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It was suggested in an email that I post this tale on a new thread to remind
us of what rbp and rbpt are all about. This was originally embedded in an OT thread. Enjoy. Mike McCrea" wrote "riverman" wrote Did I ever tell the story about running Lower Madison in an open boat, without flotation, connected to the wreckage of another canoe that was rolling over and over, tangling the throwline and pulling my boat closer and closer.... No, and after scrolling past 300+ entry rbp threads that consisted largely of political namecalling and nanny-nanny boo booing I'd love to read a new riverman tale. Let 'er rip Myron :-) Well, OKAY, since you asked. Its strangely timely, as I just moments ago recieved an email from the outfitter who I was working with (that particular trip was about 15 years ago!) and the trip was my first trip with him. ------------------------------ It was the early days, way back when I didn't have such a bad back, slept in my van, and ate a lot of fried fast food. I had been poking around the Western US running rivers privately and trying to make ends meet, and had not yet worked as a canoe guide. I had many years experience as a rafting guide, but had gotten tired of the growing 'Disneyland' atmosphere of commercial rafting trips and was looking for another way to keep my feet wet and make a living. So I packed up my stuff into Otis the Van, tied my battered old Blue Hole 17A on the roof, drove out to the Pacific NW, and spent a lot of time on Oregon and Washington rivers. To pay for that fried fast food I was working as a day tripper for some commercial rafting outfits, and then later in the week I would bring my canoe up and run the same rivers with my buddies. Doing so much private boating on technical water, I was regularly getting into fairly big rapids: in fact, I think I have the first descent of Husum Falls (there's a funny thread about that in the archives). But I was also doing a lot of canoe camping, and naturally my whitewater skills were being used on these camping trips. I had long ago learned that it was easier to pick a careful line than it was to portage all that stuff and carry a boat around, so I got to develop into a pretty dependable Class 3-4 open boater (or at least, as a boater who could tapdance through a Class 3-4 rapid in loaded tripping canoes without flotation and without saddles or thigh straps). When some friends heard of an outfitter hiring guides for canoe camping trips on the Rio Grande, they passed the word on to me, and I agreed to meet up with this guy in Odessa, Texas, where he was outfitting. I was a little unsure if my style of boating was in any way an accepted practice, or even if I would muster up to the level that Eastern boaters maintained, but I figured I could learn. He agreed to 'try me out' on a provisional basis on a trip he was leading that next week. On the very first day of the trip, we had all these novices at put in, and we just dumped piles of gear in their boats, put lifejackets on them, put paddles in their hands and shoved them off. They pinballed down the river for the first 5 miles (no whitewater), gunnel-grabbing, getting hung up on every gravel bar and crashing into the outside bank of every turn in the river. When we made camp, I was thinking "Wow, these folks don't know anything!" That evening, as we gathered around the dinner fire, the Outfitter asked me to give the introductory safety/instruction talk. Now, sometimes in life we find ourselves in a brand new situation, and we have to invent the rules as we go, but not usually with so many eyes on us, so when he asked me to do this, I was very nervous...I had never given a canoe safety talk before! I mean, I had given rafting safety talks up the yingyang, and I had informally taught people how to canoe before, but I had no idea how this outfitter gave his talks or what they said or what. But I was on the spot, so I thought "Well, what do these guys need to know? They need to know basic stuff that will keep them from falling out of their boats, and they need to know how to paddle their boats straight." So I started off simple....I told them about how to load their boats so that they float down straight and are easy to turn. I told them about how to sit in the boat when there are rapids, and to keep their hands off the gunnels ("Imagine that the gunnels are razor blades," I told them) and to keep their paddles in the water. I showed them the basic forward and turning strokes, and a high brace. I told them that, on the water, we'd help them learn to work in tandem, and later we'd teach them more advanced strokes. I mean, all this was common sense stuff to me and I didn't want to overload them the first night, so I gave them just enough to get them through the next day. The outfitter nodded in agreement, added a few minor comments along the way, and just let me talk. Later that evening, I asked if it was okay, and he said yeah, that it was almost word-for-word exactly what he gives in his safety talks. So I had a very strong affirmation that my instincts were good, and that I was going to be okay with this guy. It felt very reassuring. As the trip progressed, it was very nice finding my niche. The cook, Rachelle, was paddling a solo boat but was a bit nervous in her skills...she was probably just a Class 2 boater, but a world-class cook and all around sweetheart who had been with the company since