Available Formats
Hardback, Fifth Edition
Published: 9th October 2018
Paperback, Fifth Edition
Published: 1st April 2003
Canoeing & Kayaking West Virginia
By (Author) Paul Davidson
By (author) Ward Eister
By (author) Dirk Davidson
By (author) Charlie Walbridge
By (author) Turner Sharp
By (author) Bobby Miller
Menasha Ridge Press Inc.
Menasha Ridge Press Inc.
1st April 2003
Fifth Edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
Travel and holiday guides
797.12209754
Paperback
352
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
467g
Began as a collective effort by members of the West Virginia Wildwater Association in 1965, Wildwater West Virginia emerged as the preeminent guide to whitewater in West Virginia. Now part of a new series and a new name to boot, A Canoeing Guide to West Virginia continues this legacy, guiding boaters of all abilities to over 120 of West Virginias rivers, creeks and streams. The result of combined knowledge of hundreds of paddlers, this book gives paddlers all the information they need to paddle rivers safely and confidently: At a glance information helps boaters pick rivers to match their ability and current weather conditions, while river descriptions, gauge and shuttle route information provide additional critical information. More than an encyclopedia of mountain rivers and hydrologic data, Whitewater West Virginia is also a collection of experiences and an introduction to some of the most amazing geography in the east. Destined to ride in the dry bags and glove compartments of paddlers nationwide, this book continues to set the standard for all paddling guidebooks. Some of the rivers profiled include: Gauley River, North Branch of the Potomac, New River, Cheat River, Tygart River, Waites Run, Red Run, Roaring Creek, and Keeney Creek.
Charlie Walbridge began paddlng in 1969. An active slalom racer and river guide in the 1970s, he has a number of first descents on West Virginia rivers. He is a board member for American Whitewater and Friends of the Cheat, and a writer with a special interest in safety issues. After running a whitewater shop in Philadelphia for 20 years, he and his wife Sandy now live in Bruceton Mills, West Virginia.