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Upcoming Trips, Classes & Club Events PDF Print E-mail
Date Canoeing / Kayaking Trips
Difficulty / Class Coordinator
3/13
Chattahoochee - Sautee to GA 255
Trained Beginner
Dickie Tillman
3/13 South Chickamauga Creek   Flat water with Tennessee Valley Canoe Club.  TVCC is working with others to establish a canoe trail Beginner Lamar Phillips
3/13
Chattooga Section 3 Intermediate
Mark Holmberg
3/13
Nantahala
Intermediate Pauline Thynne
3/14
Upper Amicalola
Trained Beginner
Richard Bowman
3/14
Alcovy River - Factory Shoals
Intermediate
Donald Robertson
3/20
Etowah River - Falls Section
Trained Beginner
Don Parker
3/25
Dinner - Taco Mac - 6:30 - Hwy 9 Alpharetta - Please RSVP
Ya Gotta Eat!
Gina Johnson
3/27 Toccoa-TVCampground to below Party Rock Trained Beginner Gina Johnson
3/27
A) Flint River - Sprewell Bluff to Hwy 36
B) Flint River -Hwy 36 to PoBiddy (Includes Yellow Jacket - Class III)
Trained Beginner
Intermediate
Vincent Payne
Vincent Payne
3/28
Spring Membership Meeting & Metro Hooch paddle (Article Below)
Beginner
Lisa Haskell
April
     
4/2 Okefenokee Swamp - Overnight Smooth Matt Carroll 
4/3 Broad River
Trained Beginner
Dan MacIntyre
4/10
Toccoa - TVC to below Party Rock
Trained Beginner
Jack Taylor
4/11
Tallapoosa River
Beginner
Karen Saunders
4/16-18East Coast Canoe and Kayak Festival - Charleston, SC
non-GCA event
 
4/17
Etowah - Tunnel Section
Beginner
Buddy Goolsby
4/17 
Nantahala Intermediate Mark Holmberg
4/18
Indian Springs Lake
Beginner
Marie Short
4/18 Broad River Trained Beginner Jeff Engel
4/18 Nantahala - Ferebee to Falls Intermediate Mark Holmberg
4/24
Toccoa - TVC to below Party Rock
Trained Beginner
Jack Taylor
4/24 Upper Chattahoochee
Intermediate
Dan MacIntyre
4/25
High Falls State Park Lake
Beginner
Marie Short
May
     
5/9
Sweetwater Creek State Park - Lake
Beginner
Marie Short
5/14
Spring Extravaganza - Smokey Mountain Meadows Beginner to Adv
Several
5/15 Cypress swamp - George L Smith St.Park -"Paddlers Club" location Beginner
Marie Short
5/15 Pigeon River  Intermediate/Adv 3+ Mark Holmberg
5/21
Swift Water Rescue Class - 3 Day Class
N/A Matthew Crawford
5/22
Basic Rescue (Tentitive)
 Gina Johnson
5/29-30
Sea Kayak Basics
  Steve Cramer
5/29
Hiwassee River - Memorial Day Weekend
Trained Beg. 1-2
Brannon Proctor
5/30
Hiwassee River - Memorial Day Weekend
Trained Beg. 1-2
Jack Taylor
June
     
6/12
Sea Kayak Rescue Benefit Class
N/A Steve Cramer
6/18-20
Canoe, Kayak, & Recreational Kayak Classes -3 Day Class
Various Levels
Gina Johnson
6/19-6/25 Paddle Georgia   Broad River
non-GCA Event  
26
Duckie Day - Inflatable, Sit-on-top Class
Beginner
Gina Johnson
July
     
7/16-18
Canoe, Kayak & Recreational Kayak Classes - 3 Day Class
Various Levels
Gina Johnson
Aug
     
