| Scale of River
Difficulty
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The
difficulty of a river is classified on a international scale of I to VI, with
Class VI indicating an unrunnable stretch of river.
The
difficulty of a river may vary significantly with fluctuations in water level.
For example, the river is normally a Class II, but in times of high water, the
difficulty may increase to Class III+. The ratings usually listed refer to the
rivers' difficulties at normal, summer levels. Don't judge a river by it's
put-in pool and take-out, know what's downstream. Know the rating
class...
Class I: EASY Waves are small; passages clear. No serious
obstacles.
Class II: MEDIUM Rapids of moderate difficulty with passages
clear.
Class III: DIFFICULT Waves are numerous, high, irregular; rocks;
eddies; rapids with passages clear though narrow, requiring expertise in
maneuvering.
Class IV: VERY DIFFICULT Long rapids; waves powerful and irregular;
dangerous rocks, boiling eddies; powerful and precise maneuvering
required.
Class V: EXTREMELY DIFFICULT Long and violent rapids following each other
almost without interruption; riverbed extremely obstructed; big drops; violent
current; very steep gradient
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