Dickerson Whitewater Course
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The Dickerson Whitewater Course, on the
Potomac River The Potomac River () drains the Mid-Atlantic United States, flowing from the Potomac Highlands into Chesapeake Bay. It is long,U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map. Retrieved Augu ...
near Dickerson,
Maryland Maryland ( ) is a state in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. It shares borders with Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia to its south and west; Pennsylvania to its north; and Delaware and the Atlantic Ocean to ...
, was built for use by canoe and kayak paddlers training for the 1992 Olympic Games in Spain. It was the first pump-powered
artificial whitewater An artificial whitewater course (AWWC) is a site for whitewater canoeing, whitewater kayaking, whitewater racing, whitewater rafting, playboating and slalom canoeing with artificially generated rapids. Course types Main types of course: ...
course built in North America, and is still the only one anywhere with heated water. It remains an active training center for
whitewater slalom Canoe slalom (previously known as whitewater slalom) is a competitive sport with the aim to navigate a decked canoe or kayak through a course of hanging downstream or upstream gates on river rapids in the fastest time possible. It is one of th ...
racing, swiftwater rescue training, and other whitewater activities. The facility is owned by the
NRG Energy NRG Energy, Inc. is an American energy company, headquartered in Houston, Texas. It was formerly the wholesale arm of Northern States Power Company (NSP), which became Xcel Energy, but became independent in 2000. NRG Energy is involved in ener ...
company. Except during special events, access requires membership in the Potomac Whitewater Racing Center, a USA Canoe/Kayak National Training Center. The course was constructed in 1991, inside a pre-existing straight, -long concrete channel, wide. Since 1959, the channel has returned cooling water from the
Dickerson Generating Station The Dickerson Generating Station is an 853 MW electric generating plant owned by NRG Energy, located approximately two miles west of Dickerson, Maryland. Description The facility consists of three 182 MW coal-fired steam generating plants, two 1 ...
to the Potomac River, upstream from Washington, D.C. Water is pumped from the river, warmed as much as 35 °F (20 °C) as it cools the power plant's three coal-fired generators, and then emptied into the channel for gravity flow back to the river.Davey Hearn, ''Dickerson Whitewater Course''
/ref> (The plant has three other generators which use a different cooling system.) Streamflow through the course is to , depending on the operation of the plant's three coal-fired generators and their six cooling water pumps. In the summer months, when water temperature in the channel exceeds , the course is closed for health reasons.''Dickerson Workouts''
Retrieved 2010-06-11.
It is also closed when the Potomac River rises above on the Little Falls gaugeUSGS Real-Time Water Data for USGS 01646500 POTOMAC RIVER NEAR WASH, DC LITTLE FALLS PUMP STA
/ref> , flooding the lower section of the course.


History

In the 1960s, local canoe and kayak paddlers began conducting winter practice in the heated Potomac River water immediately below the discharge channel. Nearly three decades went by before paddler Scott Wilkinson got the idea of moving the practice up into the concrete-lined channel itself. In 1991, he sold his idea to two of the power plant managers, and, in support of the 1992 Olympics team, the
Potomac Electric Power Company The Potomac Electric Power Company (PEPCO) is an American utility company that supplies electric power to the city of Washington, D.C. and to surrounding communities in Maryland. It is owned by Exelon. The company's current trademarked slogan ...
, Pepco, which owned the plant at the time, approved the insertion of approximately 75 artificial concrete boulders and two wing dams into the channel. Wilkinson's fellow paddler John Anderson, an architect, built a 1:12 scale model with flow-diversion features similar to those in the
Segre Olympic Park Parc Olímpic del Segre is a canoeing and kayaking facility in La Seu d'Urgell, Catalonia, Spain, built in 1990 for use during the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. The competition whitewater course is 300 m long, with a 6.5 m drop, making a 2 ...
artificial course in
La Seu d'Urgell La Seu d'Urgell (; es, Seo de Urgel, formerly in ca, Urgell}) is a town located in the Catalan Pyrenees in Spain. La Seu d'Urgell is also the capital of the comarca Alt Urgell, head of the judicial district of la Seu d'Urgell and the seat of ...
, Spain, built for the 1992 games. The model was tested at the Navy's
David Taylor Model Basin The David Taylor Model Basin (DTMB) is one of the largest ship model basins—test facilities for the development of ship design—in the world. DTMB is a field activity of the Carderock Division of the Naval Surface Warfare Center. Hist ...
. Construction companies building combustion turbine units on (and for) the Pepco Site, donated time and equipment, and the course was opened in December 1991. The first race was held in June 1992. Athletes who trained at the Dickerson course won bronze and gold medals in the 1992 Olympics, and others have continued to win Olympic medals and world championships in subsequent years. The course was redesigned in the fall of 2002, once again by John Anderson. A new scale model was built, this one outdoors and onsite. After testing his new arrangement of flow-diversion features on the model, he specified new locations for some of the artificial boulders. The wing dam on the left side was moved downstream into section four. A crane was deployed for the moving job. In October 2003 a persistent problem at the end of the course was fixed. Whenever the Potomac River level is below on the Little Falls gauge , there is a sheer drop between the end of the concrete channel and the river. In certain conditions of high course flow and low river level, a stream-wide retentive hydraulic, or "sticky hole," posed a hazard to paddlers who failed to correctly " boof stroke" across the drop. It was a worse problem for paddlers who had made a wet exit from an upside-down boat and were swimming the course. This feature was modified by adding a concrete slab under the drop and two trapezoid-shaped diverters on the sides. The hydraulic was converted into a central tongue of water ending in a wave train, with an eddy on each side.