8/7
Sea Kayak Strokes Class
  Steve Cramer
8/13-15
Canoe, Kayak, & Recreational Kayak Classes - 3 Day Class
Various Levels
Gina Johnson
8/14
42nd South Eastern Races "Canoe Club Challenge"
Intermediate
See Link
8/21-22
Hiwassee - Chick Paddle
Trained Beginner
Karen Saunders
8/21-22
Nantahala - Whitewater Warrior Weekend
Intermediate
Jack Taylor
Sept
     
9/18-19
Fall Gala  - Smokey Mtn Medows - Nantahala, Tuck, & More
Various Levels
Lisa Haskell
9/18-19
Sea Kayak Basics Class - Charleston SC
  Steve Cramer
  See "Trips" Calendar above for sign up details.
   
Click here for trip coordinator contact information 
You must register and sign in to access this list.  Coordinators, feel free to update your contact information.
  All club trips are free unless clearly noted.
   
  Trip sign up guidelines
   
 Release schedule: Upper Ocoee, Middle Ocoee, Hiwassee
  
 
Spring Membership Meeting - 2010 (Updated) PDF Print E-mail

Our Spring membership meeting is going to be in Atlanta on Sunday, March 28, 2010 at 1:00pm. We will meet at the pavilion at the Power's Island Parking area (the usual put for the Metro Hooch). We will have a members meeting and a covered dish meal after which we will canoe and kayak the mighty Hooch.


Which section of the Hooch we paddle will depend on participant skill levels and water levels. We can either put in at Johnson's Ferry and paddle to Power's Island and take out, or we can put in at Power's Island and paddle down to Paces Mill which is the usual Metro Hooch section. We can even split into two groups to allow people to paddle their preferred section. Just remember, at recent water levels the Hooch will be running MUCH faster than many of us are accustomed to. This means that anyone who ends up in the water could be in for a long swim so be sure to DRESS FOR THE WATER!


Please be sure to bring whatever you would like to drink and a dish to share as well as your canoeing or kayaking  gear. We will need main dishes, side dishes and desserts!


If you have any questions feel free to contact me. Lisa Haskell This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
US 64 vs Ocoee Season PDF Print E-mail
Blasting Saturday both Feb 20 & Feb 26 at 2:00PM Click to view
At the moment, there is a massive slab of rock aimed at the put in area. They are moving a lot of rock, but the scale of the project makes progress seem painfully slow.

Large boulders at the base of the put in ramp have been broken up for removal.

The Ocoee season open appears to be in jeopardy. The webcam is aimed at the blasting area, but there it still a massive slab aimed at the put in. Details here

 
Winter Roll Practice PDF Print E-mail

Cool Indoor pool roll sessions are Mondays from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. on January 4, 11 and 25; February 1, 8 and 22 and March 1, 8, 15, 22 and 29 at the Warren/Holyfield Boys' and Girls' Club at Berne and Marion Streets near Grant Park.

Directions: Exit I-20 at the Boulevand/Grant Park/ Cyclorama exit. Go south about 1/2 mile to the light at Berne Street and turn left. Go another 1/2 mile and you'll see the facility, a large brick building on the left. Turn left on Marion Street. The pool entrance is in the back — enter via the gate at the far end of the building to unload boats. Boats must be cleaned before entering the pool.


This is your opportunity to learn to roll, practice your roll to stay sharp, teach a fellow paddler to roll or work on other techniques such as wet exits, hand rolls, deep water reentries, etc. The indoor heated pool is a great place to hone these skills during the cold winter months.

Fees:  $7.00 per session to cover heated pool rental.

 

GCA Membership is appreciated.

ACA membership is required for insurance.
Current ACA members, be sure to bring your ID number.

 

GCA members can join ACA for $30 Individual or $45 Family

Non-GCA members can join ACA for $40 Individual or $60 Family

There is a one time introductory ACA membership, six months for $10 available to people who have not taken advantage of this before.

And there is the option to pay $5.00 for an “ACA event membership” for each session.

 

We need eleven people at each event for GCA to break even.

