Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Los Pinos River

Three days of wilderness paddling, Moose, Elk, Swimmers, Sieves, waterfalls and the A Team crew, has been added to my list of amazing outdoor excursions and has certainly formed long lasting memories of adventure.

With nearly peak flows and plenty of cocky testosterone, Jared Jonson decided that the long anticipated Pinos weekend had arrived. We decided to plan for the trip in typical laid back kayaker style. We got our paddling fix in the morning and headed for some climbing in the early afternoon. Knowing that we still needed to buy food, drive 4 hours and find a willing paddling crew, we promptly arrived back in town by 6pm and motivated to put things together and in motion.

Somewhere in the back of my mind I thought we would be rolling out of town by 7:30pm and getting a good nights sleep before the 7 mile hike in. However after raiding City Market, getting our gear together and motivating Brad Higginbotham, Scot Baker, Ben Stokesbarry, Lizzy and Raffa to join the team, we were sluggishly departing Durango some late hour after dark when you’ve simply given up caring.

Finally getting to bed with the moon falling rather then rising.




The fallowing morning, bummed that we had more miles of hiking in front of us then we had of sleep, the boats were slowing being loaded with all our multi-day necessities. Annie’s Tuna Mack, sleeping bags, whiskey, and various other goods, such as the B.J.M.

Unfortunately the other half of the crew were a little off from their anticipated arrival time. After several hours of waiting Brad Hanganbothem decided to urinate a finishing line in the middle of the road with the hope that our other frinds would arrive before it dried back to its dusty state.

Around 2 O clock the crew had been assembled and we embarked on the hike taking us from the Rio Grand reservoir, over Weminuche Pass and into the headwaters of the Pinos River.



With the Sun just hanging high enough we found enough water to begin our 25+ mile paddle to Lemon reservoir.



Soon after beginning our late afternoon paddle we found ourselves barreling through a small, manky miny gorge without the key ingredient, “eddies.” This quickly led to two pinned paddlers, a simmer and a cracked boat. A unanimous vote led to finding camp 1 and telling rumors of what one believed to find in the rarely explored whitewater to come.


Beginning day 2 at camp 1.



Lizzy throwing downs her mad boofing style day two


Towards the end of day 2 we reached the rumored “first gorge,” which really isn’t much of a gorge but rather one burly section of whitewater. The holes were looking meaty and drops stout, so the idea was thrown out to camp and hope for lower water in the morning. However with Brad’s solid energy and our confidence in paddling with each other, we couldn't’t let the opportunity to probe the Penos’s inner depths pass.

Loaded boats make the best hole bashing battering rams, myself surviving drop 1 of 4


Photo Scot Baker

Drop 2 had a good old, sticky ledge hole that had both Brad and I digging for freedom.

Photo Scot Baker

Drop 3 was a killer supper boof that lead into one of the biggest holes on the run. Yet by this point we where so jacked up on adrenaline, the safety was sweet, swim lines chill and it was no time to hold back. I found myself swimming out of this one, followed by Brad stomping the line and showing everyone how to get’er done.


Camp 2 was found a short walk down stream and was well beyond the word “amazing.”

Side hikes and relaxation filled the remaining afternoon.


With the start of day 3 almost everyone found a little chunk of action in the first gorge.

Jared firing up the first d on a drop just upstream of our put in from the night before.


Ben on the first drop of his 3rd day. One hell of a warm up.


Jared stomping the last drop of the section.


Rafa in one of many drops following the first gorge section.


By the Time we made it through this large section of whitewater it was around 3pm on the 3rd day and we still had another burly gorge section and 15ish miles of water between us and our PBR’s basking in the blistering head of the shuttle rig. Jarred, Lizzy, Been and Rafa were in no rush and decided to find camp 3 before the last gorge. Brad, Scot and I needed to be back to work the following day so we embarked and an afternoon endurance run of the remaining miles.

With so little time for scouting and portaging I think we where all tweaking out on adrenaline as we closed the gap between our shaking fingers and the warm waiting love of the PBR.

With the lack of time very few photos where taken of this section, except for this one by Mr. Baker, of myself and the goods in the lower gorge.

Photo: Scot Baker

The rest of the crew had an amazing day finishing the run on day 4 with no time restraints. This was one vary worthy mission in the San Juans and I would highly recommend it to anyone.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

South Fork Salmon River. Spawn there.

After spending the winter trapped in my basement while Evan Stafford and I put Whitewater of the Southern Rockies together, I’ve been doing everything I can to avoid writing or taking pictures of kayaking. It’s been great. Between random construction jobs the weekends have been packed with some good weekend adventures, but all suffering from the two-day limit until last week.

