Thursday, December 13, 2007

Hagen Creek Video: 12/6/07

Hagen Creek is a tributary of the North/West Fork of the Washougal just outside of Washougal, WA - not far from Portland. It was first ran within the last two years and it's a wonder that it went undiscovered for so long. It contains some nice bedrock rapids and a couple clean waterfalls. Once it meets the NWF Washougal there are 2 fun class V drops followed by some good class IV boogy and some amazing scenery. We didn't get too many photos, but we did get some footage.



Uldis in the entrance to the second falls on Hagen.


Uldis continuing on down this broken up 30 footer.


Joe buried in the second falls after the confluence with the NWF Washougal.


Uldis droppin' in.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Video: Panama Creeking 2007

Here's the video I put together from my recent trip to Panama. Enjoy!!!

Monday, November 26, 2007

Landslide on Money Drop: Rock Creek, WA

Money Drop was an 80 foot falls before a huge ever-changing landslide filled in the creek and the base of the waterfall. Right now it's around 40 feet and it's definitely still changing. Jim Busse, Luke Spencer, Chuck Taylor, Johnnie Ott and I witnessed, and a few of us narrowly escaped, part of the landslide falling into the river.

Notice the huge landslide that's taken out a bunch of trees.


Jim Busse stomping it!


Johnnie Ott's sequence.


This drop has a fast slide leading into it and it launches you with some good speed - so fun! After the falls you paddle through a tight canyon for a couple hundred yards at the end of which were eddies on both sides. The takeout was on the right and missing this eddy meant making a move boofing a log and then going into some log-choked sketchy stuff. One of our party missed the eddy and wedged his paddle across the log-move drop and I ran like hell along the shore catching the bow of his boat before he went paddle-less into the log mank.

The landslide on the left with the manky log-choked washout on the right.


Luke getting ready to go deep.


Me enjoying weightlessness.


Seconds after my second lap of the falls, the whole side of the river started sliding in. I was in the left eddy and noticed that the eddies had changed. Johnnie was running safety on a rock in the takeout eddy on the right and yelled to me to get over - at this point I had no idea what was going on. The takeout eddy became moving water so Johnnie and Chuck helped grab my boat while I got out. They passed the boat up the cliff and we scrambled up as fast as we could away from the landslide and the rising water. We watched the whole wall of clay-mud slowly slide into the river and into the eddy where I had been sitting seconds before. The rock Johnnie was standing on was submerged and Luke's throw rope got eaten by the rising water.

The dirt on the left is where the left eddy was.
The submerged rock on the right is where Johnnie was standing.


That's a lot of mud!!


Watch for signs of landslides including but not limited to:

Looming walls of loose sliding mud with downed trees packed in it.
Burned down houses.
Caution tape.


Sunday, November 18, 2007

Snow Day!!! Trout Creek, WA - another fun day in the CRG

Trout Creek is a steep continuous creek about an hour and a half outside of Portland. We were lucky to catch it before it got snowed in, and I don't think access will be easy for much longer. After recovering from the previous day's festivities(check previous post), Joe Stumpfel, Uldis, and I decided to knock another CRG classic off the list. With over 300 feet per mile in the steepest part and no waterfalls this thing drops fast. It has a good warmup, then it's basically one continuous class IV-V rapid. Joe, the crazy C-1er, boat scouted almost the whole thing for us - we only got out to scout a couple times. Just eddyhopping steepness with some big rapids, and big holes - so fun!

A nice camping spot at the take-out across this bridge. Notice the weather.


Rocking Chacos, Uldis was surprised to see snow at the get-in.


Now this reminds me of Minnesota - a fun day in the snow!!!


Joe dropping in as it starts to pick up.



Uldis and Joe havin' a good ol' time in the snow.


Joe enjoying one of the many rapids like this.


Yeah, the line was under that tree - nice!



Snowmen like to paddle too.


A blurry shot of the gauge rock.
A good flow for a first time down - known to locals as the minimum.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

An epic adventure on Canyon Creek, WA

2 broken boats, 3 walk-offs and 4 swims later,
we finally reached the takeout in the dark....

Uldis, Joe Stumpfel, Joe's girlfriend Rachel, and I put on above Fly Creek at around 2 in the afternoon. None of us had run Canyon Creek before, but we had all heard that this was a IV to IV+ run, and we thought we were in for a pretty mellow day.

Uldis breaking his boat at the get-in.