the first day, and was very interesting to talk to. So I found myself paddling close to her when we went through riffles, giving her encouragement and helping her learn strokes. But she was set in her ways, having been a class 2 paddler for about 50 years, and just kept making her dependable way along. Later, about midway through the 10-day trip, we came to a pair of troublesome rapids. First was 'Hot Springs', a short but rocky Class 3 drop that we had to portage. The policy on the trips the outfitter guided was that the clients got to soak in the nearby hot spring while the guides portaged the boats and gear, but on my own later trips I would just run the client boats through while they bathed. After that, a few miles downstream we camped on river left just above the largest rapid on the river; Lower Madison Falls. This was a very loud, long, rocky and tumultous Class 4-5 rapid, and approaching it involved a long, sneaky rock garden run, through a gap between two rocks, into an eddy just above the dropoff. Then a quick landing and securing of the boat, unloading it, and a horriffic portage through a boulderfield to a tiny eddy below. We were exactly midway through the trip, so the loss of a boat or the gear made running it too risky, and Rachelle told me that the portage was just too brutal to be any fun at all, especially following the footsteps of the Hot Springs portage. The next morning, we all geared up our boats and got ready to cross the river. To reduce the risk of losing gear, food or clients, we loaded extra gear into the guide boats to lighten the client's boats. Then we ran in a very precise order: the outfitter went first and caught the eddy, dragged his boat on shore, and established safety from shore with a throwline. Then I ran next, caught a microeddy behind a rock at the head of the eddy, far out in the river, and set up safety there with MY throwline. Then the clients came through, one at a time, with Rachelle sending them off in order and me pointing out the route from out in midriver where I was eddied. One at a time, they worked their way down the rock garden, caught the eddy, and paddled to shore. The very last boat to come down was Rachelle, with all the kitchen gear and some extra baggage. I saw it coming. She started out too far in the current, was too far off of the indicator rock, and missed the gap between the rocks. In a last ditch effort to make the eddy, she broached on a rock and I watched in horror as her upstream gunnel sank below the waterline, the boat filled with water and with a gut-twisting 'cruunnnchh' wrapped around the rock and Rachelle washed out, immediately before her broken boat washed off the rock and started heading down towards the rapid. I yelled "ROPE!" and tossed my throwbag at her. It landed right across her body (she was only about 20 feet away) and I quickly clipped my end of the rope around the thwart and started paddling for shore. As my rope got tight, it got harder and harder to make headway, and my forward motion stopped. I looked back and saw that the loose end of my rope had gotten tangled around the wreckage of her boat, and we were both getting dragged back out into the current. The outfitter, seeing my difficulty, threw HIS rope to me, and I caught it and grabbed tied it around the thwart, too. He pulled from shore, I paddled from my boat, and I was still getting rapidly dragged back. The outfitter, now being dragged chest-deep into the river, yelled "CUT THE ROPE!!", and with a glance over at Rachelle holding on for life, I knew what I had to do. I grabbed my knife, and cut the outfitter's rope, leaving me, Rachelle and both our boats tied together and on our way into a Class 4-5 rapid, 100 miles from take-out, with half the trip gear and most of the food and kitchen. I turned my boat around, paddled out closer to her and started talking. Partly to reassure her, mostly to reassure me. I said "OK, Rachelle, take some deep breaths. We're going to run this rapid and you're going to have to relax and swim it out. Your boat is a bit ahead of you and to your left, so you should be able to stay away from it. I'll stay behind you and off to the side. Here comes a big wave....grab a breath and lay on your back...." We ran the first entrance wave, I rocked with it and kept dry and she popped up on the back of the wave. "OK, how ya doin'? "Great" she said. "So what's next?" "Looks like a bit of a waterfall....maybe 3, 4 feet. Keep your feet up, grab another breath, here we go...!" It went like that the whole way through. I had to keep one eye on her, watch the water, keep the rope between me and her boat from snagging on rocks (mostly by just following her boat through the rapid) and just go with it. Fortunately, I was on a good line, and she was a good swimmer, and it felt exactly like running all those rivers in Washington and Oregon. After a few moments we emerged out from the bottom of the rapid. I passed her the stern line, and in the calm of the pool below the rapid I was able to get to shore, drag my boat up, she and I hauled her boat ashore. We dropped down on the sandbank, I grabbed a beer from the dragbag in my bow, popped it open, and said "Well, hell, Rachelle! We just ran Lower Madison!" Just at that moment, a sound like a bear came crashing through the brush behind us. The outfitter came charging through the sawgrass, throwrope and first aid kit in hand, lunged to a stop downstream from us and peered out over the run-out. He didn't see us, so he hopped up on a rock, looking anxiously downstream to find us. His body language was of complete desperation. We called him, and he turned around to see me and Rachelle, beer in hand, sitting in the warm sand, with both boats safely on shore. My boat was dry as a bone, hers was a wreck but not one piece of gear was lost, and no one was hurt. He slogged over, sat down, took a long haul off of my beer, and said: "So, you want a job?" It was the start of a beautiful relationship. :-) --riverman |
