Archive for the ‘Kayaking’ Category

Re-visiting Riverhouse

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

The author drops the dam

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I last boated the Riverhouse Section of the Deschutes probably almost 8 years ago; long enough that I can’t remember exactly! The only other time I was in Bend, we ended up doing several other sections and skipped the Riverhouse section of the Deschutes. Other than that, I hadn’t been back in Bend for boating for one reason or another. This year, I headed over to Mt. Bachelor with my girlfriend to do some skiing for a couple days and took the chance to do a quick run down Riverhouse on Sat., March 14th.

The last time I was there, I don’t remember anyone even talking about the possibility of running the dam just upstream of the usual put-in for Riverhouse. But, times change, and I’d heard from friends that the dam was a great way to start the run. From the scout the dam looks straight-forward enough until I got in my boat and started to line up on the drop. From the lip, the drop is big enough to get the adrenaline flowing! I spent a couple minutes right at the edge trying to line up in order to miss the tree in the run-out and to calm my nerves a bit and then I dropped over for a fast ride down the face of the dam and through the hole at the bottom. It was a really smooth ride as my kayak maintained contact with the dam all the way and I punched through the hole and past the log with no problems. My friends were right, great way to start the day!

The author blasts through the bottom hole below the dam

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Below the dam the river slides through a small rapid as it goes under the road bridge and then flattens in a long pool. As I was to find out throughout the run, the houses are so close to the river in this section that I felt like I was trespassing. Because the flow is regulated on the whole length of the Deschutes, folks can build right to the edge of the water and sometimes beyond without fearing from floods. Kinda depressing from a boaters viewpoint.

Anyway, for the first couple miles the run alternates between punchy rapids with some waves and holes and flatwater. Everything is scoutable from a boat and the rapids are a nice warm-up for the bigger stuff downstream. Shortly downstream there is a small ledge drop known as The Wright Stuff that has a couple chunky lines. I picked my way down the left side a bit, caught a small eddy just before getting pushed over the lip, lined up for a boof in the center and came through with no problems. I think there is a right-side line as well but both lines have the chance of a piton so choose well.

A little further downstream is a fun rapid called Flumes of Doom. Here the river splits around an island with the most interesting rapid in the left channel. I had planned to boat-scout this rapid as well, but the line isn’t super obvious at the top, and, to be honest, I really didn’t remember anything about what the rapid looked like from my previous trip. I caught a small eddy on the right and wedged my boat between two rocks which allowed me to stand up in my boat and get a look at the entrance of the rapid which consisted of a zig-zag move between two rocks and then what looked like a good boof on the right. I got back in my boat, immediately blew the first zig-zag move, caught an eddy to re-group, ferried back out to the right and hit the boof. Good stuff! Just downstream the river rushes through some fast waves and a couple holes as the right channel re-joins the left channel.

After a few small rapids and some calm floating, the river bends back to the right and begins to accelerate down into T-Rex Rapid. T-Rex is long with a nice zig-zag move at the top to avoid a couple rocks and holes and then a steep drop into the pool below. The drop at the end is tough to scout from the river and the left side drops onto some rocks. I was able to catch a small eddy on the left, scout my line a bit from my boat, and then ferry back to the middle for a good boof over the ledge. The far right-side also looked to be clean.

Looking downstream into T-Rex

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Shortly below T-Rex is the last big rapid of the run; Ogre. Ogre doesn’t have a lot of places to stop above it to scout but I was pretty confident that it was really a big flush down the right side. Sure enough, the right side drops into a big wave pushing back to the middle and down through a big hole at the bottom. Really fun! Below this are a couple smaller drops and some rock-dodging before the river really starts to mellow out.

Looking back up at Ogre Rapid

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Looking downstream from the bottom of Ogre

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After Ogre I was trying to hustle because I was a bit late for meeting Lisa with the shuttle but this stretch has some of the prettiest scenery on the run and there are, finally, few houses in view. There is at least one surprise rapid in this section and a couple nice play waves to keep things interesting.

All in all I had a great morning on the river. I took about 1.5 hours to do the run and could’ve stretched it a bit longer if I’d wanted with some play and mellow floating. Hopefully it won’t be another 8 years before I come back to Bend for some more boating. Thanks to Lisa for running shuttle and taking some great shots of me running the dam.

Killer Fang of the Clackamas River

Friday, February 20th, 2009

The Killer Fang section of the Clackamas River has had a fearsome reputation in the past. Perhaps this is due to the 3rd edition of Soggy Sneakers which opened it’s description with: “This secluded and scenic run on the Clackamas River is also one of the most dangerous. A perfect roll, reliable equipment, and a competent leader are prerequisites.” This is a bit overblown but this section is very scenic and has some fun rapids and a couple nasty rapids. At any time other than high flows, there are plenty of eddies and pools to scout and portage what you need to. The Blue Sky crew usually does this run once a year to check for any changes that might make rafting a bit more friendly.

