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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36 Nebraskaland • August-September 2022 a surfer. That kind of experience isn't needed to enjoy the whitewater park, though. Paddlers on the trail can simply point their boat downstream and ride right through the wave. "They're both surfable," Knapp said. "The top one is a little easier. The bottom is a little bigger. With both of them, you're probably going to get water in your boat coming down, so just be ready for that." Flows at the features vary depending on natural fl ows in Turkey Creek and, according to the U.S. Geological Survey stream gauge on the creek, range from roughly 150 to 250 cubic feet per second on weekdays when NPPD's hydroelectric plant is operating. "I would say anywhere from around 180 to 250 cfs is where it is best for surfi ng. Any higher and you can't stay in the wave because the water is too high and washes the wave out, and any lower it gets kind of rocky and small," Knapp said, adding that the lower fl ows also mean a bigger drop and more water coming over the bow of paddlers heading through the features. If you happen to capsize, the drop structures are designed to spit you out of the whitewater and send you downriver, where you can easily get to either shore. Life jackets are recommended for all paddlers, and helmets for anyone attempting tricks in the whitewater. Below each feature, boulders terrace the shoreline, providing a place for spectators to sit and watch. Paddlers can carry their kayaks from the bottom feature back to the top along the paved hike-bike trail on the south side of Turkey Creek, part of a 13.1-mile trail connecting Cottonmill Lake The Kearney Whitewater Park won't be the only such park in Nebraska for long. Work will begin this month on an $8.4 million redevelopment project in downtown Norfolk that will include eight drop structures on the North Fork of the Elkhorn River. The North Fork Development Project is centered around restoration of Johnson Park, a federal Work Project Administration plan from the 1930s that was a centerpiece for the town before it was wiped out by fl ooding in the 1960s. The project will restructure the river, replacing an aged hydroelectric dam with smaller drop structures to create whitewater features. It also includes a trail system, fi sh- habitat improvements and angler access, an amphitheater and festival space along the river, as well as business and residential development and street improvements. It is expected to be complete in the fall or winter of 2023. More Parks? Zach Nelson paddles through the rapids below a drop structure in the Kearney Whitewater Park.

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