Bardstown Boaters no longer uses Blogger. Visit www.bardstowboaters.com for the latest news.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Bear Creek

This creek has great potential for a whitewater run here in Nelson County. Access points cover the entire run at Manton Rd., Pottershop Rd., and after it runs into the Beech Fork at Hwy 49.

At Manton Rd. you can spot a large ledge drop, from the road you can't see the bottom so right now the height is unknown.

At Pottershop Rd. there looks to be multiple whitewater features when the water level is up.

This creeks needs to be walked to know for sure, but from road scouting it looks good.

Riverrestoration.org Designed Park a Success

Glenwood whitewater park brings paddling legitimacy, tourism dollars

GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colorado — Ever since the Glenwood Springs Whitewater Park’s opening in the spring of 2008, the park and the town have become a second home for whitewater sports enthusiasts.

The park has brought events such as the May 2009 U.S. Kayak Freestyle Team Trials and next Monday’s stand-up paddling championship. Kate Collins, former Vice President of Tourism Marketing for the Glenwood Springs Chamber Resort Association, said those events help bring tourism dollars to the city.

“It’s increased interest in a time of year when there is not a lot of tourism,” Collins said. “I understand the number of competitors [in the stand-up paddling event] is small, but people are coming even from Hawaii.”

Collins also said that since the whitewater park opened, the city has emerged as a worldwide destination for whitewater events. Stand-up paddling championship coordinator Paul Tefft agrees.

“As event coordinator, we wanted to choose a venue that is known for whitewater,” he said. “The Colorado River is great.”

One thing that sets the Glenwood venue apart, according to the website glenwoodwhitewaterevents.com, is that the water flows of the Colorado River are higher for longer than most other places in the United States. This allows events to take place in “shoulder seasons,” before or after regular whitewater seasons.

Aspen Kayak Academy owner Charlie MacArthur said that, since the whitewater park was built, things have changed.

“It’s changed dramatically,” he said. “I think it adds to the legitimacy of how amazing Glenwood and the whole valley is. The strength is that it can host so many different events, so it’s pretty cool.”

MacArthur added that the park brings people in and that helps the city and tourism.

“It helps [businesses] a lot,” MacArthur said. “They hit breweries, restaurants, and you have all the shops. They have access to all that Glenwood has to offer, and they spend.”

He said events like the stand-up paddling championship are here to stay.

“At this point, I don’t know how it would go anywhere else,” he said. “It’s in our backyard, and I don’t think anywhere else has this nice of a venue.”

This is the first competition that will benefit from the $430,000 in bank improvements recently completed at the whitewater park. Improvements include observation bleachers and decks for spectators on both the north and south riverbanks, and a specific take out for paddlers to the west of the Midland Avenue Bridge. Gould Construction completed the improvement work, while Aspen-based Dunnett Design Group designed the park.

The wave feature was designed by Jason Carey and was constructed by his company, Riverrestoration.org.


Monday, May 24, 2010

Buena Vista Whitewater Park Grows In Popularity

Reporting
Doug Whitehead

BUENA VISTA, Colo. (CBS4) ― As the snow begins to melt high in the Colorado mountains, rafters and kayakers are gearing up.

Whitewater parks are growing in popularity around the state and kayakers around the world are discovering one of the newer parks — the Buena Vista Whitewater Park on the Arkansas River.

"A big part of why I’m here is because this whitewater park is so good,” kayaker Dustin Urban said. Urban is a world champion boater. As a professional, he’s been kayaking all over the world. Today he calls the Buena Vista Whitewater Park home. “It’s just getting better every year,” he said.

For years the stretch of the Arkansas River known as the Buena Vista River Park has been a popular corridor for anglers and commercial rafting companies.

“This section of river used to be pretty hazardous, it had a lot of big rocks where boaters and fishermen and rafters could get stuck on,” said Earl Richmond, a promoter for the whitewater park. In recent years, hazards have been removed, channels developed, and features added, creating a world class whitewater park, and the park has already grown. “We now have about another quarter mile of river features that include bank-side improvements and public access improvements, and also about three more kayaking features for all the paddlers to enjoy,” Richmond said.

Local boaters in the Upper Arkansas River Valley believe that the Buena Vista Whitewater Park, at more than 1 1/2 mile in length, is the longest park of its kind in the state. “So this is really a dream come true that I can grab my boat and come down here on a lunch break or after work,” Andre Spino-Smith said. “What’s so amazing about this for me is I live and work about a half block away in the South Main neighborhood.”

The South Main neighborhood is one of the newest developments in the historic town of Buena Vista. New homes, new businesses, and a new restaurant are all just a stone’s throw to the Arkansas River and the whitewater park below.

“This river, stretch of river up here, is much higher gradient. It’s moving faster and so that presents opportunities and challenges,” said whitewater park designer Mike Harvey said.