 
Tires - Trash Talk PDF Print E-mail

Hey all you Georgia paddlers, hope you had a safe and fun holiday and July. Keep praying for rain. Just got back from Paddle Georgia on the Flint River. Like all of Georgia’s rivers, the Flint is extremely low and suffers from lack of rain. GCA had a large presence with GCA safety boats guarding the 300+ paddlers on the Day 2 journey through Yellow Jacket Shoals and during the week with deadfall and technical places.

Vincent Payne did an awesome job giving the safety talk before the paddle started with the “Paddle Safety Bingo” game. Even those of us who have heard the safety talk too many times to count listened and learned something. If you ever have to do a safety spiel for a large group, this is an effective, fun way to get the job done.

The Flint is extremely clean, but we had decided months before to do a clean up on Monday’s paddle. I learned a lesson about assumptions, and did not say what NOT to pick up since I had seen very little trash of any sort the first 2 days. We had a huge shock when piles of tires and trash were brought in that evening. One canoe with 3 teenagers had 13 tires in it! (Don’t ask, you need to see the pictures). We ended up with 35 tires and over 800 pounds of trash. The DNR Ranger told me it was the biggest clean up ever on that section of the Flint!

Most of the tires were placed long ago by fishermen to give fish a place to nest. We have seen the same thing in Lake Lanier. Tires were generally considered “non-hazardous” and OK to use for this purpose. The research has proved different and we have begun removing them. If you remove tires from a river, please keep the following in mind. If the tire is submerged, will remain so and is adding stability to the riverbank and is not a hazard, I generally suggest leaving it. If it is sticking out and has exposed areas and might be a breeding place for mosquitoes, it is an excellent candidate for removal.

Be extremely careful when handling and removing tires. They harbor critters that can bite, sting and generally cause you to have an unpleasant journey. Ask Jim Albert: I have not seen him since he helped us on an Upper Chattahoochee River event and had multiple critters from a tire gang up and attack him in his canoe. Tires also have mud, sand and rocks and are extremely heavy. Balancing a tire on a kayak is almost impossible: canoes have more success but they still take excellent balance and control. Unless you have a place to off load your tire quickly you will be traveling down the river with the beast.

The other issue is disposal. Tires can not be put in a regular dumpster, they have to be recycled. If you don’t have a trash collection exemption or figure it out ahead of time, they can cost $3.00+ each and you have to get them to the recycle center. If you are planning a clean up, tires must be addressed and disposal determined before you start the event. If you have some tires that are bugging you, by all means get them, but if you are just generally doing a clean up, I suggest “NO TIRES.”

Rivers Alive’s (www.riversalive.org) 10th year of supporting waterway clean ups is this year. We are producing special T-shirts and will have 2 shirt choices in the offering along with boat stickers. Registration is open so get your river event on the calendar.

Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper (www.chattahoochee.org) is holding the first headwaters “Save the Hooch” event at Indigo Joe’s Restaurant in Cumming on July 26. This is a Sweetwater Beer event, so beer will be featured and on sale along with music and food. Come help us “give our liver to save the river.” Times and other information on the UCR website, See you on the river, keep it clean!


by Bonny Putney, GCA “Trash Queen”
From The Eddy Line, August 2008

 
Spring Extravaganza - 2010 (Updated) PDF Print E-mail

Our Spring Extravaganza is planned for the weekend of May 14-16, 2010. The canoeing and kayaking portion of this event will take place on various rivers in the Nantahala area, the camping portion of this event will be at Smokey Mountain Meadows Campground.


The campground officially opens on May 1, 2010 and the phone number after that time will be 1 (828) 488-3672. If you would like to contact the campground earlier than May 1st to make your reservation please call 1 (864) 420-8077 and speak with Elaine. They offer tent sites with no water or electricity, sites with water and electric only, and full hook up RV sites. Be sure to specify that you are with the GCA when you make your reservation.