#2
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Damn Myron, that's a beautiful story, well crafted as usual, and
reminds me of the rpb of yesteryear. Many thanks bro, Mike "riverman" wrote in message ... It was suggested in an email that I post this tale on a new thread to remind us of what rbp and rbpt are all about. This was originally embedded in an OT thread. Enjoy. Mike McCrea" wrote "riverman" wrote Did I ever tell the story about running Lower Madison in an open boat, without flotation, connected to the wreckage of another canoe that was rolling over and over, tangling the throwline and pulling my boat closer and closer.... No, and after scrolling past 300+ entry rbp threads that consisted largely of political namecalling and nanny-nanny boo booing I'd love to read a new riverman tale. Let 'er rip Myron :-) Well, OKAY, since you asked. Its strangely timely, as I just moments ago recieved an email from the outfitter who I was working with (that particular trip was about 15 years ago!) and the trip was my first trip with him. ------------------------------ It was the early days, way back when I didn't have such a bad back, slept in my van, and ate a lot of fried fast food. I had been poking around the Western US running rivers privately and trying to make ends meet, and had not yet worked as a canoe guide. I had many years experience as a rafting guide, but had gotten tired of the growing 'Disneyland' atmosphere of commercial rafting trips and was looking for another way to keep my feet wet and make a living. So I packed up my stuff into Otis the Van, tied my battered old Blue Hole 17A on the roof, drove out to the Pacific NW, and spent a lot of time on Oregon and Washington rivers. To pay for that fried fast food I was working as a day tripper for some commercial rafting outfits, and then later in the week I would bring my canoe up and run the same rivers with my buddies. Doing so much private boating on technical water, I was regularly getting into fairly big rapids: in fact, I think I have the first descent of Husum Falls (there's a funny thread about that in the archives). But I was also doing a lot of canoe camping, and naturally my whitewater skills were being used on these camping trips. I had long ago learned that it was easier to pick a careful line than it was to portage all that stuff and carry a boat around, so I got to develop into a pretty dependable Class 3-4 open boater (or at least, as a boater who could tapdance through a Class 3-4 rapid in loaded tripping canoes without flotation and without saddles or thigh straps). When some friends heard of an outfitter hiring guides for canoe camping trips on the Rio Grande, they passed the word on to me, and I agreed to meet up with this guy in Odessa, Texas, where he was outfitting. I was a little unsure if my style of boating was in any way an accepted practice, or even if I would muster up to the level that Eastern boaters maintained, but I figured I could learn. He agreed to 'try me out' on a provisional basis on a trip he was leading that next week. On the very first day of the trip, we had all these novices at put in, and we just dumped piles of gear in their boats, put lifejackets on them, put paddles in their hands and shoved them off. They pinballed down the river for the first 5 miles (no whitewater), gunnel-grabbing, getting hung up on every gravel bar and crashing into the outside bank of every turn in the river. When we made camp, I was thinking "Wow, these folks don't know anything!" That evening, as we gathered around the dinner fire, the Outfitter asked me to give the introductory safety/instruction talk. Now, sometimes in life we find ourselves in a brand new situation, and we have to invent the rules as we go, but not usually with so many eyes on us, so when he asked me to do this, I was very nervous...I had never given a canoe safety talk before! I mean, I had given rafting safety talks up the yingyang, and I had informally taught people how to canoe before, but I had no idea how this outfitter gave his talks or what they said or what. But I was on the spot, so I thought "Well, what do these guys need to know? They need to know basic stuff that will keep them from falling out of their boats, and they need to know how to paddle their boats straight." So I started off simple....I told them about how to load their boats so that they float down straight and are easy to turn. I told them about how to sit in the boat when there are rapids, and to keep their hands off the gunnels ("Imagine that the gunnels are razor blades," I told them) and to keep their paddles in the water. I showed them the basic forward and turning strokes, and a high brace. I told them that, on the water, we'd help them learn to work in tandem, and later we'd teach them more advanced strokes. I mean, all this was common sense stuff to me and I didn't want to overload them the first night, so