Many of the whitewater parks around the world that Harvey has helped design have been in urban settings. This was a bit different. “Here we really started with a relatively natural stretch of river and one of our design goals was to preserve that character,” Harvey said.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Story on the Green River Drowning During the Past Flood

By BOB WHITE

Had their plans worked out, two good friends would have, today, been recovering after a weeklong paddling excursion through Mammoth Cave National Park on Green River.

Dangerous and powerful floodwater and unpredictable river debris, however, resulted Monday afternoon in both their kayaks being consumed by the Green River.

Gary Tyler, a relatively experienced 56-year-old paddler from Elizabethtown, managed to save himself by latching on to a log jam, then phoning for help.

On Friday, after a grueling five-day search, it was learned that Bobby Atcher, a novice 55-year-old kayaker from Radcliff, had drowned beneath a field of woody river debris swept up against an island head.

It was the end to, as Atcher’s wife, Debbie puts it, “his last adventure.”

That adventurous kayak and camping trip that Atcher and Tyler planned weeks before rains fell Derby weekend, was something that excited Atcher.

It was right up an outdoorsman’s alley.

Atcher was an outdoorsman.

Atcher’s sister, Ronda Wood - just a year younger - grew up riding horses, fishing and roughhousing with her brother.

He’d been crippled at 3, when a car crushed his little legs, but Wood said he never let his limp bring him down, or impact his abilities to go out and conquer the great outdoors.

Atcher helped Wood run City Pawn in Radcliff for a couple years prior to taking a maintenance job at Stithton Baptist Church, where he continued to work until this past week’s tragedy.

It was during his time away from work, that Atcher’s soul shined brightest of all. He served with the Kentucky Baptist Disaster Relief group and Esther’s Closet – a clothing distribution center at Stithton Baptist Church.

Giving of himself, Atcher had gone on a mission trip to Alaska to build homes for the indigent a few years ago. Being an outdoorsman, he snuck in some panning for gold, fishing and exploration while he was there.

Regularly, Wood said her brother would hunt, fish and search for arrowheads in the wilderness with his buddies.

By all accounts, the wilderness was Atcher’s home away from home.

“He loved that kind of thing,” Wood said.

Two friends plan a trip

Tyler’s wife, Becky, said its that love of the outdoors that nurtured Atcher and her husband’s friendship that spanned back to 1978.

It was through Tyler, an RV tech at Phelps Dodge, from whom Atcher learned the ropes of paddling.

He enjoyed the sport so much, and the 10-foot boat’s ability to take him deep into the woods, that Atcher recently bought a kayak of his own – a pretty blue one.

The trip he and Tyler had planned together was slated to put the new kayak to the test -taking them both, over the course of several days, more than 20 miles from a launch in Munfordville to the interior of Mammoth Cave National Park.

Once inside the park, they’d have the unique chance to paddle directly into a riverside cave that’s accessible by small paddle boats when the water’s up enough.

The water was definitely up…

Rains Derby weekend delayed their planned weekend departure, but the sun shone brightly Monday morning, giving them the green flag to set out for their great big adventure.

Others witnessed the adventure begin

Atcher’s oldest daughter, Carrie, shuttled them to Munfordville, where, at about 1 p.m., they launched their kayaks onto the swollen passage that drains roughly one-third of Kentucky’s land.

Several people spoke with Atcher and Tyler before they set out. Some on the bank merely gawked at the river, then at the men and what they were trying to pull off. Some onlookers were aware of the risk, but Tyler and Atcher were grown men able to make their own decisions.
“None of us could have stopped him,” Debbie Atcher said. “I wouldn’t have taken that away from him.”

By noon Monday, rains caused the Green to spill well out of its banks, rising to 50-foot above flood stage and pushing so forcibly at 60,000 cubic feet per second that entire trees were swept downstream like toothpicks.

The river’s force was overwhelming, but Tyler’s wife said this wasn’t the first time the two had taken off on a challenging outdoor adventure.

“They’ve been through hell together,” she said.

Family members on both sides expressed gut feelings that the trip was too risky, but they knew that it was for this type of adventure that both men lived.

The Green, turned brown from stirred sediment, swept Tyler and Atcher briskly downstream. Their paddles steered them along as the powerful flow provided all the propulsion any paddler could ever need.

It didn’t take long for trouble to surface.

Two hours and 4.5 miles into the trip, the pair was thrust into a woody debris field at the head of an island – a literal dead end.

Overturned and smashed into a log jam, Tyler clawed on top of it and clung to a tree.

Atcher, who from behind saw the trouble Tyler was in, knew what was coming.

Some say Tyler last saw Atcher praying with his eyes closed and heading into disaster.

He’d never again see his friend alive.

From atop the debris field, Tyler called for help using a cell phone that had been stowed away in a Zip-Loc baggy.

According to Hart County Emergency Management director Kerry McDaniels, Tyler was in grave danger when rescuers arrived.

“He was in the middle of the river holding onto a log,” McDaniels said. “Luckily, we had a well-trained swift-water rescuer team able to get a boat over the fast water and to him.”

