Plan B · Different Watershed · Same Weekend
3 Days · 2 Nights · ~16 River Miles
The longest undammed river in the eastern United States. Class I-II through the Appalachian highlands with designated trail campsites, a state park, and mountain views. Our backup when the North Fork isn't cooperating.
Which River Do I Paddle?162 miles of undammed Appalachian river draining 1,656 square miles. When the North Fork is too low or too high, the Greenbrier is often just right.
Photo: Tim Kiser / CC BY-SA 3.0
The North Fork of the South Branch Potomac and the Greenbrier River are in completely different watersheds. The North Fork drains east into the Potomac / Chesapeake Bay. The Greenbrier drains west into the New River / Mississippi Basin. They're separated by the Allegheny Front -- the same ridge system that creates different weather patterns on each side.
When a drought drops the North Fork below 300 CFS, the Greenbrier's larger watershed (1,656 vs 310 sq mi) and western slope position often keep it runnable. The Greenbrier carries nearly 2x the water in spring.
| North Fork | Greenbrier | |
|---|---|---|
| Watershed | Potomac / Atlantic | New River / Mississippi |
| Drainage | 310 sq mi | 539 sq mi (at Buckeye) |
| May Avg CFS | 656 | 1,153 |
| Class | I-III | I-II |
| Character | Mountain creek, committed canyon | Wide valley river, rail-trail alongside |
| Remoteness | 4+ mi no-exit canyon | Never far from trail/road |
| Camping | Dispersed NF sites | 14 designated trail campsites + state park |
| Drive from Seneca Rocks | 0 (you're there) | 1.5-2 hours |
Check both gauges 3 days before launch. Here's the decision tree.
USGS 01606000 — N F South Branch at Cabins
Paddle the primary trip. View North Fork Plan →
Check forecast. Rain coming = wait 24 hrs and re-check. No rain = consider Greenbrier.
Check Greenbrier at Buckeye: -- CFS
USGS 03182500 — Greenbrier at Buckeye
Need 480+ CFS for comfortable paddling. May average: 1,153 CFS.
If both rivers are out of range, postpone the trip.
Marlinton to Denmar on the Greenbrier River. ~16 river miles through the Pocahontas County highlands.
Marlinton to Denmar. ~16 river miles over 3 paddling days. Class I the whole way. The Greenbrier River Trail runs alongside for easy bail-outs.
Put in at Marlinton City Park (or Stillwell Park Boat Launch just upstream) after staging vehicles. Easy river access with parking. Paddle south through wide, gentle valley. Class I riffles, gravel bars, mountain views on both sides.
Pass through Buckeye at ~mile 4 (USGS gauge, hospital nearby). Continue to Trail Mile Marker 49.3 — designated primitive campsite with gravel tent pad, fire ring, pit latrine, picnic table, bear-proof trash. Filter water from the river. Good tree coverage for hammocks.
Main paddling day — ~3 hours on the water. Arrive at camp early afternoon.
Short morning paddle past Watoga Bridge (~mile 8) to Seebert (~mile 10). Easy Class I the whole way.
Resupply at Jack Horner's Corner in Seebert — pizza, subs, ice cream, convenience store. Open May-Oct, 9am-9pm. (304) 653-4515.
Camp option A: Watoga State Park campground ($23-50/night) — showers, electric, real facilities. ~2 miles from Seebert bridge. Reserve ahead: (304) 799-4087.
Camp option B: Continue downriver past Seebert toward Denmar, find a trail campsite for Night 2.
Flexible day — short paddle, explore Watoga SP hiking trails, or push further downstream.
Final paddle through a more remote, scenic section. River widens slightly with rock cliffs and eagle/hawk sightings. 2-3 hours on the water.
Take out at Beard access (trail MM 38.5) near Denmar — has parking. One guy drives to Marlinton for the other vehicle (~30 min via US-219).
Post-trip: Head to Marlinton for food, or south to Hillsboro/Lewisburg. Drive home via US-219 N to US-250 E, or south to I-64.