Present course design

The course has four sections, connected in a straight line, end-to-end, with a drop at the end of each section. A final section ends in the river, with or without a drop, depending on the river level. Overall slope adds another seven feet of drop, for a total course drop of 15 feet (4.6 m), plus zero to four feet (0 to 1.2 meters) into the river at the end. The following map shows the arrangement of the visible and submerged features. To use the course without a certified instructor present, a paddler must pass a "blue card" test: namely, pause in each of the numbered eddies, in sequence, and roll in the current, not in an eddy, between eddies 1 and 5 at the top, and again between eddies 1 and 5 at the bottom. During the blue card test, the course must be running near full flow, , and the river must be low enough that there is a significant drop from the bottom of the course into the river.


Unique features of the course

Because the water channel was designed for an industrial, rather than a recreational, function, there are no wide pools to serve as resting spots, and there is no easy way off the water, short of the end. The water is deceptively fast, and all but two of the eddies have swirling water with an upstream component. From the river, paddlers must carry their boats the length of the course to re-enter and make another run. There are two other artificial whitewater courses in the mid-Atlantic region: in Charlotte, NC, and McHenry, MD. The Charlotte course, U.S. National Whitewater Center, USNWC, opened in 2006, and the McHenry course, Adventure Sports Center International, ASCI, opened in 2007. They do not have heated water. The Dickerson Power Plant operates at a fraction of what it did 10 years ago, so the heated water is decreased accordingly. They both feature circular water channels with conveyor belt lifts from the course end to the beginning, plus bigger drops, wider eddies, mid-course pools, and guided raft trips for tourists. Dickerson is for decked, hard-shell boats only. All three facilities are used for canoe and kayak training and as venues for competitions.


Gallery

Image:Dickerson-C1a.jpg, Slalom Practice. Paddling a C1, decked canoe. File:Dickerson_2010_Nationals_Slalom_Gates.jpg, 2010 Nationals. 22 gates for the September 26 race. File:Dickerson_2010_Nationals_Gate_4.jpg, Gate #4 at the first drop, poles on separate wires. File:Dickerson_2010_Nationals_Gate_5.jpg, Gate #5, single-pole upstream. Image:Dickerson_Middle_Hole_Surf.jpg, Features of the Channel. Side-surfing in the Middle Hole at full flow . Image:Dickerson_Middle_Hole.jpg, Middle Hole at low flow , revealing the underwater rock that creates it. Image:Dickerson_Wing_Dam.jpg, One of two resting spots -- this one below the left-side wing dam in its new position. Image:Dickerson_Course_Finish.jpg, A winter day when the Potomac River was high enough to flood the final drop. Image:Dickerson_1991_Empty_Channel.jpg, 1991. The channel as it was 1959-1991. Image:Dickerson_1991_Model_Testing.jpg, Running water through the model. Image:Dickerson_1991_Rock_Construction.jpg, Shaping the concrete boulders. Image:Dickerson_1991_Rock_Installation.jpg, Lowering them into place (water flowing). Washington Post full-page graphic


References


Video Links

* The course a
low flowmedium flow
an
full flow

Kibler's Hole
at medium flow.
Slide Show
2006
The Bottom Hole
before the 2003 fix. * Two complete slalom run
1
an
2
by 2008 U.S. Olympian Scott Parsons. {{Canoeing and kayaking Artificial whitewater courses Sports venues in Maryland Canoeing and kayaking venues in the United States