Nolichucky River
About
The 26-mile gorge run from Poplar, North Carolina to Erwin, Tennessee cuts through some of the most sustained Class III-IV water in the southern Appalachians. At 1,400 CFS average, the Nolichucky pushes through Unicoi and Greene counties with optimal flows between 600 and 3,000 CFS — a wide window that keeps commercial outfitters like USA Raft and Nantahala Outdoor Center running trips through most seasons. Above 2,500 CFS the gorge becomes a different animal entirely, with hydraulics that can hold rafts and technical lines that disappear in the flood. Below Erwin, the river drops to Class I-II through more open country, then flattens to Class I through farm valleys on its lower reaches. Champion Paper Company logged the surrounding forests from the 1880s through the 1930s, but the creation of the Nolichucky Gorge Special Management Area in 2010 brought federal protection to the corridor. The gorge earned recognition as a Premier Appalachian Wilderness Float in 2024, cementing its reputation among serious whitewater paddlers. USGS gauge 03467609 tracks the flows that make or break a gorge trip.
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.