I gave them just enough to get them through the next day. The outfitter nodded in agreement, added a few minor comments along the way, and just let me talk. Later that evening, I asked if it was okay, and he said yeah, that it was almost word-for-word exactly what he gives in his safety talks. So I had a very strong affirmation that my instincts were good, and that I was going to be okay with this guy. It felt very reassuring. As the trip progressed, it was very nice finding my niche. The cook, Rachelle, was paddling a solo boat but was a bit nervous in her skills...she was probably just a Class 2 boater, but a world-class cook and all around sweetheart who had been with the company since the first day, and was very interesting to talk to. So I found myself paddling close to her when we went through riffles, giving her encouragement and helping her learn strokes. But she was set in her ways, having been a class 2 paddler for about 50 years, and just kept making her dependable way along. Later, about midway through the 10-day trip, we came to a pair of troublesome rapids. First was 'Hot Springs', a short but rocky Class 3 drop that we had to portage. The policy on the trips the outfitter guided was that the clients got to soak in the nearby hot spring while the guides portaged the boats and gear, but on my own later trips I would just run the client boats through while they bathed. After that, a few miles downstream we camped on river left just above the largest rapid on the river; Lower Madison Falls. This was a very loud, long, rocky and tumultous Class 4-5 rapid, and approaching it involved a long, sneaky rock garden run, through a gap between two rocks, into an eddy just above the dropoff. Then a quick landing and securing of the boat, unloading it, and a horriffic portage through a boulderfield to a tiny eddy below. We were exactly midway through the trip, so the loss of a boat or the gear made running it too risky, and Rachelle told me that the portage was just too brutal to be any fun at all, especially following the footsteps of the Hot Springs portage. The next morning, we all geared up our boats and got ready to cross the river. To reduce the risk of losing gear, food or clients, we loaded extra gear into the guide boats to lighten the client's boats. Then we ran in a very precise order: the outfitter went first and caught the eddy, dragged his boat on shore, and established safety from shore with a throwline. Then I ran next, caught a microeddy behind a rock at the head of the eddy, far out in the river, and set up safety there with MY throwline. Then the clients came through, one at a time, with Rachelle sending them off in order and me pointing out the route from out in midriver where I was eddied. One at a time, they worked their way down the rock garden, caught the eddy, and paddled to shore. The very last boat to come down was Rachelle, with all the kitchen gear and some extra baggage. I saw it coming. She started out too far in the current, was too far off of the indicator rock, and missed the gap between the rocks. In a last ditch effort to make the eddy, she broached on a rock and I watched in horror as her upstream gunnel sank below the waterline, the boat filled with water and with a gut-twisting 'cruunnnchh' wrapped around the rock and Rachelle washed out, immediately before her broken boat washed off the rock and started heading down towards the rapid. I yelled "ROPE!" and tossed my throwbag at her. It landed right across her body (she was only about 20 feet away) and I quickly clipped my end of the rope around the thwart and started paddling for shore. As my rope got tight, it got harder and harder to make headway, and my forward motion stopped. I looked back and saw that the loose end of my rope had gotten tangled around the wreckage of her boat, and we were both getting dragged back out into the current. The outfitter, seeing my difficulty, threw HIS rope to me, and I caught it and grabbed tied it around the thwart, too. He pulled from shore, I paddled from my boat, and I was still getting rapidly dragged back. The outfitter, now being dragged chest-deep into the river, yelled "CUT THE ROPE!!", and with a glance over at Rachelle holding on for life, I knew what I had to do. I grabbed my knife, and cut the outfitter's rope, leaving me, Rachelle and both our boats tied together and on our way into a Class 4-5 rapid, 100 miles from take-out, with half the trip gear and most of the food and kitchen. I turned my boat around, paddled out closer to her and started talking. Partly to reassure her, mostly to reassure me. I said "OK, Rachelle, take some deep breaths. We're going to run this rapid and you're going to have to relax and swim it out. Your boat is a bit ahead of you and to your left, so you should be able to stay away from it. I'll stay behind you and off to the side. Here comes a big wave....grab a breath and lay on your back...." We ran the first entrance wave, I rocked with it and kept dry and she popped up on the back of the wave. "OK, how ya doin'? "Great" she said. "So what's next?" "Looks like a bit of a waterfall....maybe 3, 4 feet. Keep your feet up, grab another breath, here we go...!" It went like that the whole way through. I had to keep one eye on her, watch the water, keep the rope between me and her boat from snagging on rocks (mostly by just following her boat through the rapid) and just go with it. Fortunately, I was on a good