Right at the get-in Uldis was doing the seal launch and his boat hit some of the sharp volcanic rock, putting a nasty crack in his Rocker. "No worries," I said, "just go grab my All-Star and playboat this one." After some deliberation he decided to go for it and we were off. 195 pounds is pretty heavy for the All-Star so we figured he would be in for a pretty exciting day. The run starts off as an awesome play run - great surfing waves everywhere with some perfect kickflip and wavewheelin' waves. Just watch out for random pick-up trucks in the river.

Good scenery as we start our (mis)adventure.


After the first few rapids we ran into a couple boaters putting on at a different get-in. Mark from Idaho and Tyson from Eugene hooked up with our group. Shortly after this, Joe noticed Uldis stern stalling down the river and they came to find out that my All-Star had a huge crack in the bottom and was funneling in water fast. Boat number 2 down. Luckily this happened before the canyon because Uldis was able to hike out.

Cracked All-Star - not my baby!!


Working our way into the canyon.


After entering the canyon, things were going good - it was pretty juicy in there, but we were making good downstream progress. We came to a rapid and Mark gave us the line, "Ride up on the left and punch the seam." Mark and Tyson made it through fine then I was up. I punched through upright but didn't have enough momentum to the right so I was getting sucked back in from the left wall. "Oh, that's what he meant by ride up left!" I threw a couple ends in the Mega Rocker and it flushed me out. Rachel was approaching the drop while I was getting rodeo'd, Joe yells to her "Catch an eddy!" But it was too late - I flushed and rolled up in time to see her come through. It was a pretty sticky hole and it took her for a good ride before she popped out. Now we're in a mini canyon so trying to get the equipment together and back to its occupant was a challenge. The only way for Rachel to get down to her boat was to swim, so she held a rope while Joe belayed her around the corner into an eddy with a nasty undercut. She basically slingshotted around slamming into the wall. After some more swimming she was finally reunited with her boat and paddle.

One of the mini canyons that Rachel had to swim through.


Shortly after this, Tyson swam out of a sticky ledge and his boat went for a long ride in another sticky pourover while we all watched and hoped it would come out. After a few minutes we all cheered when it finally was free. We gathered his gear and headed downstream, quickly coming upon a stomping rapid. It was a long rapid with huge waves and holes ending in a sticky pourover. As the group pondered the pourover, I decided to fire it up. I made it through the big stuff fine, but was coming towards the pourover backwards. I had time to get a couple quick strokes off and tried to push my bow up, and I was through! But wait a second, my skirt imploded and I was squirting down river into some continuous class III leading into the 17 footer. So I punched out and made it to shore with my boat floating downstream. After watching this, Rachel and Tyson decided to hike out there - hike-outs 2 and 3. Joe's boat was at the top of the rapid and Rachel's Solo was the only boat at the bottom. With some fast thinking Joe tells Rachel to hike out with his boat and he'll take the Solo. Joe ripped out the bulkhead of the Solo so he could fit, switching from C-1 to two blades, and went paddling after my boat.

Watching Tyson's boat take a ride in a sticky hole.


I thought for sure my boat was going over the waterfall, but luckily it was breached on one of the only exposed rocks about a hundred yards above the falls. Joe ferried out and clipped the boat in as Mark and I held a rope on shore. Okay, I got my boat back, let's go check out the falls. At this level the falls was pretty burly. It requires a delayed boof and if you miss it you're gonna go deep, maybe coming out, maybe taking a serious thrashing, and maybe going into one of the undercut walls. We all ran it with good lines and were off. After the falls is a stomping section with HUGE holes all over the place. I got stopped and went for a long sidesurf - it's really hard to surf the 93 gallon Mega Rocker out of holes. Finally got out of that one, made it downstream a ways and took another long surf. This time I had to just rest in a sidesurf for a minute before I built the energy to work my way out. These holes were massive! After this I was pretty tired. I took a break in an eddy for about 60 seconds before continuing.

Joe buried in the falls.


Looking back up at the falls - it was getting dark fast at this point.