Despite a search lasting into the dark, there was no sign of Atcher on Monday.

Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday passed, with each day remnants of the expedition being found.

All the items found – camping gear, coolers, Atcher’s boat and life-jacket – were concentrated at a single log jam within 75 yards of the spot where both paddlers got into trouble.

Due to that, McDaniels said volunteers from 10 different agencies focused their search for Atcher in that same area.

When a cadaver dog with a Jefferson County search team “hit” on that same location late on Thursday, it confirmed searchers’ suspicions that Atcher was beneath the debris field.

While searchers had a clue to Atcher’s whereabouts, the high water made recovery almost impossible for several days.

Then late Thursday and early Friday, the water dropped almost 20 feet, like some sort of other worldly occurrence.

“That’s faster than what it should have dropped,” Atcher’s wife, Debbie said. “We’d been holding out for a miracle and that was the one God gave us.”

A grueling five-day search ended Friday morning, when searchers returned to find the kayaker beneath the woody debris.

McDaniels said the dropping water level made all the difference in the search for Atcher.
It wasn’t the miracle family had been hoping for, but Atcher’s wife said finding him after five days was still a blessing.

Atcher, Wood and McDaniels each credited the many volunteers for the week-long search and recovery.

Search and Rescue teams from Radcliff, Louisville, Munfordville, Hart County, Metcalfe County, Barren County, Kentucky’s Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources and others put themselves and their gear at risk to search the floodwaters.

The gave of themselves, their own financial resources and sacrificed time with their own families to help provide another family some closure.

Atcher and Wood said they’re grateful to have been so lucky to have such a wonderful crew of volunteers assist in the search.

“Central Kentucky has the best volunteers around,” McDaniels said.

Atcher’s wife said the mission to find her husband was the type of search he would have jumped right into, donating his time and personal resources too, for the benefit of others.

Atcher's being put to rest on Tuesday.

Nelson-Edelen-Bennett Funeral Home in Radcliff is in charge of Atcher’s final arrangements. Visitation will be held there Monday, then at Stithton Baptist Church Tuesday, from noon until the time of his funeral service.

Atcher asks that people touched by her husband’s story remember the many different volunteer groups, from those her husband supported to those who helped recover him from the river this past week, and donate to those groups whenever possible.

Since Kentucky law prohibits volunteer search and rescue groups from charging for their services, McDaniels also emphasized the importance of donations for their support and operations, such as this week’s search for Atcher.

Last week was a deadly one.

Atcher’s death was one of several across the state this past week attributable to flooding, according to Kentucky’s Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources.

Spalding Hurst, a whitewater paddler familiar with the Class 1 Green River and other Kentucky streams, said rivers that seem peaceful can become deadly with a little rain.

“The river’s speed and power increase tremendously as the flow increases, raising its difficulty,” Hurst said. “Brush, fallen trees, bridge pilings, undercut rocks or anything else which allows river current to sweep through can pin boats and boaters against the obstacle. Water pressure on anything trapped this way can be overwhelming.”

Even experienced whitewater paddlers must consider the many factors of paddling any stream, even when they’re equipped properly.

“If your inexperienced and don’t have proper equipment — don't even think about it,” Hurst said.

Reporter Bob White can be reached at (270) 505-1750.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Red Cross Support for Nelson County Flood Victims

Nelson County was hard hit in the recent flooding. Please see the below for how you can help.

I have spoken with some families and Red Cross. At this point we have families in the Boston Community that will need household items, but they are looking for a house to move into. However, some of our school families are in need of cleaning supplies and trash bags.

Items needed for all flood victims:

  • Bottled water
  • Snacks
  • Trash bags
  • Face masks
  • Cleaning gloves
  • Food for a week or two
For more information or to make a donation, please call Red Cross at (502) 348-1893

Monday, May 3, 2010

Downtown New Haven Under Water

The swollen Rolling Fork River is expected to crest sometime tomorrow

New Haven, Ky. — Rains over the weekend have swollen the Rolling Fork River reaking havoc on downtown New Haven and surrounding areas in Nelson County.

Downtown New Haven is closed and seven businesses have been evacuated. Fire Chief Freddy Dewitt says that the worst is yet to come. They expect the water to continue to rise over the next 12 to 24 hours and the hold for 12 hours before receding.

Around 15 residences and two apartment complexes have had their access roads covered in water yesterday but are passable today. Residents are warned to stay out of the water if possible, if you have to enter the water make sure you don't have any open wounds or cuts because the water is not clean.

From: 84WHAS | More photos

Derby Flood 2010


The area was soaked with rain this past weekend. Flash flood watches were in effect for all of Kentucky. Many roads around Nelson County were closed due to the rains.

Bardstown Bulletin posted some pictures from Derby Flood 2010: http://bit.ly/aF8aDp

These by far were the best two tweets from the flood: 01 & 02.