This year, just like last year, Oregon has had lots of low elevation snow which has made getting to the river interesting. There is rarely snow near the put-in for Killer Fang. Luckily it wasn’t too deep and the van was able to make it pretty close to the top of the run. Parking was a bit interesting though.

Gearing up on the road near the put-in.

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After a short hike to the put-in, we hopped on the river and floated the first mile of essentially flat-water. This section has some great, big old trees along the banks and it isn’t uncommon to see a bald eagle. Pretty soon the action picks up with a couple fun, small rapids. This whole section is located within a huge, ancient landslide zone. The geology is very unstable. This results in lots of landslides along the river which contribute new wood and boulders to the rapids. Most of the rapids on this section consist of boulder gardens.

The first rapid of note is called Hole in the River and is about the 3rd rapid on the run. At the low flows we had on this trip it’s a pretty straight-forward boulder garden but at high water, it has a couple big, stompy holes which are super fun.

Neal, Dylan and Nick take the raft through the bottom of Hole in the River Rapid

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After Hole in the River there are lots of smaller fun rapids before getting to the Alder Flat area. Alder Flat has a good trail that goes up to the road which is about a mile from the river. It’s one of the few reasonable spots to get out of the canyon before the bigger stuff downstream. Just around the corner from Alder Flat is Drop Stopper. We stopped on the left to take a look for any wood and to give the rafters a chance to see the rapid for the first time. Drop Stopper is just below a huge landslide on the right bank and consists of a fast entrance in between some rocks and then a move through one of the slots at the bottom of the rapid.

Paul came down first in his kayak and took the middle slot at the bottom which is a fun S-turn move. The raft was next and after a bit of a bobble at the top, came down and made the move to the right at the bottom. I ran last in my kayak and had a good run through the hole at the top and then through the hole at the bottom in the right slot.

The rafters entering Drop Stopper. You can see the huge landslide in the background

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Paul heading for the middle slot at the bottom of Drop Stopper

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Below Drop Stopper there is a fun wave train that ends in a beautiful pool. The canyon walls go vertical and the river begins to take on a more serious feel. One more wave train leads to the big eddy above Prelude Rapid. Most of the time I run the left slot in Prelude which is a fun ledge through a small pool, but the right slot works fine too. Even though there is a big pool below Prelude, you don’t really want to mess things up as Killer Fang Rapid is about 25 yards downstream. At high water, the eddy above Prelude is pretty intimidating but all the lines still work.

Looking back at Prelude from the beginning of the portage around Killer Fang

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Killer Fang rapid starts straight-forward enough with a fast tongue of water dropping around some rocks to the right. Unfortunately, a huge rock peeled off the vertical left wall of the gorge and blocked the majority of the river; creating a huge siphon on the right that pushes the water down at least 10-15′ below the surface before bubbling back up to the surface downstream. There is a small exit slot on the left but the left wall is also undercut and getting to this slot at some flows requires a strong move to the left and UP over a big curler pushing into the siphon. Although Killer Fang has been run at some flows (higher water seems to be better), I think it is extremely dangerous for the fun factor and I’ve always done the portage through giant boulders on the right. This is pretty challenging with a raft but over the years we’ve worked out an o.k. system.

The team scouts the siphon with the entrance in the background

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Looking down into the siphon on the right and the exit slot on the left

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After Killer Fang, it’s a short distance to the next major rapid on the run; The Sieve. The Sieve isn’t all that hard, but, as the name implies, it has some consequences if you screw it up. Back when I first ran this rapid it was pretty easy and inconsequential. Since then, the rocks have shifted around and made it much tougher. The trick is to know that the easy slot on the left is blocked by rocks and wood directly downstream. It isn’t very hard to just stop above the sieve but it can be intimidating the first time; particularly if you are running it blind.

On this trip, the rafters were in a small boat and got tossed a bit in the tricky lead-in rapid, nearly flipped, and just had time to get things together before running the left slot. Neal was pretty surprised to find the raft plastered up against a rock and a log with the only exit too small for a raft or a person! Paul and I ran next with no problems although I almost got blown into the sieve trying to make the paddle out.

Paul running The Sieve

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After the Sieve there is one more fun boulder garden with a couple tight exit slots and then the river slows down considerably as it makes it’s way to the take-out. There is some great scenery in the last stretch. While not the best section of whitewater around, the Killer Fang section of the Clackamas is worth doing for the sense of isolation, dramatic scenery and geology.