Before I started kayaking I lived in Redding for a short
time, and we used to hike around the Brandy Creek area fairly often
since it was so close to town, and beautiful. I’d never
really thought of something this small being kayak able when I started,
but over the next year had heard of people kayaking on this small creek.Cacreekshas
a goodwrite-upof
this run, although it makes it sound really hard and intimidating. So
hard and intimidating in fact that I hadn’t really thought
too much about running it. Jon on the other hand has had this run on
his list for a while, and with recent rains I made the drive to Redding
for the run.Caliproductalso
has a good video of an upper section on this run, it looks really fun.
When
Jon and I arrived at the run we found it to be slightly low but
certainly flowing. Thankfully the gate on the road was open, it was
closed most of the winter. Dropping off Jon’s car at the
takeout he mentioned he had enough gas for shuttle, but perhaps not
enough to get back to town. We were just going to do the lower run due
to schedule issues. Work, always getting in the way of kayaking. We
headed up the dirt road and put-in at trailhead that accesses the upper
section. “The first 0.5 miles drops 240 feet, giving boaters
a 480 foot per mile stretch to warm up on.” This warm-up
steep section really isn’t too bad, mostly classic north
coast mank, which consists mostly of pinballing through steep boulder
gardens and hoping not to pin. Eventually we came on the first horizon
line worth scouting, this fun narrow drop that had another good ledge
shortly below it. We both tried to boof but there really
wasn’t anything to boof off of, and we plugged without any
problems.
Here
Jon runs the first drop. Some day
I'll buy a real camera and get
good low light shots.
I am assuming this rapid is the entrance the
section
described as;
“After this start, the run begins to get serious, the lower
two miles is where the big waterfalls await.” This run has
plenty of fun drops, but nothing that I’d classify as a
“big waterfall”, or even a medium waterfall to be
honest. With Jon leading in a bombs away style on par for the norm we
blazed through the run. I’d normally scout something like
this a lot but I was able to see him go through and pop out at the
bottom of most the rapids, so we only scouted a few more times. This
was the largest waterfall on the run. It appeared to have an auto-boof
flake in the middle, but was deceptive. We both plugged it through a
crease after sliding off the flake.
“Split
Falls”
A narrow mini-gorge ensued immediately after, and
warranted a quick
scout. I’d assume the two holes in this drop would get rowdy
at higher flows.
Jon
got spun around at the top
but managed to drive
through the bottom two holes with no problems.
After this mini-gorge it was mostly back to mank again.
Really the only
carnage of the day was myself paddling with several gallons of water in
my boat and suffering a brief pin. I was in denial about my boat being
broken, but it didn’t help keep the water out. This run is
very doable in a modern creek boat and isn’t too well suited
for
duckies. I’d give it a medium class V creeking rating, on par
with Slate Creek or similar. There are currently several downed logs on
this run, one of note right above the Sheep Camp Bridge, and several
more downstream. We only had to get out to portage one near the end of
the run, and were able to scrape by two or three other logs. If you
don’t mind a little boat abuse I’d recommend this
run, I’ll be on it again. It rarely, if ever runs off snow
melt,
and needs around an inch of rain in the area to get it going.