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Access Site WV

Take Out

Lick Creek

Source: american_whitewater Updated 3 months ago

City: WV
County: Summers
Type: Whitewater Take Out
Location: 37.77666900, -80.89389000
Air Temp: --
Location
Nearby Gauge Conditions
Whitewater Run
II-IV Take-out Lick Creek - Green Sulphur Springs to the New River at Sandstone
65 ft/mi
View Run
Current Conditions
-- • 3.00-5.20 ft
Piney Creek at Raleigh, WV
Whitewater Runs on Lick Creek
1 run
Difficulty Classes
I Easy II Novice III Intermediate IV Advanced V Expert/Extreme VI Unrunnable
Position relative to this access site: Put-in at this location This location is on the run Take-out at this location
Downstream from here Upstream from here
Whitewater data from American Whitewater
About This Access Site
Lick Creek's take-out access in Summers County, West Virginia provides an exit point for whitewater paddlers running this medium-sized stream. With a drainage area of 88 square miles and an average gradient of 26.7 feet per mile, Lick Creek offers notably steep terrain that generates consistent current and technical paddling conditions. The creek maintains an average flow of 76.65 cubic feet per second with velocities around 1.54 feet per second, making it a moderate to challenging waterway depending on water levels and seasonal conditions.

This take-out location serves paddlers completing runs on Lick Creek, which stretches nearly 20 miles and drops over 500 feet in elevation from its headwaters. The significant elevation change and stream order indicate this is an active whitewater creek with frequent rapids and obstacles rather than a calm float stream. Paddlers should be prepared for moving water, potential hazards including submerged rocks and fallen trees typical of Appalachian whitewater streams, and the need for intermediate to advanced paddling skills.

As a designated take-out access, this site provides egress for kayakers and canoeists completing their Lick Creek paddling trips. The steep gradient and headwater nature of the stream mean conditions can change rapidly with rainfall, and water levels should be checked before paddling. Summers County's Lick Creek represents a legitimate whitewater paddling opportunity in southern West Virginia for experienced paddlers seeking technical creek runs.