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#1
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Hi,
Anyone been down the Pee Dee River in SC? I'm wondering if you can get a powerboat down the river to the coast starting in Chester, SC. Thanks, Billy Cook |
#2
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Oops. I meant Cheraw, SC
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#3
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Billy wrote:
Oops. I meant Cheraw, SC In a jon boat, maybe. Here's a guy that talks about canoing up near Cheraw http://members.aol.com/mmcbs3/peedee.html I've explored a short (very short, 10 miles) section of the Pee Dee right next to the Waccamaw/ICW and found that it unpredictably shoals, with numerous side channels. Pretty, some nice anchorages. Can be frustrating though, and I'd hate to be trying to get somewhere in a hurry on that river. Fair Skies Doug King |
#4
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Hey, Billy,
I've never done the PeeDee, but it has always looked pretty hinky. Why not try the Cape Fear from like Fayetteville to Wilmington? Deep water all the way. Justa thought. |
#5
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![]() muskrat wrote: ... try the Cape Fear from like Fayetteville to Wilmington? Deep water all the way. Anyone have knowledge of the Cape Fear above Fayetteville or a source of charts? |
#6
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I think we have decided to try the Little Pee Dee from Galivant's Ferry
Landing instead of starting up in Cheraw. Hopefully we will make it. Biggest boat is a 16' McKee Craft, rest are jon boats. Will have a GPS so hopefully can stay in the correct channel. |
#7
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"Billy" wrote in
ps.com: I think we have decided to try the Little Pee Dee from Galivant's Ferry Landing instead of starting up in Cheraw. Hopefully we will make it. Biggest boat is a 16' McKee Craft, rest are jon boats. Will have a GPS so hopefully can stay in the correct channel. When you get time, Billy, come down to Goose Creek (the city), just up US52 from Charleston. A really great boat trip begins in the salt water side of the Cooper River at Bushy Park, a public boat landing on top of a earthen dam that makes a freshwater reservoir for our water system through a canal up above the salt water line in the Cooper River. You drive down Red Band Road, right through the Naval Weapons Station on the public road to get to the dam. The salt water side of the dam is to your right, the freshwater reservoir is to your left and has a floating dock and another boatramp in the reservoir. The short tour is about 3-4 hours long simply making the loop. You come out of the little cut into the river and turn left, going upstream in the Cooper River through ancient rice fields on the old plantations, following the meandering river towards Lake Moultrie. Just after you pass a nice campsite on a little bluff we've spent the night on the river on, the river Tees. You'll see houses and trailers on a bluff to your right that continues up the Cooper River towards the lake. On the short tour, you take the left down an artificially-cut canal, past another public boat landing at a LOW-CLEARANCE road bridge you pass under, going down the canal into the upper reach of the Bushy Park Reservoir about 2 miles down the canal. Just after the road bridge, there is a railroad bridge you go under and watch for the kids swinging out of the trees to port on weekends on a huge tire. It's been there for 30 years that I know of. Just follow the canal into the reservoir. Stay near the right side of the upper part of the reservoir, maybe 50 yards from the grass, as that's where the deep water is. The fishing to port is great but there are many obstructions to watch out for. You'll probably see the waterskiiers in their powerful inboard boats as the reservoir narrows, next. They have a permanently- moored, inflatable course set up in the reservoir. A red airtank in the weeds inflates the bouys that are weighted to sink when air is released. Great fun watching these expert skiiers run the slalom behind a big V-8 on summer weekends. Further down the reservoir it gets much deeper and you'll come to the first water intake structure out in the reservoir. Lots of alligators live in the canal and reservoir and they hang out a lot in a canal dug to service a small factory just before the intake. Down from the first water intake you'll spot the second water intake by the floating dock and ramp. You'll see your car in the parking lot as you're now on the freshwater side of the dam, all freshwater flushed of the salt and ready to be put on the trailer...(c; The long tour changes our route back at that Tee in the Cooper. If you turn right at the Tee (or quicker come up from the freshwater side of the boatramp up the canal to it) you'll be headed up the Cooper River past some homes up on a bluff, through a railroad bridge that opens and on up past some really nice homes upriver. The channel was finally marked a couple of years ago by the Santee-Cooper power company as many people just drove off into all the rice fields to clog their props in weeds and go AGROUND in 2' of water that looks like it's deeper. From the houses on the left, the channel goes across the rice paddies to Mepkin Abbey, a beautiful Catholic abbey whos claim to fame is they are in the egg business. You are welcome to land on their lawn and look over the beautifully kept grounds, if you like. The monks are very friendly. Past the abbey, the river meanders past lots of interesting South Carolina wetlands and a few more plantations eventually becoming the Tailrace Canal almost imperceptably near Moncks Corner, SC. Where possible, waterfront