Chattooga River
About
First Wild & Scenic River designated in the Southeast in 1974, the Chattooga defines the Georgia-South Carolina border through 57 miles of Sumter and Chattahoochee national forest. The Cherokee called it "The River Boundary" — fitting for water that still separates states and marks the transition from Blue Ridge foothills to Piedmont plateau. Section IV holds the reputation: Class IV-V continuous drops including the legendary Five Falls sequence that tests expert boaters at 860 CFS average flow. Section III offers solid Class III-IV water with Bull Sluice as the signature rapid, while Section II provides mellower Class I-II water for learning. Optimal flows run 500-2000 CFS on gauge 02177000. Commercial outfitters including Nantahala Outdoor Center and Southeastern Expeditions guide the accessible sections, but the hardest water remains the domain of private boaters with solid Class V skills. Blue Ridge logging operations ran through the 1920s before the forest designation, and paddlers couldn't legally access the headwaters until 2012 — 38 years after Wild & Scenic protection began.
River conditions are community-verified. CFS ranges, difficulty ratings, and access points may not reflect every flow level or seasonal change. Always check current conditions, scout unfamiliar rapids, and paddle within your skill level.