Whitewater Run PA Class I-III

T370 to Trough Creek State Park

Great Trough Creek

Linked via: Proximity 42% confidence Synced 3mo ago

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Gauge Conditions
Runnable: 700.0 – 3,500.0 CFS
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Description
Put-in follow the signs to Trough Creek State Park from PA route 994. It is about 10 miles north of the town of Saxton. At the park entrance there is a park office where you can pick up a park map which will help in navigating the area. Continuing on, you will shortly cross a recently restored wooden arch bridge over Great Trough Creek. Take the first right after you cross the creek onto Trough Creek drive which quickly degrades to a gravel road. You may want to take note of the pipeline crossing where the road closely approaches the creek for future reference when you run the creek. In a couple miles take your first right onto another gravel road(T-370); in 1/2 mile you will be at the put-in. Takeout Retrace your path to the wooden bridge cross over the creek and take the first right - this is still Trough Creek drive. Follow this road just past the campground to the parking area near the dam and the "ice mine". River Description In the first part of the run Trough Creek is hemmed in on one side at a time by limestone bluffs with scenic woodlands on the other side. The gradient is modest with periodic riffly rapids, and the occasional small drop cum surfing opportunity. Shortly,(perhaps 100 yards)after the pipeline crossing there is an excellent surfing hole. This is best grabbed on the way downstream as getting back up and in once you've blown out is an arduous and paddle-banging task. There is a small eddy above it on river right for one boat to wait your turn. The river left side of this hole can be testy at higher flows. The creek continues with periodic class II rapids and surfing opportunities until it briefly flattens as you pass through the developed portion of the park near the wooden bridge. Then the gradient, action, and multiple surfing opportunities return. There is a rapid, surfing spot and pool at Copperas Rock. Just below this the creek passes under a new bridge; within a hundred yards downstream of the bridge there is usually a nice glassy faced wave. A couple hundred yards below the glassy faced wave the creek departs from the road a little and makes a slight bend to the right where a limestone bluff rises nearly vertically from the left bank. At most levels (low to med-high) this is the most difficult rapid on the creek; at high levels is washes out. Below this rapid you will pass under a suspension foot bridge and Abbot run enters from river left, cascading over Rainbow Falls. Just downstream from Rainbow Falls, high above you is Balanced Rock. There are a couple more fun drops, then you pass under another foot bridge and arrive at the pool backed up by the dam. Most boaters will usually take out above the dam. The hydraulic below the dam is lethal except for a side slot on far river left. If you run this remember to hold your paddle paralell to the long axis of your boat as you drop into the slot. One time one member of our group had his paddle bridge the opening and he did a fast and improptu limbo move, subsequently running the slot sans paddle. _Keystone Canoeing_ by Ed Gertler is an excellent reference.
Difficulty
Class I-III
Length
8.0 mi
Gradient
37 ft/mi
max 60
Rapids
0
Difficulty Classes
I Easy II Novice III Intermediate IV Advanced V Expert/Extreme VI Unrunnable
Current Conditions
5-Day Forecast
Whitewater data from
American Whitewater