We have reserved the pavilion for use on Saturday night so that we can have a group dinner. The pavilion has a roof and picnic tables so that we can gather and eat even if it happens to rain on us. This campground has very nice bath houses for those of you who are interested in such things!


We hope to be able to offer canoe and kayaking trips on the Tuckaseegee and the Nanty and possibly other rivers as well depending on water levels. I need volunteers to lead the aforementioned Tuck/Nanty trips so if you would be willing to lead a trip on one of these rivers either Saturday or Sunday, please contact me (Lisa Haskell) at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it and let me know. Hope to see you that weekend! Keep watching the Eddy Line and the website for more details!

 
No Water Grabs PDF Print E-mail

The Georgia General Assembly is in sesson, and no river is safe for 40 days and 40 nights. What can you do about this? Sign the Petition to Protect Georgia's Waterways.

Over 1100 people have now signed the No Water Grabs petition - can you? Go to www.nowatergrabs. com to let your elected leaders know you want all Georgia waterways protected.

Georgia is home to more than 70,000 miles of rivers and streams, but with a population of 9.8 million people, these abundant water resources are being strained. This is especially true in Metro Atlanta, where half of the state's residents are located.

Some believe that the abundant water resources of Georgia's smaller cities (the rivers in which we paddle) should be piped to Metro Atlanta to support its continued growth. This process is usually referred to as "interbasin transfer" because water is moved from one river basin to another and not returned. Such transfers could significantly impact the economic future of Georgia's smaller communities, threaten the natural heritage of our state and dry up the river that we love to paddle.

A better alternative is water conservation and efficiency. Metro Atlanta could save between 130 and 210 million gallons of water per day by implementing water efficiency and conservation. Interbasin Transfers are costly, very controversial and would take a long time to provide drinking water. The cost of efficiency measures range from $0.46 to $250 per 1,000 gallons saved or new capacity. Water efficiency FIRST is the most cost-effective and timely solution.

Let your elected leaders know you want all Georgia communities and waterways protected - go to www.nowatergrabs. com today and tell your friends, particularly your paddling friends!

1/27/2010
Dan MacIntyre

 
Let me help you coordinate your first trip in March. PDF Print E-mail

Update v7:


You know that feeling you get when you scout the drop really well from the shore, discuss it with your buds, then jump in your boat for the run and when you get to the drop you realize you've no clue what to do? Well this is nothing like that. It'll go like clock work.
Take the plunge.     "Help you I will", Yoda.


If you would like to be coordinator for a GCA canoe / kayak trip in MARCH
I will help you though every step of the trip. My goal would be to help someone who has yet to take the plunge into trip coordination but is ready; although they feel they could benefit from a bit of assistance.

Trips on smooth water, black water, real short lakes, class I and II and “class II with the occasional class III thrown in so I can swim” are all fine. Don’t rule out canoe / kayak camping trips or kayak fishing trips. Florida, Alabama, South or North Carolina or Tennessee trips are doable as well. This will be your trip and you get to do it your way (with my coaching and help with the leg work).

Trip coordination is fun, easy, gratifying and not stressful at all. My schedule will fill up quickly so ACT NOW!!

Vincent Payne, 678-343-5292 cell

Lisa has the completed the Master of Trip Coordinatorship course by coordinating a four day trip to Florida in January. She made the weather very nice everyday. This is certainly an advance trip coordinator skill.

Congratulations to Lisa Haskell the latest graduate of the Vince Payne School of Trip Coordinatorship. Lisa led a trip o the Cartecay River in December and completed her studies on her own because I was on the injured list. 

Congratulations to Robert Harris the November graduate from the Vince Payne School of Trip Coordinatorship. Robert led an overnite trip that went off smooth as lake water. He even included a couple of members from a canoe club out of Minnesota for the final leg on Sunday.

Congratulations to Marshall Busko the October graduate of the Vince Payne School of Trip Coordinatorship. (Yeah, I made up that word.) As his friends anticipated, Marshall graduated at the top of his class.


 
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