Next up was the double drop - a pair of 6-10 foot ledges about 10 yards apart. I scouted it and it had some nasty recirculation, but it looked good to go. Joe and Mark ran the first drop and then I was up. I guess I was just really tired after all of our (mis)adventures up to this point and was a couple feet too far right. I dropped off the right side of a finger rock right into a nasty seam. I held on for a while trying to keep my head up which was hard in the extremely aerated water. After surfing for a while I realized there was no way I was getting out of there so I pulled. "Wait a second," I thought, "I'm not surfacing!" I was getting recirculated in the base of the falls. Flailing and trying to get out wasn't doing anything and I was down for a while, so finally I curled into a ball and went so deep that all I could see was darkness. I wasn't getting chundered anymore so I hoped I was free, and as I came towards the light at the surface I rejoiced. Sweet, sweet, air!!! As I collected myself on shore I saw my paddle float into the eddy that I swam into - hooray! The second drop is all cliffed out so I watched from the cliff as Joe was trying to unpin my boat from under a log in a pourover. Luckily Rachel had a pin kit in her boat and Joe set up a pulley system to get my boat out. From the cliff there was no way down except to jump into the dark water of unknown depth. Luckily I was able to lower myself down the cliff to a point where it wouldn't have been too bad if it was shallow when I jumped.

By now it was getting really dark. Joe had my boat free and ferried it across the river right above a rapid where someone died. Mark and I both walked this one and Joe decided to run it in the dark after he got the line from Mark.
Mark: "Boof the left side of that rock"
Joe: "Is that the line where the guy died?"
Mark: "Nope"
And Joe was off - having an awesome line in the dark on the death rapid. "Best boof of the day," he later recalled.

Then a short spurt of class II and a 1.5 mile paddle out of the reservoir by moonlight. We were all powering ahead and there's a sign spanning the reservoir. "I wonder what that sign says?" says Joe. "I dunno, but I hear running water up there," I say back. Then we realized we were about to go right into the dam... that would have been a fitting ending to our day! "Oh yeah, we're supposed to go left here," Mark chimes in. We finally made it to the takeout 2 broken boats, 3 hike-offs and 4 swims later. Definitely an epic day.

Paddle safe,
Tony

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Park and Huck Video

Lower Falls on the East Fork of the Lewis is a 45 footer located north of Portland in Washington state. This video documents Luke Spencer, Chuck Taylor, and Uldis Jaunarajs on a sweet park and huck. The footage of me and Johnnie Ott was corrupted, but this should provide some entertainment. 11/6/07

Friday, November 2, 2007

A Week in Panama

First, let's set the stage with the theme song of our trip:

"Panama" by Van Halen



Crank the volume and play this video while you browse this post for the full experience.

Dave D. (a friend from NC), Maximus (MN), and I headed south for some warm water Panamanian paddling. We based out of a town called Boquete in the Chiriqui province. This is a sweet area up in the mountains that's surrounded by looming volcanoes. There is whitewater everywhere. Most of what we paddled was steep boulderbed with the occasional bedrock rapids. This was a guided trip so all transportation and logistics were taken care of. The downside was that we didn't get to do much of the full-on class V stuff that I would have liked to. We did a lot of real continuous IV and IV+ with the occasional V and it was really fun, the scenery is amazing, and booze is cheap! Travelling in Panama is super easy. Due to our country's influence and presence down there, english is spoken by most people. The infrastructure is among the best in Central America with a good system of roads, lots of which are paved. There is super easy access to lots of the whitewater, but there is plenty with harder access waiting to be explored!

The rivers we paddled were: Caldera, Cochea, Chiriquicito, Frijoles section of the Chiriqui, Caldera town section, and the Los Vios(will be referred to as LV).

One of the volcanoes.


Our shuttle vehicle.


Some boulder boogy in the jungle.


Coming around a bend to a huge waterfall.


Big awesome waterfall - you can see the top in the previous picture.


Andy gettin' some boof on.


Panamanian chess, or as they call it down there... "Drinking Game"


Boulder-filled riverbed on the Frijoles (Bean) section.


All rapids on the Frijoles are named after beans... Here's Finger Bean.


Go Left Go Right Bean.


Making our way down to the LV.


A fun warmup rapid on the LV called Quiet Time.


Andy at some hot springs that are along the river - that's a good feeling after 6 days of paddling.



Like God, we took our 7th day off to rest. We were all beat and had a good time checking out what we referred to as the monkey farm. It was actually an amazing animal sanctuary called Paradise Gardens. It was started by a british couple who house many rare birds, as well as monkeys, wild cats and other animals. They work with the ANAM, the National Authority for the Environment, by housing and caring for animals, some of which have come from a rough background. It's a truly amazing place!

An awesome jungle cat that has a really loud purr that sounds like a growl. Not your typical house cat, but it does interact with people.


Monkeys are my friends!


Monkey hat - I'm not afraid to use a monkey as a fashion accessory.


6 month old Howler.


This monkey is super friendly.


I did have a chance to make it to the canal after a fun night in Panama City.

A truly remarkable feat of engineering.


A ship in the Mira Flores Locks.