Whitewater
This page discusses whitewater rapids. For the scandal involving the former US President Bill Clinton, see Whitewater scandal.
Whitewater is formed in a rapid, when a river's gradient drops enough to form a bubbly, or aerated and unstable current. The term is also used loosely to refer to less-turbulent but still agitated flows.
Three factors separately or in combination can create rapids: gradient, constriction, and obstruction.
The gradient of a river is the rate at which it loses elevation along its course. This determines the river's slope, and thus (to a large extent) its rate of flow.
Constrictions form a rapid when a river's flow is forced into a narrow channel. This pressure causes the water to react differently to riverbed events (rocks, drops, etc.).
And lastly, there is obstruction. A boulder in the middle of a river can create constriction to the flow of the river, and can also create a "drop" (over the boulder) and hydraulics (where the river flows back on itself--perhaps back under the drop--often with fearful results for those caught in its grasp).
These days the term has a broader meaning applying to any river or creek that has a significant number of rapids and the term is also used to specify a kind of kayaking, canoeing or rafting on these rivers. Ex. One of his hobbies is whitewater kayaking.
Classification of Whitewater
The most widely used grading system is the International Grading System, where whitewater (either individual rapids, or the entire river) is classed into six categories from class I (the easiest and safest) to class VI (the most difficult and most dangerous). The grade reflects both the technical difficulty and the danger associated with a rapid, with grade I referring to flat or slow moving water with few hazards, and grade VI referring to the hardest rapids which are very dangerous even for expert paddlers, and are rarely run. Grade VI rapids are often downgraded to grade V or V+ if they have been run successfully many times. Harder rapids (for example a grade V rapid on a mainly grade III river) are often portaged (you get out of your canoe or raft and carry it down the bank!). A rapid's grade is not fixed, it may vary greatly depending on the water levels.
Whitewater in Canada
Whitewater in the United States
Rivers in the eastern section of the United States are usually considered "technical," which means that due to lesser water volume, rafters/kayakers must often direct their craft through boulder-strewn sections of river, through narrow channels, through shoals, and so forth. This requires a degree of "river reading" skill, paddling precision, and so forth.
In the western United States, the more noted rivers (e.g., Grand Canyon) have much larger water volumes, and thus require a different set of rafting skills. Western rafters also navigate many small, low volume rivers, some with much steeper decents than eastern rivers, however, since the mountains are newer in the west, the hazard from undercut rocks, a problem in the east, is replaced by more frequent log jams created primarily by logging activities near the rivers.
The big water rivers usually do not require the precision paddling of smaller rivers, but have larger rapids and longer wilderness trips are available due to the greater length and water flow of the big rivers. The smaller rivers and creeks boated by most rafters offer many exciting one or two day trips with difficulty levels from I to VI.
In the eastern United States, there are several "must do" rivers for paddlers. For beginners, there is the Nantahala in North Carolina. It is a relatively gentle river, with the final rapid having the propensity to send paddlers in for a cold, exhilerating swim.
The next step up--and the most fun you can have before things "get scary"--is the Ocoee River just west of Cleveland, Tennessee. The 1996 Olympic Kayak Competition was held on this world-class river. A special section was contructed for the venue, but the "lower" Ocoee is the classic--and best--ride. What makes this river special is that it is almost continuous whitewater. Many river are "drop-pool" rivers, with rapids far apart. Not the Ocoee. Within ten seconds of your first paddle stroke, you will be in a serious class IV rapid. While there are some challenging rapids on the Ocoee, most of the rapids are very forgiving. If you fall in, you'll get a good scare, but will very likely be pulled back into the boat within thirty seconds.
The New River in West Virginia is the next step up. It is a "grown-up" Ocoee river. Larger rapids, fairly close together (except for the long wait for the first one--"Surprise").
The Chattooga (Sections 3 and 4) outside of Clayton, Georgia can, at high water, be thrilling to the point of fear. Huge rapids, big drops, and thunderous power, this river is a challenge for even experts.
The Gauley River in West Virginia, especially at the "Fall Draw Down" (when the reservoir is drained) is a world-class ride. Huge rapids, many of the listed as "class V+" (which is shorthand used for insurance purposes). A true challenge is to do the upper and lower Gauley in a single day. It's twenty-four miles of big rapids and lots of paddling.
