From the desk of Dave Woten, as posted to rec.boats.paddle (3/5/2000):
And then there was 1: the tale of 7 paddlers.
_(Creekin' Drake Run style)_
After a year of drought and limited releases, low water was not aconcern the weekend of February 19. With high hopes of paddling the
NorthFork of the Blackwater,
Otter, or a similar creek, I searched the gauges only to find Davis over 4000 cfs, and Parsons at 48,000+. That much water even ruled out most of the West Virginia micro-creeks such as
Red Creek and
Red Run. Standing at
Ohiopyle Falls, watching entire trees disappear intothe hole, one thought came to mind. Drakes!!! Off we went to pet those animals Bobby 'the Mann' Miller wrote about.
Parked, unloaded, dressed, and off to shuttle they went as I sat in my Chevy Crapalier. They returned from the 15 minute shuttle over an hour later. On the way to Riversport, Frank's Jeep become thirsty. He obliged with a nice drink from the Yough, easy to do, since the water was over 3 feet high on the road. Let's just say, water doesn't compress well in a cylinder. However, I was impressed because even that couldn't keep Frank off of Drakes. With our late start, Bic couldn't make it home in time for work if he paddled, so he packed up and left.
7-1 = 6 paddlers putting on Drake Run (which already cost about $2000). Chuck Morris, an awesome boater, floated past at the put-in. We weren't sure if this was a good sign or not. After paddling some fast moving flat-water, we rounded a bend only to find a low foot-bridge crossing the creek 15 yards in front of us. Frank and I fought our way under while the others carried around. It was at this time that Kevin Whitaker and DaveGregory opted for the ¼ mile hike out rather than the 2 miles of class V and zoo full of animals waiting downstream.
7-3 = 4 paddlers continuing the run. After a couple small ledges, we approached the first real rapid, a wicked slide called 'Ignorant' by the Riversport Boys. Not only is it steeper and longer than
Swallow Falls but it also includes an S-turn and pinning rock at the bottom. Scary! Joe ran the entrance perfect in his answer to the creekin' world, a Sleek. Following a perfect entrance, he ran the bottom drop a little too far left. He got turned sideways and due to the high flow and was launched 4' vertically off the pinning rock. Joe later verified that hitting a rock sideways at 30 mph does hurt. His facial expression left no doubt. We weren't sure if Frank yelling 'go left, go left' had any effect on Joe's line. Frank, myself, and Craig followed in that order with clean lines down the right side of Ignorant.
Our next problem occurred in the sliding ledges following Ignorant. Craig turned to look upstream. Where the head leads, the body does follow. Now going over the ledge sideways, he flipped and swam. Now that wouldn'thave been a problem except his skirt became hooked on a log and his boat was going solo over a class-V drop which required scouting. We abandoned the gear and attended to Craig. He freed himself and made it to the shore. A happy ending except that his boat ($800) continued running the 200+ fpm creek without him. It appeared to have some nice lines. Oh, did I mention that he had his video camera ($700) unfastened in the boat? Craig began his hike downstream hoping his boat would stop before reaching the Yough.
7-4 = 3 paddlers. Frank, Joe, and I continued to make our way down thecreek. The rapids were an awesome mix of boulder piles and ledges. Manyrequired a series of technical moves followed by a 5-10' ledge drop. Onerapid required a 90-degree left hand turn off of a pillow (similar toHeinzerling) dropping 5 feet and immediately turning right to avoid theundercut in front of you. Though we could boat-scout some, we were requiredto get out to scout at least 5 times. Strainers were a concern followingsuch a big storm. We did have to carry one rapid because of an unavoidablelog across the landing of a 10' waterfall.
¾ of a mile downstream of Craig's swim, I spotted him on river right reunited with his boat. Still shaken and not wanting to face the next couple of technical rapids, he carried downstream and ran a 10' waterfall. After a great line through the falls he decided not to continue. Craig asked me 'how am I going to get my boat out of the gorge?' I replied, 'I think that's obvious'. In early fall, we had hiked the creek without water and knew that it was not an easy carry. On the way out, he stumbled upon his camera case only to find that it had not been closed properly causing it to leak. That's okay, his new digital camera will take much nicer videoanyway. And besides, he was the only one on the video of this run. About 200 yards from the takeout, while scouting, Joe decided to carryoff because his back was hurting from his 'Ignorant' encounter.
7-5 = just Frank and I on the creek. He disappeared out of sight over the final 3 drops. When he came back into my sight, he was no longer in his boat.
7-6 = And then there was one! I boofed the final 8' ledge chasing his boat. He waited on an island while Craig provided boat retrieval assistance from theshore. The throw rope pendulum technique got Frank safely to the river left takeout.
Drakes is awesome creekin' with beautiful, unspoiled scenery. I found it to be far less abusive than the
North Fork of the Blackwater and
SovernRun, but more technical than both. Be prepared for the almost 2 mile carrydown the train tracks back to your car. If you are not consistently running all the technical moves on the
Upper Yough, you probably want to stay off Drakes. While hiking we did spot caves, sieves, and other hazards that elevate the danger of this technical creek. Frank and Joe did a nice job of leading me down my first decent of Drakes. Special thanks goes to Joe for his willingness to pet the lion first and once again living up to his nickname, 'The Probe.'
As usual I have compiled a list of tips in case you choose to face DrakeRun:
1\. that tiny creek at the put-in becomes viscous in a hurry
2\. don't lend Frank your vehicle for the shuttle
3\. water doesn't compress well
4\. watch for bridges in the middle of nowhere
5\. enjoy it because Drakes doesn't run often
6\. Sister's restaurant in Confluence provides good food and friendly
tow-truck advice
_Please don't swim in the creek!_
Dave Woten