The Loop, River Dart
The Loop is a section of the River Dart, Dartmoor, also known as the Dart Loop.
It is perhaps the most popular section of whitewater for kayakers and canoeists in England. This section is preceded by the Upper Dart, and followed by The Lower.
Overview
The Loop is named as such because of the shape of its meander, much like a loop of string.
This section's length is approximately 3 miles (4.8 kilometres), but to drive by car from start to finish is only 1.3 miles (2 kilometres) because of river and road geography.
This section is graded at 2, with three rapids rated at grade 3. In very high water, some of the grade 2 sections will become continuous and push towards grade 3.
Whitewater rapids
List of rapids
Most of the rapids have been named by watersports enthusiasts,[1] and are officially referred to in guidebooks, such as English White Water: The British Canoe Union Guidebook.[2][3]
In order of each rapid, they are:
Newbridge rapid
The first rapid is Newbridge itself, a small wave formed before the bridge which can be played on at low-medium levels, washes out at high levels.
Top wave
About 50 metres from Newbridge is river-wide wave, which gets better with more water going over it. Very popular with playboaters, with eddy service on both sides, and a bankside walk back to the car park.
Many grade 1–2 rapids follow. The river splits, with a gauge on the island, following that the River Webburn joins. Here a seam between the two river currents form, allowing squirtboaters to practise their sport.
Washing machine
A 1 metre grade 3 drop, with a stopper and wave train beneath it. The lead in pushes you right, the river left is where you need to manoeveure to.
In high to very levels the stopper is quite formiddable for novices; hence the name. Low-medium levels require little effort to pass through.
More rapids follow, along with seal-launch rock, a tall sloping rock which can be slid down.
Lover's leap
This involves a 100 m grade 3 rapid, which requires rock evasion and a final wave train which pushes one into the leap itself: a large undercut cliff-face. In anything but high flows this is easily avoided, but can still cause pinning potential with inexperienced paddlers.
Several wide and continuous rapids follow Lover's Leap. However just before the next grade-3 rapid, a small but sticky stopper appears without warning. This needs to be taken mid-river or one could end up being back-looped, and going over Triple-drop in an awkward position.
Triple-drop / Triple-falls
The most difficult grade 3 rapid on this section of the Dart. Luckily inspection, and if necessary portage are available on both sides of the river.
- The first drop is a half metre ledge. A pour-over type hole in low levels .
- Second drop is a big wave/stopper into a pool.
- The last drop is harder, requiring you to take the centre line followed by a move to the left or right, avoiding the centre which turns into a sticky stopper at most levels.
Each drop has small eddies on both sides of the river, and the pool after the third drop is flat allowing boats and people to be rescued at the river bank.
More grade 1/2 rapids follow before you reach the Spindryer.
Spindryer
At high levels this rapid can be harder, especially if taken on river right, leaving you in the fast-rotating eddy the rapid is named after. If caught, a fast break-in is needed and possibly a surf across the wave that forms next to it. River left is the ideal place to aim for.
More small rapids follow.
Haystack rapids
The last notable rapid on the river before Holne Bridge, which works best in medium to high levels. Reasonably large but predictable breaking waves carry you 50–80 metres down to Holne Bridge.
Holne Bridge: and lower take outs
There is no longer a take out facility at Holne Bridge. Continue down and take out river left above the weir (where there is not really any lay-by facility on the road: temporary stopping might be tolerated) or continue to the next bridge downstream. This carries the road at the entrance to the Country Park. Get out on river right above the bridge. Temporary parking at egress point is possible, but (October 2013) is restricted. The main car park is several hundred metres up the hill. This bridge is frequently called "Waterworks Bridge". This is very confusing since below Buckfastleigh there is a large waterworks on river right, a bridge, and a good egress point immediately below the bridge on river left. This is very close to the main road on which traffic moves very fast. Stopping in short lane (room for two cars) between the road and river is possible, but parking there is not advisable.
The Riverdart Country Park charges (pay and display) during the paddling season £5 per car or £10 per minibus for the day. Parking is free after 4 pm for visitors wanting to use the bar and restaurant. Day visitors also have use of the toilet facilities and communal hot showers on Saturdays and Sundays. The Old Sawmill is open at weekends and offers a Sunday Carvery lunch from noon to 3 pm.
A feasible, though fairly long, alternative is to continue down the river to Buckfastleigh where in the winter there is ample parking. This section, the Lower Dart or just "Lower" is grade 2 with some flat sections.
Holne weir
In medium to high levels this is a highly retentive stopper and should be treated with caution. Two chutes allow access through, and should not be missed. The lead-in is flat, and is easy to achieve. Portage on the bank is also possible.
Another small rapid follows, with the Anvil; a rententive playspot.
External links
- Official Dartmoor website regarding Canoeing and Kayaking
References
- ↑ http://www.ukriversguidebook.co.uk/swengland/dart.htm UK Rivers Guidebook entry for Dart Loop
- ↑
- Ferrero, Franco (2003). English White Water: The British Canoe Union Guidebook. Pesda Press. ISBN 0-9531956-7-8.
- ↑ http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=SGt7MpOWhikC&lpg=PP1&dq=English%20White%20Water%3A&pg=PA57 English White Water online at Google Books
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