Thursday, August 7, 2008

The beauty of multidays


The picture at the left shows the put-in for the Yampa River through Dinosaur National Monument. The river is wide and big... 10,000 cfs when this picture is taken. We are rigging our Hogs for five days of big Western whitewater. The first night we camp at Tepee Rapid. The hole at the top is loud and literally the size of a bus, but relatively easy to skirt river right. Excitement the first night is real. Later the next day we stick our finger in the light socket before lunch in "Little Joe" with a non- scouted run over a horizon line drop and down through 12 foot high haystacks that hide a monster hole at the bottom. I watch Fat Eddy drop in in his 16 foot Cat, and disappear. I get two strokes in a trough before clipping the left quarter, and turn around to signal Double O Don to go right. He misses her, but behind him Jiggy goes into the meat, and fills the infamous Eat Me up to the gunwales. His better half, Maria, does an awesome job high siding her through the rest of the wave train, and we bail her out full of adrenaline about a half mile downstream. Beautiful sandy beaches, petroglygphs, pictographs and scouted rapids dominate the next couple of days, and then like clock work the weather turns ugly as we head into the big rapid named Warm Springs. I've been down there twice now, and each time it is blowing rain sidways when we scout Warm Springs. I believe it is like that always. It is an ominous place on a remote stretch of the Yampa that has flipped many many boats. The noise is unreal. and the features make her a solid class 4. There is a boat flipping hole up top, and a series of ledges below that at different levels require different approaches. Our plan is to pull river right, and miss the big hole, and then punch the two bottom holes that are formed by the ledges. The penalty for being in the middle of the river is the big hole, and a sure flip, and then a massive pour- over down below in the center that would surely flip you if you were not already upside down. Without sounding too dramatic, the pour over is Mr. Ugly. It is 20 yards wide, and the back side is six feet high, and the water is flying over the top, and creating a massive upstream current that looks like it would recirculate you while it worked you over like a trash compactor. I want no part of the pour over and hole, and make the pull to river right, as well as the rest of our group except for the lead boat that gets caught in the wave train above the top hole, and sent into the hole. He flips, swims, recovers his boat, and becomes legend. His rigging holds, and all we lose are several random cold drinks. There is a special excitement in camp that night after the flip. The oarsman handles the situation like a pro as we retell our stories of our runs dozens of times. There is nothing in the World like a multi day trip down a wilderness river. It is bliss when the group is tight. It brings out the best in everyone. Permits anyone?

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