The past few years have been full of adventure. The pursuit of whitewater paddling has risen to become the foremost focus in my life. I've shaped my lifestyle, both personal and professional, into a mold that allows me to more fully immerse myself in the navigation of swiftly moving, and falling water. There is a closeness, a tremendous bond that forms among people who share any passion, or who triumph jointly over great challenges. Often adventure is met at the point where great passion and challenge come together. It can be both enlightening and terrifying, exulting and tragic. Whitewater is the medium on which I choose to focus my passion. It is the challenge for the body, mind and soul that elevates focus and blots out all distractions. And it is over this incredible dynamic medium that I have been able experience and explore some of the most incredible places on earth and share time with some of my closest friends. I hope this blog will serve its purpose of sharing the passion for adventure and whitewater equally with both those who may already be familiar with its draw and those to whom it is foreign. I'd like to nurture that closeness, and strengthen that bond that has been created as a result of these pursuits while also shedding light toward the reason behind my addiction to whitewater for my non paddling friends and family. Through photos and stories this blog is my shot at defining adventure.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Idaho: Land of Giant Water

So California Plans were set aside as word rolled in that the late melt had led to too high flows across the Sierras. Not to be discourage and with other info suggesting huge water fun to be had in Idaho, I set off with Jeff Clewell toward Banks, Idaho, home of the North Fork of the Payette River. The North Fork is a unique river, big water and uniform steep gradient combined with road blast rock make for some of the worlds longest and fastest rapids. This awesome stretch of whitewater is usually run at flows between 1500 and 3000. However, with a late spring melt and some heavy rain, the North fork was on a slow fall from a record high 9000 cfs when we arrived. We met Cooper Lambla and Will Stubblefield, two NC boys livin the dream in Idaho for the summer and went for a couple of laps on the 'easier' lower five miles to get our big water legs under us. I can honestly say i haven't ever paddled anything so enormous and so fast, and we were only on the 'lower five'.

The Upper 10 miles of the North Fork would have to wait till Monday, our next stop was the Secesh and South Fork of the Salmon River, a classic overnight adventure that takes you twenty miles down a steep action packed creek, into a huge big water canyon, with rapids the reminded me of Granite, Lava and Crystal on the Grand Canyon for 35 more miles, and finally out 20 miles on the Main Salmon river, one of the largest drainages in the North West. Seventy-five miles of steep creeking, huge water, and fantastic company made for a great 1st time kayaking overnight.

Back to Banks tired and happy, and scared as all get out cause next in line is a Top to Bottom North Fork Run and it is still running huge! Its hard to convey what this run is like from the paddlers perspective. Take every one of the biggest big water rapids you know of; take the Grand Canyon and eliminate every inch of flat water, make the rapids bigger, harder, way faster, no eddies. Drive your motorcycle at 30 mph into a big breaker off the Hawaiian coast and do that over and over again. In any case, I've been looking for that threshold, that piece of whitewater where i could say, thats as big as I really will ever care to go, and i think i found it on the North Fork of the Payette last week at those high flows. I had the great fortune to be able to follow two of the greatest big water paddlers I've ever seen through the melee; many thanks to Fred Coriell and Ryan Casey for the good beta and solid lines. Check out this Link for a fun visual reference: http://www.vimeo.com/12563837.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Eddy Flower Update and California Bound...

These last weeks we have been going full tilt, running rivers day in and day out, our team, THE Off the Cowch Team, is the heavy leaded in both vertical feet paddled and Donations pledged. This is huge. never before has such a contender for the vertical title also been a lead contender for most donations received for First Descents. I personally am blown away at the contributions that have been made on my behalf and they all have inspired me to continue paddling as long and hard as i can. A week ago I was having a conversation with a friend, and in trying to explain the significance of this competition i came to the realization that over the course of my development as a paddler I have really only paddle for my own personal rewards and objectives. Now for the first time ever, my paddling has given rise to an excitement that is benefiting a broader purpose. It's an incredible feeling. Every donation i see arrive in my name, inspires me to paddle another river, do an extra lap, and not for myself any more but for everyone who is watching, contributing, and for the benefit of the First Descents camps. In any case, my goal for the remainder of the competition is lofty. I want to finish with 40000 ft of descent and $4000 in donations. With 10 days to go, the work has been cut out for me. I'll do my best, and if any one out there has the means, First Descents is truly an awesome program. Again, here's a great video about what they do: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPnRYc5p1e0&eurl=http://www.firstdescents.org/cms/. You can check the real time standings of the competition or donate by going here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPnRYc5p1e0&eurl=http://www.firstdescents.org/cms . Thank you to everyone for your support.

THE Off the Cowch Team members Drew Austell, Jeff Clewell and Curt Joyce along with Susan Hollingsworth from Femme 45 starting a lap on the Miracle Mile of the Willamette River. Photo by Melissa Wilder
Susan Hollingsworth, Drew Austell and Jeff Clewell on the North Fork of the Middle Fork of the Willamette in Central Oregon

And now, I am headed to California...