This guide is intended only to provide information to river runners and is not intended to be a complete description of any section of river. Hazards can change in minutes. Some hazards may not be listed. Boaters should always scout their runs and check with local sources for the latest information.
Upper Gorge
The run begins directly beneath the I-15 highway bridge. This is the only contact with the highway until the rest area, although there are several hike-out points along the run. Just past the bridge is a good surf spot known as the Pothole-- OK at low levels, and a destination play hole at 1,000 cfs and above. L.A. Freeway-- a Class II bony riffle--sits on the first bend. The tamis have grown in tight below this and a quick move is needed for rafts here. A couple of more bends brings on a really rocky, but short drop leading into a wall. The river bends back to the left, and the entrance to Table Top rapid appears. Table Top is usually run left. At high flows the namesake rock forms a big hole which more than a few boaters wished they hadn't blundered into. At more reasonable water levels there are two good surf holes on the left run, the lower one with eddies on both sides. The river keeps up a good current below Table Top. A few mid-channel boulders provide surf opportunities. A triple highway culvert on the right (obscured by tamis, May 2001) marks By-the-Pipe rapid, a short and rocky drop with a folding surf hole at the bottom. At high flows the river powers into a sandstone wall at the base of the rapid and has given some rafters an unintentional baptism in the Virgin's waters. A half-mile downstream of By-the-Pipe a broken-up wall on the left and an obvious canyon entrance mark the top of Keyhole (Grapevine) Rapid, another canyon mouth debris fan, rocky at most levels.
When the river swings right agianst highway fill on a broad left-hand bend and and a pair of concrete drainage gutters show on the fill slope, New Forest Circus Follies is just downstream. The river used to flow down the left side of this part of the canyon, but was forcibly relocated to the right side by the Quail Creek flood. The 60,000 ft flood peak occurred the night of January 1, 1989 and left debris which can still be found 30 ft above the river. Forest Circus got its name more than 20 years ago when a group of Forest Service people decided to have a go at the river and found themselves floundering through the old 4-foot drop. Observing this spectacle were the Yakkaderros, a group of ex-bikers turned sport yakkers from Kanab, who had a howling good time watching the Feds stumble through. They christened the rapid and the name stuck. New Forest Circus is a narrowing of the river that has several good holes leading to a "rock of shock" and a smart move to the left at the rock.
A couple of meanders leads to rising limestone ledges forming the steep-walled Aztec Canyon. Here the canyon is narrow and deep. Turtle Rapid sits in the upper third of the canyon. Just upstream of Turtle is a side canyon on the left that leads to ledges and the top of the canyon, a worthwhile side hike. Turtle is a straight drop center left, with a surf hole at the bottom. Sand waves, a hallmark of Virgin Gorge boating, often form in the mile downstream of Turtle. Look up on the right bank slopes near the mouth of Aztec Canyon to see a cactus garden. In April and May this slope may be in full bloom, an amazing sight.
As the canyon ends, Grand Wash Fault ( the same fault that forms the end of Grand Canyon) crosses the river and the canyon opens. Go-for-the-Hole rapid, another outwash boulder field with several good holes, and Tree Rapid, a move to the inside of a right-hand bend, are in the next mile. A swath of Joshua trees covers the slopes on both sides of the river here.
A couple of miles of riffles, gravel bars, and some surf holes lead to the rest area take-out.