Monday, June 7, 2010

Cali 2010


May 4th, 2010. Flying over the Sierras it became evident just how early it was to be headed to California. Cold weather and stormy skies plagued the entire trip. I slept with my down jacket on every night and rarely took it off during the day. "Drying" gear froze overnight on a regular basis. It wasn't quite what I envisioned but the cold weather did at least keep things from blowing out. After being picked up in San Francisco by the trustee ol' Drew Duval our first stop would be the S.B. of the Feather to meet Will Pruett and Nick, who had been there the previous two days enjoying some juicy flows. The Chattanooga boyz go fast and that's what we did, not much scouting, if any other than 99 problems, was done as we blazed the river in a little under 2 hours. The following photos are from a variety of trips down the S.B., all photos by me except the two of me by Nathan Klema, thanks buddy.
JJ boofs

TJ boofs bigger with little to no concern for his spine
Rodrigo kind of faded sideways, but still slayed it in the end
Nothing about 99 problems bothered Drew.


Looking downstream to the eventual 100 footer with the 99 problems horizon line in the foreground.

Christian Cook stompin' the 20 above 99

Me on 99 problems
The classic falls above the takeout. Although an easy waterfall, this thing still dishes out plenty of broken paddles and bloodied faces. Pack your Werner, AT's weren't standing up to it.

After jumping in with the Janney brothers and Christian Cook in from Colorado we went back to the S. Branch. Then we ran the Little North Fork Middle Feather down to Milsap Bar. Sweet run although there's some burly mank in there. A few ultra-classic drops and the two-day aspect of the run keep it good in my book, but again, overall not classic.
The rapid no one wanted anything to do with. L.N.F.M.F
I believe this is Jaroslavs drop. I dropped my watershed camera bag in here and it got recirculated in the hole/eddy for a while before Tom could grab it. Luckily, I was using my camera at the time.
Cool lizard at camp


This was the classic drop at the end I'd been waiting for. I remember it from old Scott Lindgren videos and now I finally know what river it's on.
We ran Canyon Creek and got to hang out with Anthony from Reno. He provided entertainment in the evening as he usually does. Then we ran the Upper Middle Cosumnes, which I actually ran several times while out there. These couple photos are from a high water day. The burl swirls were in play and Tom took a swim early on. He got redemption at Skate Park shown below and all the other good rapids on this run.


Cool sequence of Tom in Skate Park. It wasn't sunny.
The South Fork Merced is an incredible river, one of my favorites to date. We saw an opportunity to put on after a couple of cool days when the level dropped to 800 Cfs at Wawona. We made the immediate drive south and put on with now warm temps and a mostly sunny sky. The first day is awesome, big drops with plenty of swirls for everyone. Everything can be run but most people make a few portages in there. We elected to paddle past Superslide and camp a little ways down past some of the burliest stuff since the level would rise for day 2. A large group led by Evan Garcia had the same idea and we ended up in nearby camps. That night it rained again. Waking up the next morning I saw the level had clearly risen but the sun was out and the river looked very inviting. We picked our way down through burly rapids and had a great day, everyone was stoked to of had a safe trip down at high water. To Tom, Christian, Louis, Mike, and Nathan, that was a great trip I will always remember. Look forward to paddling with you boyz next time.

Classic S. Merced scenery
Louis on Superslide

This beauty is named Cali Tongue. One in a million is directly above.


It was sunny sometimes

Somewhere in there we paddled the Secret Stash section on the W. Feather. It's a cool run with a few distinct mini gorges that pack powerful rapids in each.

R. Kelly on the first and best drop.
Tom stylin' it

Tom after punching himself in the face on the S. Branch.

One of the last days I did Golden Gate on the S. Fork American with Will Pruett, Nick Murphy, and Nathan K. We were all expecting a super burly long day but to our surprise it wasn't too hard. We made one portage around Brain Fade due to wood and skirted a couple of the meat lines but everything else is really manageable. Nate was the only one to attempt the meat line at Taco Bell and it burled him up real good resulting in a swim and lost paddle. He came out no worse for the wear.
Will Pruett at Straight Shot
Brain Fade
F-111 Falls
Right side of F-111 Falls. Will took an exploratory line under the rock shelf that extends out from river right.

Nick Murphy going with the left line.

Cali was great. It's always a cool feeling when you can actually look forward to returning home after a paddling trip instead of dreading it. Not only do I return home to a great girl, I get to come back to Asheville and reap the benefits of summer living in Western NC. Most importantly, this trip to California was a growing experience for me since I learned alot about what I want to do in life. More about that later, now I just wish some of these afternoon thunderstorms would bring creeks up. We'll see about that.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Roadtrip

Great week in the southeast! Started off with a fun day on Wilson Creek with the gals on Wednesday and Linville on Thursday. Got some rain and the weekend off so Ryan and I figured we'd head to West Virgina where snowmelt had kept Mann's Creek flowing for days. After making a few phone calls we determined Mann's Creek may well be running a very low flow. Instead, we set our sights on a little known creek in Virgina that drops close to a 1ooo feet in three miles. You may recognize some of the drops and the mandatory portage in the pictures below from the American Whitewater page on Bottom Creek. You won't find any flow info there but you will find several photos posted by Gordon Dalton along with a few important notifications about the mandatory portage that is hard to spot from upstream. Go with someone who knows it your first time so you don't miss it and die!
Beautiful Mouse Creek falls drops in at a rapid known as Swiss Cheese
Steve Powers shows how it's done
Eye of the needle aka Inner Earth. This picture doesn't show the long entrance to the portage which could be easily mistaken as a great rapid. Go with someone who knows where to get out.


