Next I head to the first real drop, spin down the diagainal hole on the left, catch a couple rides on a sall wave there and head down to catch the wave above the next drop, and high speed ferry and a little paddling and I’m down to Nemo’s to mess around a little.

Now I’m not usually one for solo paddling, but these Sunday evening runs have been a habit that dates back to 2001 when a freind of mine had a house in Friendsville and we’d head over most sundays during the Summer followed with a sanwich at Fox’s in town. But I digress.

Last Sunday ended up being one of the most ivigorating, relaxing and pleasurable days I’ve had recently. I’ve been on the Upper a couple times recently and those were a great deal of fun, but on the Upper even at lowr water you have to be on your game, and that max relaxing a little tough during the main part of the run. So for me- a summer evening on the Loop sure makes for a good night. 

Creeks and streams of note

The rain tonight has me thinking about little known creeks in the area here is a quick list of creeks nearby that see little use.

  • Cherry Run - Class III-IV 
     Distance: .75 miles in length 
     Location: flows into Deep Creek Lake along Rock Lodge Road
    Gradient: 120+
  • Difficult Run (WV) - Class IV+
    Distance: 4 miles
    Location: Flows into N. Branch of Potomac from West Virginia
    Gradient: 140
  • Laurel Run- Class IV+ to V-
    Distance: 1.6 miles
    Location: Flows into N. Branch of Potomac from Maryland
    Gradient: 275
  • Lost Lands Run -Class V
    Distance: 2 miles
    Location: Flows into N. Branch of Potomac from Maryland
    Gradient: 250
  • Crabtree Run - Class III - IV
    Distance: 6 miles
    Location: Flows from Swanton, MD into Savage River Resevior
  • Little Savage - Class III-IV
  • Jennings Run - Class II-III
  • Western Maryland Boating

    On this blog you will find info about boating in Western MD. From info on the Friday Night Fun Series, that I,m coordinating at the Adventuresports Center to Yough Paddling Club info, and river info from the area. THis is my first try at Blogging so I hope this turns out well.

    A couple quick links of interest:

    Adventuresports Center International - www.adventursportscenter.com

    ASCI Friday Night Fun Series: http://ascikingoftheriver.com

    A little about myself

    Name: Nathan Blatchley
    Age: 35
    Years Boating: 23
    Favorite types of rivers: Creeky class IVish rivers
    Current Boats Paddled: PS6-200, Skeeter, Solo
    Number of days a year on the water: 20-30 (wish it were more)

    I am passionate about promoting the region and its paddling opportunities. It sure is nice to have 30 runs with in 45 minutes to an hour of the house. I spent this past Sunday evening enjoying the sun setting on a lazy run on the Loop section of the Lower Yough - peaceful, playful, and utterly rejuvenating!

    Bad Behavior has blocked 55 access attempts in the last 7 days.