Nebraskaland

Aug-Sept 2022 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1472976

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August-September 2022 • Nebraskaland 35 district is operating its hydroelectric plant below Kearney Reservoir, which draws water from the Platte River near Elm Creek. The roughly 100-member Kearney Whitewater Association spearheaded development of the trail. Its founding members, a grassroots group of a dozen or so individuals who simply enjoy paddling, met at a local watering hole in 2011 to discuss resurrecting the idea of a water trail and whitewater park that was born and died in the previous decade. Members donated thousands of hours to help clear 20 tons of trash, car bodies and other debris from the bed and banks of the creek, and the group split the cost of building the put-in and take- out points with the city. Their ultimate goal, however strange it may have sounded at the time, was to build what was part of their name: a whitewater park. They funded a feasibility study with a Colorado company to see if such a park was even possible. When the study found it was, they helped fund project design and worked with the Kearney Area Community Foundation to raise the money needed to cover the $700,000 cost of the park, working through a "brutal" two-year stretch that included severe fl ooding on the creek in 2019 and the COVID-19 Pandemic that started in 2020. In the end, they raised $260,000 from grants and foundations, and $112,000 from individuals in the community — including $40,000 from the core group of KWA board members — for the whitewater features and the water trail. Along with it, the city of Kearney committed $400,000 to the projects. "I think really, up until a year ago, it still seemed like we were making this whole thing up, like it was never going to happen," said Carson Rowh, a whitewater paddler and founding member of the whitewater association. "I'm still pinching myself to be honest. It's beautiful." The Course The whitewater park includes two drop structures above and below Second Avenue constructed this past winter with limestone boulders and rock trucked in from a quarry in Weeping Water and held in place with sheet piling and cement. The structures form a V across the creek channel, pooling water above them. As water rushes over the structure and drops into a hole below, it turns back on itself and creates a foam-topped wave. Unlike waves in the ocean, however, these don't move. But experienced kayakers can paddle in from eddies on either side of the drop and ride the wave like Greyson Peterson of Columbus jumps into the wave below a drop structure on a body board. He came to test the waters with his grandfather, Bob, of Norfolk.

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