River Rawthey

Soon after I’d started white water paddling, Pete Bridgstock had related the tale of a trip down the River Rawthey, which needs a lot of rain and drops very quickly almost as soon as the rain eases off. From not long after that, when I was paddling at a high enough grade to contemplate the trip, the River Rawthey had been on my list of rivers to paddle. The club hasn’t (to my knowledge) had another descent since Pete’s trip, maybe fifteen years ago, so there was no-one left paddling regularly who knew the river. On odd occasions we’ve been for a look based on weather forecasts which have been over-optimistic, or when much rain fell, but not in the right place. We’ve seen it in flood when coming home from other rivers which have been programmed trips, and we’ve heard of folk paddling it when we’ve used the heavy rain to go a grab a descent of something else …

Finally, this weekend, we had a suitable group, a programmed river which wouldn’t run, and enough rain that the Rawthey would (we hoped). A drive over showed that it was still up and the trip was on ! Rainchasers had it at a medium-to-high level, but this is based on a gauge some way downstream which is measuring the combined waters of the Rawthey, Clough and Dee, and will also lag an hour or two behind the levels on the upper stretches of these rivers. So despite its still raining as we put on, the river was already dropping and we probably wouldn’t have wanted to paddle it much lower, as some lines were already becoming rocky and technical.

From the put-on the river is quite fast with low overhanging branches and an adequate but small number of eddies, few big enough for more than a couple of boats. Technical and continuous enough to feel slightly pushy, but nowhere really pushing our envelope. There were a couple of rolls from the odd misjudgment of the speed of the water and one stopper which backlooped a boat. As my H2 had developed a split (after ten years of hard use) I was back in the Ammo, which I’m not used to, and is quite short, so I was quite pleased to have stomped through that stopper without an upset. There were plenty of small drops and rapids – the rockiest drops always seemed to have the deepest water on river right, not always the easiest line to get to.


Low branches made getting right over here quite hard – in fact the next tongue left would have been good, too, and easier

One drop we’d scouted from the road, and a more distant view from the footbridge leading to the Cautley Spout footpath. This seemed to have a clean tongue river right, but closer inspection suggested a bit nearer the centre, just right of a projecting rock. This was easier than it looked, if on line, but too far right dropped into a stopper and recirculating eddy from which it was difficult to escape.


Hitting the right spot at the top of the tongue

Soon after this drop, the river eases off, passes under said footbridge and into a more open section of the valley at the back of the Cross Keys temperance hotel by the Cautley valley. Cautley Spout was still flowing pretty well, making a fine view up the valley. The flatter section is soon enclosed by steep wooded banks as a sharp bend to the right is approached. We took out here for a quick look at the grade 4 rapid beyond the bend. Most eddied river left, but I found a good viewpoint river right from which I could see the line the others were taking.


Pete heading down the main line towards a hole (which didn’t detain him)

I didn’t much fancy that big stopper in my Ammo, but could see that there was (probably) a more technical line river right which sneaked past it and might be a better bet in a short easily-looped boat. The very steep bank meant that I couldn’t see it as well as I’d like, but I could see enough to be sure it was free of strainers so this was my line of choice, which proved to be a nice line provided one stayed upright and paddling to keep in the right place.


Cliffs on the right made inspection from river right less than ideal, but the line was good

Very shortly below this, a tree right across the river meant a portage – going right up to the top of the bank proved to be strenuous and time-consuming, and everyone else managed to get past much nearer river level. After this, the river eases with rapids further apart separated by fairly easy water, though still moving at a pleasant pace. One rapid was complicated by a substantial tree across the main channel, but this was easily visible and a rocky channel on the left provided a straightforward bypass, as long as one kept paddling and didn’t let the current take you back to the main channel.


Hold the line left as some water escapes to the main channel

The last real obstacle was a short drop in which a lot of the water funnelled into a nasty-looking slot. A big cushion on the left as water flowed over a rock avoided this, and Sarah paddled right up this and down bypassing the stopper almost entirely. Above, this good line was guarded by a projecting rock on the left, so the rapid had to be hit fairly precisely, with power taking you left. I demonstrated that too much power would take you neatly into the guard rock, to be spun round and dropped backwards down the rapid, but the hole was nowhere near as nasty as it looked and this proved to be a harmless exercise. Steve showed that ferry gliding across too close to the rapid was a perhaps neater way of descending it backwards, though the look on his face and the “Oh shit!” exclamation rather gave away that it wasn’t intentional.


Putting the bow over the eddy line slows the whole boat down giving more time to hit the rock

There’s now a fun little gorge in Conglomerate rock, but nothing technical before an interesting tributary comes in on the left under two bridges. Then the valley opens out and the Clough comes in, also river left. By now my GoPro had run out of battery, so I didn’t record one last very bouncy wave-train just before the takeout. This last bit is shown in the video, but recorded (at a lower level) on a later date.

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