Off the water by noon. Home to Harpers Ferry by ~5 PM.
Live conditions for the Marlinton / Greenbrier River corridor. Elevation ~2,100 ft — slightly higher and cooler than the North Fork valley.
The Greenbrier is gentler than the North Fork, but cold water is cold water. File a float plan.
| 911 | Pocahontas County Emergency |
| (304) 799-4445 | Pocahontas County Sheriff |
| (304) 799-7400 | Pocahontas Memorial Hospital ER (Buckeye — on your route) |
| (304) 799-4334 | USFS Marlinton Ranger District |
| (304) 799-4636 | Pocahontas County CVB |
The Greenbrier River Trail (rail-trail) runs alongside the entire river. You are never more than 1/4 mile from a maintained trail and a paved road.
| Marlinton | Mile 0 — put-in, full services |
| Clover Lick | Mile ~2-3 — road access |
| Buckeye | Mile ~4 — bridge, parking, HOSPITAL nearby |
| Watoga Bridge | Mile ~8 — trail crossing, Watoga SP 2 mi |
| Seebert | Mile ~10 — bridge, Jack Horner's store |
| Denmar/Beard | Mile ~16 — take-out, parking |
The Greenbrier River valley is in the National Radio Quiet Zone — established to protect the Green Bank Observatory radio telescope. Cell towers are restricted by federal law in this area.
Verizon: Spotty in Marlinton, dead on the river.
AT&T / T-Mobile: Nearly useless.
Bottom line: Satellite communicator (Garmin inReach) is essential.
| CFS | Conditions | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| < 480 | Scraping, walking your boat in shallows | TOO LOW |
| 480-886 | Runnable but bony in upper sections | MARGINAL |
| 886-1,400 | Good flow, clean lines through riffles | GO |
| 1,400-2,700 | Ideal. Swift current, fun wave trains | SWEET SPOT |
| 2,700-5,300 | High and fast. Strong eddies, submerged hazards. | CAUTION |
| > 5,300 | Dangerous. Stay off the water. | NO-GO |
Simple loop on US-219. Drop vehicle at Denmar/Beard, drive together to Marlinton, paddle downstream.
From Seneca Rocks: WV-28 S to Dunmore, then US-219 S to Marlinton. ~1.5-2 hrs. Or from Harpers Ferry: I-81 S to Staunton, US-250 W, US-219 S. ~3.5-4 hrs. Stop in Staunton, VA for groceries/gas (last real town). Camp at Watoga SP or Marlinton area.
Both vehicles south on US-219 to Hillsboro, then CR 31 (Denmar Rd) to Beard access at trail MM 38.5 (~30 min). Park Vehicle A. Navigate to Denmar →
Both guys in Vehicle B. North on US-219 to Marlinton City Park (~30 min). Park, unload boats. Navigate to Marlinton →
Easy river access at Marlinton City Park. PFDs on, satellite communicator clipped. Hit the water.
Load boats on Vehicle A. One guy drives north to Marlinton for Vehicle B (~30 min via US-219). Regroup. Head home. Back in Harpers Ferry by ~5 PM.
| Location | Type | Parking | Notes | Navigate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marlinton City Park | Put-In | Free lot | Overnight OK. Go-Mart, IGA nearby. | Maps → |
| Beard Access (Denmar) | Take-Out | Lot + trailer | Trail MM 38.5. Via CR 31 from Hillsboro. | Maps → |
| Buckeye Bridge | Bail-out | Roadside | Hospital nearby — (304) 799-7400 | Maps → |
| Seneca Rocks → Marlinton | ~65-80 mi | ~1.5-2 hrs |
| Harpers Ferry → Marlinton | ~170-180 mi | ~3.5-4 hrs |
| Marlinton → Beard/Denmar (shuttle) | ~20 mi | ~30 min |
If the North Fork is marginally too high but not dangerous, the South Branch's larger volume handles it better. Plus: bald eagles and 1,000-foot canyon walls.
Photo: Arun Prakash / CC BY-SA 3.0