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If you look around the ACC message board, you can find all the info. These are a few pics from the first day we got to play our new waves.
This is designed to be playable down to 200cfs( 2.0ft-ish?). Historically, the Illinois River near Siloam Springs, AR(USGS) has only fallen below 200cfs about six times in the last 20 years. The designers say it will be funable up to 1500-2000cfs.
Where we once only had a half-a** wave/hole you could ride in and scar up your boat,one eddy-line, and unfriendly locals who liked to shoot over your head, we now have at least 8 squirtable eddy-lines, one very user-friendly wave, a more burley-advanced bottom feature, and new neighbors who are as excited about this as we are. Everything about this park has been designed for safety and fun. The pools below the features are designed for swimmers, and future swift-water-rescue classes have been well thought out and provided for. This will be a place of learning as well as fun. "Kiddie pools" for teaching rolls and just lounging in the water to the stone used in construction picked to match the natural surroundings, every time I've gone out just to look, new "features" become apparent. The actual land-park will feature changing rooms, a boulering area, and bike/running trails, which will some day connect Fayetteville, AR and Siloam Springs, AR.
This project was financed and spearheaded by the Walton Foundation. Yes, this is the same Walton Family who founded Wal-Mart, but, if you want to be honest, the actual Walton Foundation is more involved with the Walton Arts Center, (Northwest Arkansas), and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR, both of which add to our amazing lifestyle here in NWA.
So, at this time, water has been flowing through our new park for less than four days. We were there playing both Saturday and Sunday, and during just those two days the gravel in the riverbed has been moving around a little and making some changes to the features. The top feature appears to be stabilized, but the gravel below the second had noticeably moved around overnight and changed the feature. What I'm trying to say here is that this thing is brand new, and still trying to figure out where it's going to be. I'm guessing there will need to be a few flood-events before we see what we've really got out there.
I started going out to the "Ford" back in 1993, with old New Wave Quantums(rat-turd looking boats about 12ft long) that we had "borrowed" from the Outdoor Rec Club at the UofA. I've spent 1000's of hours there, and seen everything from dead cows dumped off of the Fisher's Ford Bridge, illeagle gravel-mining from the pool below the "wave", to a drunken landowner who did not have a problem waving a gun in your face or firing off a few over your head. I've met some of my favorite people on the planet at the Ford, and have a million wonderful memories of times spent with friends there. Will I miss what it was? Maybe, because being an old-timer is kind of cool sometimes, but what we have there now is so much more dynamic and welcoming it's very hard to compare the two. Don't think that we've lost anything, but that we've gained so much.
I'd say that this is worth driving up and checking out for anyone who boats the region. We're working on figuring out the most convenient camping and will share all info as we get it.
So, that's my $.02 worth. I'd be back out there today if the wind-chill wasn't in the single digits. I'm freakin' STOKED!
Dan Daniel
Fayetteville, AR