homes line the canal near Moncks Corner for a while ending in the "ditch" just above a waterfront park that has a pier. Just above these woods you'll come to a no-wake-zone that's enforced quite vigorously to protect The Dock Restaurant which has changed hands to one of Charleston's best seafood companies. Dock the boats for lunch in front of the dining room and head on inside to food and beverages that are great. From the Dock, head again upstream under the high level US52 bridge. On summer weekends, try to keep looking ahead and not at the bikini-clad girls who seem to congregate where the boats land under the bridge's shade to swim. The canyon of the canal becomes deeper, now, as you pass under yet another railroad bridge where you'll see the 90' high Lake Moultrie Dam and powerhouse in front of you. Mill about with the other boats waiting for the FREE trip up 70 feet in the big lock into Lake Moultrie, itself. The nice man from the power company will ask you for your boat's name and where you are from. I think they use that to justify keeping the lock maintained at company expense. There is a floating dock that rides up a groove in the lock wall, a JetDock, where everyone rafts up safely to ride the water up the dam. This is great fun with kids as you are staring into the cavern of the empty lock at the short monstrous doors with a little water spraying out the seam way above you, the depth of the lake at that point. It's quite a sight for the youngsters...(c; The claustrophobic will tremble as the much higher lower doors close behind you. The water comes in quite tame so small boats are not upset and it only takes a few minutes to fill the lock. The short doors open and ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE as the Bubbas try to see how fast they can get out of the lock and to the fishing and partying on the lake. The US Air Force's Hodge Podge Lodge is the facility just to the right sticking out on a point. If you are military or military retiree with your ID card, you can use this facility from their marina on the dam-side of the point. Others are not welcome unless there is an emergency, of course. This end of the lake is quite deep, of course. As you go across the lake, over submerged towns, roads, farms, church steeples you can plot on your sonar, you'll be VERY careful as these lakes were NOT CLEARED BEFORE FLOODING in the 1930s! The shallower parts of the lakes is FULL OF STUMPS that all have magic magnets on them to hunt down lower units of outboard motors and props to kill. There is a little store on the other end of the dam from the lock (Lions Beach) to port as you exit and if you go around the AF point and up the lakeshore there is another small marina/store/gas station at Bonneau Beach where the road drives right into the lake as it was there before the lake was there. Reverse course and come down through the lock to get back the same way you came, taking the canal into the reservoir like the short course did on your way to your car/trailer at Bushy Park. Make SURE you get back to the landing by DARK......OR YOU'LL BE SORRRRRRRRRRRY! The river, rice paddies, canal and reservoir are NOT friendly places to strangers in the pitch black dark.....Time your trip up so you can plan your trip back. Oh, there is another marina down in the Tailrace Canal just on the lake side of the US 52 bridge up another short canal that goes parallel to the road. He as gas and some eats, too. Great fun on a weekend.....Don't forget the suntan oils! |
#8
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![]() The US Air Force's Hodge Podge Lodge is the facility just to the right sticking out on a point. If you are military or military retiree with your ID card, you can use this facility from their marina on the dam-side of the point. Others are not welcome unless there is an emergency, of course. Larry is Short Stay still in operation?? Leanne |
#9
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Hi Larry,
We have been doing a river trip that includes Lake Moultrie and the lower Cooper River for the last 8 years now but never knew we could go over into Bushy Park Reservoir. Next time we do that trip we will follow your directions to check it out. Most of our previous trips started at Columbia on the Congaree and ended up in Charleston. Last year we started on the Wateree in Camden, took the Wateree to the Congaree, the Congaree to Lake Marion, Lake Marion to Lake Moultrie and then on to Charleston via the Cooper. One year we even camped on the same bluff you camped on on the upper Cooper River ![]() Since we have done 7 trips down the same river system we decided we might get adventurous and try some different rivers. This year we are going to try the Pee Dee and maybe the Savannah next year. I live in upstate SC but grew up in Charleston where many of the other river trip participants still live so we and going to try to end up there on most of our trips. Maybe after we run out of rivers in SC we will try some in GA and NC. Thanks again for the info on the Bushy Park Reservoir. Funny that we passed the turn to it so many times and never knew it was there. The upper Cooper really is a very beautiful river. Thanks, Billy |
#10
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muskrat wrote:
... try the Cape Fear from like Fayetteville to Wilmington? Deep water all the way. Depends on what you mean by "deep." Bill wrote: Anyone have knowledge of the Cape Fear above Fayetteville or a source of charts? Charts? You can follow it on a topo map. The Cape Fear was improved for navigation back in the 1800s but there's nothing remotely resembling a channel any more. The first rapids are at Raven Rocks a few miles above Lillington. DSK |
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