Water (Apr 2024)

A Boatable Days Framework for Quantifying Whitewater Recreation—Insights from Three Appalachian Whitewater Rivers

  • Nicolas Zegre,
  • Melissa Shafer,
  • Danny Twilley,
  • Greg Corio,
  • Michael P. Strager,
  • Jacquelyn M. Strager,
  • Paul Kinder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w16071060
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 1060

Abstract

Read online

Outdoor recreation is one of the fastest-growing economic sectors in the United States and is being used by communities to support economic development, social prosperity, and environmental protection. For communities that have whitewater rivers, whitewater recreation provides a powerful economic alternative to ailing extractive and manufacturing industries that have long dominated rural communities. In order to promulgate a whitewater recreation-based economy, stakeholders need information about their whitewater resources, including how often and when they can be paddled. The overall goal of this study, therefore, was to develop an analytical framework that quantifies boatable days, that is, the number of days that streamflow exceeds the minimum boatable flow levels needed to paddle downstream. Importantly, our framework uses publicly available streamflow and minimum boatable flow information that can be used to quantify boatable days for any whitewater run in the country, irrespective of watershed size or river flashiness. We applied the framework to three world-class whitewater rivers in the central Appalachian Mountains, USA, and found abundant and stable boating opportunities throughout the year. Our results underscore the potential for strategically developing whitewater recreation as a means of economic diversification and highlight how boatable days analysis can be used for quantifying whitewater resources.

Keywords