well jP wants me to chime in so here it goes, forgive me if i ramble
the bottom line is that the Green gorge is an amazing place ... even if it was dry all the time id like to think i would hike down it once in a while just to be in there ... and my original motivation to get into kayaking was to see these places, not to run the stouts or surf the epics
that being said, over the years i found out that water is softer then rocks, and that i dont like hitten hard things with my boat or body ... so now for me id rather take a playboat down the green at 5k instead of run a creakboat over wet rocks.. but thats just me.. i say to each his own and what ever floats your boat or whatever
there is nothing like peeling out of an eddy into a flooding or high water river .... hooking into a power that is so much larger then yourself , surendering to it yet staying in control and working with the water (since you simply cant overpower it)... and if that gets old (wich it never realy seems to) try it in a tail stand or bow stall
the original point (wich i have been saying for years) is that the Green realy is an amazing big water run when it high, that does not get run enough (and yes i portage the nossel every time i run it over 4500, there is no glory in that drop at thoes flows, just a epic beatdown waiting to happen) ..
yes its a great place to be at any level, but if you want to truly exsperience what a rain on snow pineapple has to offer, you need to get out on the big stuff not wait a week for it to all drain away ... not that i ski much, but its like getting out on a power day vs. waiting till its all groomed (people like both, again to each his own)
this may be getting off topic but this is the northwest , its rains a ton , we are blessed with big water events all winter long most years... its a huge resourse ... for me its all about how to get the most out of a storm , we are after all, riders of the storm ...... after years of trial and error i have come to see a pattern in my flood boating ....
Day 1 storm hits things go crazy big ---- i go to the Nassell or Moshpit for a epic surf day (nice thing is i can do this solo if no one else can bail on work)
Day 2 or 3 things are still high but dropen fast --- hit lower Matheny (queets at 20k) or the Tilton at big water (4k+)
Day 3 or 4 things are droping into more normal flows --- go to the Green for more big water (4k+) since they will still be letting water out a few days after everything else has droped ..... the Green at high flows is an esential part of the post storm bigwater buffet
there are many other runs that are great at highflows too.. but thats just what i seem to do alot of the time out of Olympia in a playboat
there are many places to run rivers , but there are not many places that get rain on snow events like we do ... when a storm hits there is a difrence in watching the river gauges go huge or actualy going huge youself (it doesnt have to be class V, some of the best surfing in WA is on flooding class 3 runs)
last week i had to work so i didnt get to hit it all, but i got the moshpit on wed, green on sat and tilton on sun ... some friends of mine got on the Tilton on thurs at over 3700 (man i wish i was there instead of work)
i understand that big water is not for everyone, its taken me years to dial it in and some day i may have to hang up the playboat on thoes flood days (i duno how many 7k+ runs on the Tilton i got left in me).....but the fact is we live in a big water place and very few people take full advantage of this resourse
anyways have fun on whatever you are boating ....WA is a great place for low water , big water, steep water , flat water and everything in between

just go get wet its easyer then staying dry around here haha