Georgia Canoe - Kayak PaddlersA website for paddlers maintained by the Georgia Canoeing Association

| Dicks Creek & Middle Fork Broad |
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| Articles - Canoe & Kayak Trip Reports |
| Written by Roger Nott |
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Exploration Trip, March 1, 2009
The
Middle Fork of the Broad River bubbles up about seven miles ESE of
Clarkesville on the south side of the Eastern Continental Divide
traced by Georgia Highway 13 at Dicks Hill, which is also the source
of Hazel Creek to the east and the North Fork of the Broad to the
southeast. For its first ten miles it drains a densely forested
natural area almost entirely within the southeastern corner of the
Chattahoochee National Forest and the Lake Russell Wildlife
Management Area (LRWMA). To the east it drains Davis, Currahee,
Farmer, Allen, and Wells mountains before leaving the national
forest, entering Banks County and becoming a more pastoral stream. I
have been dreaming of paddling the Middle Fork of the Broad River
since the mid-1970’s and often talked about it with the GCA’s
first Exploration Chairman, Gary DeBacher. He walked the entire
section we paddled in the 1970’s and wrote an exploration trip
report for the November, 1976 Eddy Line about a 4 mile section
of the river, A to B in Welander’sA Canoeing & Kayaking
Guide to Georgia, 40 miles downstream of the headwaters streams
we paddled this day. Our
trip was billed in The Eddy Line as a Class 2-4 “Exploration
Wildcard,” meaning we would paddle a stream “not yet written up
in any guide book” or on the AW website. There is no river gauge
anywhere near the LRWMA, but we figured it had rained at least 2
inches there since Friday night, so our intrepid crew (open boaters
Kevin McInturff, Liph Johnson and I) set out to paddle the headwaters
of the Middle Fork of the Broad despite forecasts of heavy rain,
strong winds and snow. Kevin
had paddled the Middle Fork a few years ago with Jim Gerwer and Chuck
Wilburn from the Brown Bottoms bridge, but we decided this day to put
in near the head of the Broad River Trail at the FS87 bridge and also
paddle 1.2 miles on Dicks Creek before it joins the Middle Fork a
quarter of a mile downstream of Brown Bottoms. Dicks Creek is 15 to
30 feet wide here and drops at a rate of 100 feet per mile, mostly in
tight Class 1 and 2 drops. We
also found two sliding falls, both of which tempted us but had wood
in them. We portaged both easily along the Board River Trail, which
hugs the left bank. The first drops about 12 feet and threatened to
be a boat basher. The second, a Class 5 which plummets about 40 feet
on a 35-40 degree angle, sports a pretty clean line along its left
side. My alibis involved my using a 16 foot, borrowed Boy Scout canoe
with no floatation, the in-stream wood (which we could have cut out
in about 10 minutes) and the horrendous weather. Yes, the weatherman
was right: it rained about an inch and a half, with occasional
wind-blown snow, during the three and a half hours we were paddling. We
also had to pull over 2 deadfalls on the creek (and one on the
river), but in just over an hour we paddled Dicks Creek and reached
the Middle Fork, which more than doubled the flow. Below here the
river widened to 30-50 feet and the rapids eased up. However, we
still found frequent Class 1 and 2 rapids and a lively 25 foot per
mile gradient in the next 3.3 miles to the bridge at Farmer Bottoms.