Ryan styles Three Blind Mice. This is the last serious drop but the creek continues for another mile of steep class 4.



Ryan warms up on the Kettels.
Despite the low flow we had a blast out there and were blown away by the creek. We hung out with friends and met some great people. Thanks Steve and Joey. Saturday night we headed to Watauga where we experienced sweet free camping at the put-in. We awoke to a perfect level for Watuaga. Good times.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Upper Creek Photos

On January 25, 2010 a group of southeastern paddlers attempted Upper Creek in North Carolina. Toby Macdermot was the only person to complete the river that evening in his kayak after accidentally running a portage. The rest of us ran out of daylight portaging Toby's drop and chose to hike out over running unknown class five in the dark. Toby's drop is huge and totally unrunnable due to two logs that are in play. How he managed to come through unscathed in his kayak puzzles the shit out of me, but he did.

View from the top of Upper Falls. This is a great alternative put-in and is at the pull-off for Upper Falls from the road (181). Once above the falls, you can ferry over and hike up river left to get four or five worthy drops.

Toby drops into a tight Raven Fork like drop

Below here were two more good slides that were like the Toxaway.
Pat Keller on one of the cool drops before Upper Falls

I will definitely go back as there are plenty of good big drops and the portaging isn't bad, however, Upper Creek isn't a classic. Anyone looking for an exciting day on some new whitewater will enjoy Upper Creek. Use FR 982 as a takeout road. You can drive up a ways creekside to shorten the paddle out on FR 197.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Jocassee Double Video

Here's a short video from yesterday's session on the Whitewater and Thompson rivers. Check out previous post for pics and short write up.

safety first,

D

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Jocassee Double Header

I am totally stoked to have gotten to run the Whitewater and Thompson rivers today. None in our group (Baker, Drew, and I) had ever done either of the runs so we enjoyed an entire day of exploration. I was blown away by both the runs and I can't believe it took me this long to explore these rivers for myself. We had perfect flows, the whitewater was top-notch, and the scenery is a notch above the top. We hit the Whitewater first, putting on around 8:30 and with a level of 1 foot, which was really nice.

The "mini" gorge comes quick and it was stout in there. This picture is looking down towards the 3rd drop, which is actually hidden by the cliff. But as you can see, it's tight.


This is looking up at the landing of the first drop (big slide with boof on right). Once again, the drop is hidden.


This is the second drop, the meat if you will. It was really rompin' in there. We spent over an hour scouting the gorge before dropping in. Drew went first and slicked the entire series of rapids. He then came up and played safety/video guy for my run which went equally as smooth. We got a little video but it's so tight in there we could never get the whole gorge. That would take multiple camera angles.
The rest of the river was super-cool with a handful of huge powerful rapids like 55mph and ...merge lane?. The only thing we had (mandatory) to portage was the sieved out drop directly above the mini-gorge.
I enjoyed the hell out of the Thompson River. Instant classic in my eyes. Beautiful paddle and rapids with huge slides. And, you get to paddle into Lake Jocassee, which I've never done. Below is a sequence of Drew running a big slide. This one was sick. Complete with a sieve, shrap metal, and plenty of places to piton.
He's already dropped 20 feet
Catching some air in there. At this point, directly to Drew's left is some dicey shrap metal extending out from a log/rock sieve combo that could cut you, if not kill you.
He's right where you wanna be
nice!

This is the second half of a big slide rapid. The top portion is out of view but drops 30 feet into a mean hole. Then you get to run this down the right. Once again, I got some sweet footage but I'm having tech. difficulties getting it to save in edited format, so I'll post it later.
Check back for video,
D

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

More Toxaway

So I'm writing about the Toxaway again. I do paddle other rivers, but right now, I've just fallen in love with the Toxaway. Ryan bagged his first trip down a couple weeks ago and came away stoked. Here are some photos from my last couple trips down.


Ryan did the Toxaway! From the grin on his face, he liked the put-in slide. Sorry I didn't get you in action bro, I was dealing with the "piece" camera that day.

Nick in action on the put-in slide (non-piece camera)
Will Pruett engulfed in the first half of Wintergreen Falls
Second half of Wintergreen
Nick catching some air off the big exploder in Landbridge

Ryan finishing off Landbridge. It doesn't look as big from above.

Drew Duval sliding into Energizer
Warm up slide blue angel

Drew and Joe touch down
Check back soon for more Jocassee area goods.
Later,
D