Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/12/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Dec 16, 2008, at 4:16 PM, Hoppy wrote: > Hi Larry. No we barely had time for walking along a small portion > of the > rim. A real tragedy. Hower, we shall return, of course. As the the > river > rafting, about one or two years advance notice required for a spot > on a trip > now. About like a campsite in Yosemite! Things were much more relaxed a couple of decades ago. Rafting down the Colorado was moderately popular but had not yet come under the scrutiny of the Environmental Protection Agency. Four or five companies ran tours, some on small six passenger rafts, some on larger rafts carrying about twenty vacationers. A few intrepid river rats ran the river in kayaks. I would have liked to try it in a kayak too but my wife argued me out of it claiming that she was too young to be a widow with two children. The four of us settled for one of the bigger rafts, primarily because the rafting company, a Mormon group staffed by young people performing their obligatory missionary work, wanted to start early season trips and gave us a very favorable price if we would go in April. It was a fortunate choice. The weather at the top of the canyon was freezing but at the bottom it was warm. Since we spent half our time immersed in river water from rapids and spray, it wasn't Leica country. I carried a Nikonos II camera and, from my front seat in the raft, managed to get a lot of pictures of the interior of waves. I'll try to dig through my trove of unedited photos and try to find a few fit to post. My son was a geology student at Cornell at the time and gave us a running lecture on the rock layers visible from the river. Every night we pulled up to a sandy bank and pitched tents for the night while the crew cooked a gourmet meal. After dinner some of the travelers imbibed from bottles hidden in their backpacks, while the Mormon crew looked on disapprovingly. At the end of a week we were airlifted back to our staring point near Lake Powell. In subsequent years, the EPA became concerned about the potential for despoiling the canyon. A crash of a plane carrying tourists from the river caused them to limit the number of tours permitted. I did get a chance to borrow a kayak and try a gentle portion of the river. I'm glad my wife talked me out of kayaking the whole trip. But if you like rough water adventure there are even better rivers than the Colorado. The Snake River is one, even, in my area, the upper reaches of the Hudson River and the Delaware River. The water is as wet. Just don't take your new M8. Larry Z