As the river was rising rapidly, we enjoyed many good play spots. Kevin
promised that there was a long, fun Class 3 about a mile past the
bridge at Farmer Bottoms, so we decided to eschew the easy takeouts
at the bridge and along FS92 on river left during the next three
quarters of a mile. Instead we paddled another 1.2 miles to a river
left trail just after this rapid. The
Lake Russell topo shows about 60 feet of drop in this 1.2 mile
stretch. However, we discovered that 35-40 feet of this gradient is
consumed by Kevin’s “fun class 3 rapid.” Moreover, with three
and a half inches of recent rainfall we paddled, without scouting,
into a heart-stopping, LONG, continuous series of twisting, Class 4
slides, punctuated with several eye-popping holes and large curlers. I
was feeling pretty proud and thankful to have made it unscathed to
the right side eddy at the bottom. I had been surprised by the size
and power of the rapid we had just run, which I assumed we had
completed. So I didn't worry too much about the horizon line in front
of me as I pulled back into the current. As far as I could see was
another twisting humongous drop, very similar to what we had just
survived! We
all made it to the bottom, smiling from ear to ear! Our exhilaration
helped to generate the adrenalin needed for the steep path up to the
road, similar to the hike out at Woodall but with and additional
third of a mile carry along the rough road to FS193. We
paddled a total of 5.7 miles dropping 260 feet in this beautiful
natural area through mature, second-growth forest. Despite the
horrendous weather, we had a great trip. The
three of us are already talking about soon putting in a Farmer
Bottoms and exploring some of the Middle Fork downstream of our
takeout. We know that the river soon leaves the national forest and
plummets over a steep, possibly runable falls, perhaps 40 feet high,
into a small reservoir less than a mile after our takeout. What else
awaits us? Directions: The Ayersville and Lake Russell USGS topographical maps will be helpful in planning a trip on Dicks Creek and the Middle Fork of the Broad in the Lake Russell
Wildlife
Management Area. During hunting season, August 14 through the end of
February, one may only drive into the RLWMA from the north, by the
Game Checking Station on Guard Camp Road (FS87). At other times one
can also use Forest Services roads 193, 191, and 92 (both east and
west ends) to enter the LRWMA, a good road map of which can be found
at
http://www.georgiaoutdoors.com/hunting/WMAmaps/LakeRussellWMA.pdf. To
enter the LRWMA past the Game Check Station from Atlanta, take I-85
and I-985, which becomes State Highway 365 just past Gainesville.
Enter Habersham County, pass Highway 197 and stay on Highway 365
towards Toccoa by bearing right just before the light at the Tom
Arrendale Interchange southeast of Clarkesville. Enter
Stephens County and about a mile past the Southern Railroad crossing
turn right onto Quarry Road. It will end in less than a mile on old
Hwy. 13 (Dicks Hill Parkway). Turn right and in about two-thirds of a
mile turn left onto Ayersville Road (Patterson Milliken Rd. on some
maps). After about a mile Guard Camp Road (FS87) turns left and is
well marked. A couple of miles after you pass the Game Checking
Station Browns Bottom Road (FS 92B) turns right. For
those who do not want to run Dicks Creek, you can put in on the
Middle Fork at the bridge about a mile and a quarter down this road
at Browns Bottoms. If you continue straight two tenths of a mile on
Guard Camp Road you will reach the Dicks Creek bridge, our put-in. A
couple of hundreds of yards past this bridge is the head of the Broad
River Trail, which hugs the left bank of Dicks Creek all the way to
the Middle Fork and then follows the river for another 3 miles to the
bridge at Farmer Bottoms (FS92). To reach our takeout, drive south on
FS87 four or five miles more till it ends at FS92. If
you were to turn right (west) here onto FS92 (Red Root Road) you
would encounter the Farmer Bottoms bridge over the Middle Fork in
about fifty yards. To access our takeout continue straight (south) on
what is now FS92 (Kimbrell Creek Road), which stays close to the
river left bank for about three quarters of a mile and provides
several easy takeouts for those not wanting to run the last Class 3-4
rapid. Shortly
after it leaves the river, FS92 turns left (east) but you continue
straight(south)on FS193(Post Oak Corner Road) for another half mile.
Shortly after fording a small stream a rough road turns right.
High-clearance 4WD vehicles might try this road to get closer to the
takeout, but it was blocked by felled trees this day and we had to
park here and carry out the full four tenths of a mile to FS193. by
Roger Nott
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