River Terms
Learn these terms to talk like a rafting guide (or at least know what your rafting guide is talking about).
White Water Rafting Scale
Scale – Whitewater is classified on a scale from I to VI. A description of this is given below:
Class I
Easy, flat water. No problem. Take your grandmother.
Class II
Small rapids with clear, wide channels. Take a timid friend.
Class III
Good-sized rapids with waves and boulders. Chances of maneuvers inside the rapids are great. Get a guide!
Class IV
Intense rapids. Plan on maneuvers, hazards, big waves and tight boulders. For those seeking a challenge.
Class V
Intense and violent. Long rapids, drops, extremely tight channels, and hazards. Get a good guide!
Class VI
Don’t do it. If you do, say your final prayers first.
CFS
Cubic feet per second is a volume of water measure, which is commonly used to describe most rivers. It is measured by a water gauging device.
EDDY
Protected from the main current, these smooth sections of water are found behind obstacles (e.g., boulders or bends in the river).
Hole, Hydraulic or Reversal
When water falls over an object (e.g., a rock or ledge), the falling water creates a depression. Surrounding surface water rushes to fill in the depression and forms a hole.
Stainer
An obstacle in the river that allows water to pass through, but not a person or boat (e.g., a tree with its limbs partially submerged).
Wave Train
A series of standing waves perpendicular to the main current.