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Book, A Canoeing and Kayaking Guide to Kentucky cover

A Canoeing and Kayaking Guide to Kentucky
Sehlinger, Bob
Molloy, Johnny

Paperback
$11.02 + $1.99 USPS S/H

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BOOK SUMMARY
At-a-glance information for each river section helps paddlers determine the river that's right for them. Stream overviews, gauge and shuttle information, names of rapids and suggestions on how to run them, along with a little history, make this guide not

BOOK SYNOPSIS
28

AUTHOR BIO
A native of Kentucky, Bob Sehlinger has led canoeing trips throughout eastern North America and is the former president of the Eastern Professional River Outfitters Association. He is the creator of the Unofficial Guide travel series and a recipient of the Lowell Thomas Gold Award for journalistic excellence. Founder and publisher of Menasha Ridge Press, Sehlinger lives in Birmingham, Alabama, where he enjoys mountain biking and playing the drums.

Johnny Molloy is an outdoor writer based in Johnson City, Tennessee. He has averaged over 100 nights in the wild per year since the early 1980's, backpacking and canoe camping throughout the country. He has written numerous hiking and tent camping guides for the southeastern states, Wisconsin and Colorado.

BOOK EXCERPTS
This section of the river flows through the Daniel Boone National Forest. It is extremely remote and makes a good canoe-camping run at moderate water levels (500-1100 cfs) and a fair whitewater run at higher levels (1100-1900). This section has been designated as a Kentucky Wild and Scenic River.

As the river passes Williamsburg, rock replaces the muddy bottom found in upper sections of the river, and it continues to widen in places to almost 200-feet across. The gradient also increases, creating some mild whitewater (Class II), with boulders in the stream and some shoals spanning the entire width of the river. The current runs swift and continuously, with very few pools. Boulders line the banks in increasing numbers and some flat, accessible terraces have been carved along the streamside.

As the Cumberland begins to enter the deep gorge that will carry it over the falls and beyond to lake Cumberland, exposed rock palisades become visible on the right. About one mile upstream of the falls, the river curves sharply to the left and the KY 90 bridge becomes visible downstream. Move to the right of the river for the take-out on the upstream side of the bridge (at the picnic ground and parking lot). Failure to move promptly to the right can have tragic consequences for the unlucky or inexperienced.

One of the larger shoals (Class II) of this section is situated across the entire river just upstream of the take-out. If you run the shoals on the left, and fill up or capsize, you will find yourself in the main current heading for the entrance rapids to Cumberland Falls several hundred yards downstream. If you run the shoals on the right and take water or turn over, you will be in much slower current. Except at excessive levels (1900 cfs or higher), you will be washed into the bank as the river narrows near the bridge, or alternately, swept downstream past the bridge into a huge eddy that forms along the bank near the visitor's parking lot.


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FOR RELATED BOOKS
Sports & Recreation Books :: Canoeing Books
Travel Books :: United States Books :: South Books :: East South Central (Al, Ky, Ms, Tn) Books

MORE BOOK INFO
ISBN: 0897325656
ISBN(13-digit): 9780897325653
Copyright: 2004
Dewey Decimal: 797.7/22/09769
Library of Congress: 2003071063
Book Publisher: Pgw
Language: ENG
No. of Pages: 267
Paper Weight (lb): 1.00 lb



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