Then there is the river that only the most hardcore rafters and kayakers of the east know about or raft: The Russell Fork Gorge. Located in the Breaks Interstate Park on the border of Kentucky and Virginia, this river drops 150 ft. per mile in the gorge. Huge and fearful drops. Advanced paddlers only. El Horrendo is the showcase rapid due to its size. The best description of that rapid would be "something like a 45 degree waterfall."
In the west, most rafters start on the American and work their way up to the Rogue, the Illonois, the Toulomne, the Salmon, the Snake, and then the big water rivers like the Green and Colorado through the Grand Canyon, or the Fraser in British Columbia, and many Alaskan streams where you will get tired of eating fresh salmon and have to carry a cannon to keep the bears away.
Whitewater in the United Kingdom
Whitewater rivers in the UK are typically low volume and technical. In England and Wales rivers are typically less than 20 cumecs, and some are run with less than one cumec (usually these involve skidding the kayak down steep rockslides and small waterfalls). In Scotland there are also a few bigger volume (up to about 50 cumecs) rivers.
Almost all runs in England and Wales need recent rain to be at a paddleable level, and many can only be run immediately after heavy rain. In Scotland some bigger rivers can be run for weeks after rain although as with the rest of the country, most need recent wet weather. The paddling season is year-round but the rivers are more often runnable in winter (the wettest months of the year being December and January).
Most runs offer only a few kilometres of whitewater and often several rivers can be run on a wet day. Some rivers consist of only a single rapid. Only a few rivers (such as the Findhorn and Spean in the Scottish Highlands) have more than a days' worth of paddling, and most of this tends to be grade III or less.
There is no natural whitewater in the (mainly flat) south and east of England. Here whitewater paddlers often go playboating at man made weirs. Hurley weir on the River Thames west of London is probably the most popular. There are several artificial whitewater courses, where water is pumped or diverted though a concrete channel containing obstacles to create rapids. There is a 28 cumec artificial whitewater course on the Trent at Holme Pierrepont in Nottingham (at the National Watersports Centre), a 5 cumec course on the Tees in Teesside, and smaller courses on the Nene at Northampton, and at Cardington.
Commercial rafting is limited to artificial whitewater courses (where it often provides the majority of the courses' income) and a few of the bigger and more reliable rivers, in particular the Tryweryn and the Orchy.
There are several sites off the west coast of Britain where strong tidal currents channeled between islands create big volume sections of whitewater. These include the Bitches in Pembrokeshire in Wales, and the Falls of Lora on the west coast of Scotland.
Legal access to whitewater is a big issue in England and Wales. The public are only allowed access to a tiny proportion of the availabile whitewater, and often this is restricted to a few months or even a few days per year. This limits commercial operations and the activities of clubs, but many individual kayakers still paddle illegally. Rivers are almost all private and access must be agreed with all of the riparian owners (the owners of the land either side of the river) and the owners of the fishing rights, otherwise canoeing or kayaking there is trespass (although landowners can do little other than tell trespassers to leave their property). Agreements rarely exist as there is no incentive for the owners of rivers to let anyone else use them. In Scotland, like most of the rest of the world, access to whitewater is legal and has never been illegal. It has been enshrined in law in the recent Scottish Land Reform act. The Right to Roam act in England explicitly excluded rivers.
Whitewater in the Alps
Popular whitewater rivers in the Alps are mainly medium volume glacier-fed rivers with long continuous rapids and few big drops. The season is short (two or three months in early summer when the snow and glaciers are melting) but the whitewater is reliable in this period. Tourists come from around europe to kayak and raft--the most popular centres are Briançon in the French alps, and the area around Landeck in Austria.
Whitewater in Norway
Norwegian whitewater rivers are typically steep pool-drop rivers with many waterfalls, and are run mainly by experienced kayakers. There are also bigger (sometimes glacier-fed) rivers which are sometimes rafted. The season lasts all summer, although some rivers only run after recent rain.
Norwegian waterfalls regularly feature on extreme kayaking videos.