My girlfriend Tina Swan and I packed up for a five-day Idaho trip last week, with her father George along for the ride and willing to run our long shuttles. Thursday we arrived in the airstrip town of Yellowpine, at the headwaters of the South Fork Salmon drainage. We put on to Johnson Creek, without guidebook beta, but from reading the gazetteer and from the name of the run and flow on the AW flow page. It was an exciting day, but lesser quality than the rest of the trip.

On Friday we set off on a 3-day, 2-night self-support trip. We started at the confluence of Johnson Creek and the East Fork South Fork Salmon (upper run), paddled the East Fork 15 miles to the South Fork, and continued down the South Fork 35 miles to the Main Salmon, where a 20-mile paddle out leads to the take-out of the main at Vinegar Creek. We started on about 700cfs. Seventy miles, two beach camps, a bunch of big water IV+, and a few class Vs later we arrived at the take-out on 20,000cfs. It was classic river-running at its finest. It’s a five-star trip with plenty of R&R time. Enjoy the eye candy.

Water Level Jargon: The South Fork gauge was reading about 4 feet when we ran it. I’ve heard it starts to get scary at 5.5, and that the sickest of the local NF Payette crowd has ventured into the SF Salmon at 7.5, paddling out on the main at 80k. Low flow offers a relaxing multi-day class IV, and high water can get as V+ as you want.

-Kyle McCutchen

The put-in

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Tina on the East Fork, Day 1



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South Fork Day 1

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Tina on Devil Creek Rapid, Day 1

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Camp 1, about 10 miles into the South Fork.





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Day 2, South Fork





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Fall Creek Rapid rejection. A group of 10 used playboats, and flew out from Mackay Bar at the confluence of the SF & Main.

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The last drop of the South Fork, about 44 miles into our trip.

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Camp 2, about 52 miles into our trip.

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I like to kayak.



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Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Cyrstal Creeking - A high Water Event - North Fork of the Crystal and Crystal Mill Falls

Thanks to all the photographers who contributed photos to this post: Chris Larsen, Steve Melnick, Nicole Mansfield, Chris Menges.

This was a high water session on the North Fork of the Crystal event during the first weekend in June. Flows on the Avalanche gauge showed that our runs were done at 1300 (Saturday night) and 1000 (Sunday morning). The run is typically paddled between 500 and 800 cfs.



Day 1 @ 1300 cfs

The first of the top 4 drops is Icing (pictured below), a 40 foot cascading slide. Paddlers typically drop in on the right side of a dividing rock. Paddlers who have been here before will note the water almost covering the center rock, which is usually well out of the water.


At these higher levels, icing quickly leads into Cake, another 40ish foot cascade. The photo below shows this drop as seen from shore about 1/4 of the way down.



At normal levels paddlers find a nice pool, recovery zone and eddy at the bottom of Cake, allowing for time to avoid the logs blocking the river left channel of drop # 3. At the high level on Saturday night, we felt that missing the eddy at the bottom of the 2 slides would be very unpleasant.




Above, Leif Embertson extracts a log from the second part of drop #3. Note the landing of Cake in the background as well as the logs blocking the river left channel. These logs were almost covered on Saturday night.




Drop # 3 leads around a corner to this 8 foot falls, which felt just right even at high flows. Chris Menges practices his boof at dusk.


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Day 2 @ 1000 cfs


Waking up in the morning, we were glad to see that the river had dropped a bit. A few group members who had opted not to run on day 1 were stoked to get in the water.


Always a good man to have setting safety and watching your back, Chris Larsen (above) sets up on the logs just in case.

Always one of the most skilled paddlers of any paddling trip I'm on with her, ex-slalom paddler Laura Jorgensen scouts her line on Icing.




Leif Embertson paddling the short lead in to Icing. The amazing scenery of the upper Crystal valley is one of the main reasons for visiting the area.




Leif on Icing, day 1 high water run.....




....and on day 2, slightly less high water run. The tree in the bottom of the frame was new to us on day 2. Drop in river right.



Nicole Mansfield loves hot dogs, makes sweet beanies and always fires up the big drops in style. Above, Nicole on line in Cake.


Laura Jorgensen kayaking down some slightly steep and fast moving water.




Chris Menges coming through the bottom of the second big drop with a little bit of speed.




Nicole boofs drop 4.





More drop 4 fun....




Las chicas del equipo 'HZG' y sin seguro in the eddy below drop 4.




Laura Jorgenses peels into an eddy and displays some of the great paddling technique she picked up as a slalom racer.




The road access to the North Fork is definitely at least 4+.........




......but beautiful all the same.




After the North Fork, it is fun to paddle the Crystal Mill Falls to Crystal Gorge put-in run (don't go too far). A sequence of Chris' run on Crystal Mill Falls, one of Colorado's most well known natural landmarks.


More pics on this section to follow in the next few days............