line, and she was a good swimmer, and it felt exactly like running all those rivers in Washington and Oregon. After a few moments we emerged out from the bottom of the rapid. I passed her the stern line, and in the calm of the pool below the rapid I was able to get to shore, drag my boat up, she and I hauled her boat ashore. We dropped down on the sandbank, I grabbed a beer from the dragbag in my bow, popped it open, and said "Well, hell, Rachelle! We just ran Lower Madison!" Just at that moment, a sound like a bear came crashing through the brush behind us. The outfitter came charging through the sawgrass, throwrope and first aid kit in hand, lunged to a stop downstream from us and peered out over the run-out. He didn't see us, so he hopped up on a rock, looking anxiously downstream to find us. His body language was of complete desperation. We called him, and he turned around to see me and Rachelle, beer in hand, sitting in the warm sand, with both boats safely on shore. My boat was dry as a bone, hers was a wreck but not one piece of gear was lost, and no one was hurt. He slogged over, sat down, took a long haul off of my beer, and said: "So, you want a job?" It was the start of a beautiful relationship. :-) --riverman |
#3
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![]() "Mike McCrea" wrote in message om... Damn Myron, that's a beautiful story, well crafted as usual, and reminds me of the rpb of yesteryear. Many thanks bro, Mike Mah play-zha, broheeb. BTW, what's happening with GetLost mag? Leslie seems to be napping a lot these days. --riverman |
#4
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Hey riverman, love it, this is why I came to RBP! Keep the good
stories coming.TNT |
#5
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riverman wrote:
BTW, what's happening with GetLost mag? Leslie seems to be napping a lot these days. There is a new issue of GetLost out, which features "Life in the Congo, Part V" by one of my favorite contributors. http://www.getlostmagazine.com/ Poor Leslie has had her hand full for the past couple of weeks. Some bat aficionados on the Yahoo newsgroup World Bat Line discovered the bat fishing parody in the previous issue of GetLost http://groups.yahoo.com/group/worldbatline/ The World Bat-liners disseminated a campaign to deluge Leslie with letters of complaint. Actually, they tried to deluge me with letters of complaint, but their e-mails were directed to Leslie, who forwarded the most irrational of them along to me. The letters were about evenly divided between bat folk who believed that bat fishing was an actual sport and bat people who thought that the ill informed general public was ignorant enough to believe that bat fishing was an actual sport. All agreed that I was a horrible person. Leslie of course has managed to turn this lemon into lemonade, and a forthcoming issue of GetLost will likely be the special Bat Issue. Perhaps she'll run my response to the letters of complaint in that issue. I tried to be gentle and diplomatic in responding, but being called an "American republican asshole Bush-ite" by some overly sensitive English sissyboy was too much. My response in part: ** The Editor at GetLost has forwarded me many of the letters she has received complaining about the Chiroptera Fishing parody, and I have visited the controversy on the World Bat Line on Yahoo Groups. The bat fishing satire may have been funny, or maybe not (one man's humor is another's cause for apoplectic rage), but that anyone could have mistaken it for anything but tongue-in-cheek given the abundance of verbal and photographic clues is funnier still. Let's recount: photos obviously taken in broad daylight...references to "licensed" Chiroptera guides, wedging a thumb in the bat's mouth to facilitate removing the hook, being checked for histo and cirrhosis, Northern Long-eared bats renown for their fight, the bat anglers traditional Guinness.... Despite the obvious over-the-top nature of the piece many of the complainants swallowed the story hook, line and sinker ("I shall be looking into exactly where this is happening and make sure county and/or state authorities are notified"). Others less certain that bat fishing was in fact a "fast growing sport in the mid-Atlantic region" took pains to caution "the general public is not very bright". Oh silver-footed irony, stealing to explode a laugh at one's feet. You may have noted that Dave's e-mail response explained that the reference to him was a joke about a Pallid bat that latched onto his thumb when we were mist-netting bats in Arizona in 1988. Perhaps I should further explain that my first exposure to bat conservation was more than 30 years ago, researching bat populations in West Virginia caves in 1973; I wonder how many of the bat aficionados enraged by this parody could have spelled "bat" in 1973, even if they had been given the A and the T and helped to make the "BUH" sound. However well deserved my spanking may have been (oh, harder, harder!) the writer who accused me of being an "American republican asshole Bush-ite" went too far, and I demand satisfaction. Vernier calipers at twenty paces at dawn! ** The whole brouhaha was vaguely reminiscent of some rbp responses to the Paddler Saved By Bacon parody. (Hey Myron, send me your current snail mail address - I have something for you as the African representative of the Menacing Duckheads) |
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