Showing posts with label Raven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raven. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The Summer That Never Was

After returning from California, I had a few weeks of family and work obligations through the 4th of July weekend and then a few weeks before I was supposed to head to the Alsek for 2.5 weeks of wilderness.  I returned from a great July 4th weekend of backpacking in the Catskills with my girlfriend to find that everyone back in the Southeast had been enjoying the best mid-summer flows in years.  Fortunately and quite surprisingly, frequent afternoon thundershowers maintained water levels enough that I was able to sneak out for some after work sessions on Tremont, the Little, and a quick trip over the mountains to the Raven Fork.

Mike Reber was able to get off early enough on Friday that we started our weekend off with another after work Raven Fork lap.  That place is so lush and beautiful in the summer.  Things went smooth and we were off the river just before dark and heading to Bryson to crash with my friend Raymond.  The morning came and we went to check Toxaway, a little too low.  On to Horsepasture, way too high.  Not sure what to do we weighed options for a minute before heading to Overflow.  It was 1 ft. when we got there which is lower than ideal but we were ready for some boating. 

There were a bunch of vehicles at the bottom but no boaters, so we just headed to the top.  We had a few interesting lines due to the low flows, but in general the day was working out great and it was a treat to be there when it was warm and the flowers were blooming.  We quickly arrived at Three Forks and I asked Mike if he wanted to check out Big Creek.  He knew nothing about it but is generally down for whatever so we went on a little getting lost in the woods and checking out waterfalls mission.  When we got back to Three Forks we weighed our options: it was getting late in the afternoon and we had no shuttle, but it was only 1/2 mile and we had already scouted it out.  The decision was made to just go for it, leaving shuttle to work itself out (at worst a 10 mile jog).
Mike letting Gravity take over.
Mike catching the first of quite a few bounces down Singley's Falls
My favorite part about Overflow is the mini gorges.  Mike finishes up the last one: Twilight.
We made pretty quick work of the hike, arriving sweaty and hot at the bottom of Thunderdome.  A huge tree prevented dropping in to the final tier, so we cooled off and geared up.  A funky pinch, a junky woody mess, a mini gorge, an off vert 20 fter and a great double drop brought us to the last slide into Three Forks.  To this point, the run had lived up to all the scouting expectations.  The last slide had looked like a nasty junk fest from our earlier river right scout.  From our mid-stream scout, things were looking better.  Center left driving right to avoid the shelf on the bottom left.  I committed, coming through the entrance exactly as imagined.  Unfortunately, I wavered slightly from my plan with a touch of hesitation, allowing myself to slip too far left with no right momentum.  It seemed to not be a big deal until the final reconnect turned my angle and momentum straight left into the shelf and a world of hurt.  See the last shot of Mike's video below - it was a lot worse than it looks.
Too bad the log was in the way.  It's still a powerful place.
Mike droppin' the biggest one on Big Creek
Mike cruising into a juicy little mini gorge
Mike grinding a huge boof.  This might be the best move in the whole Chattooga drainage?
The wood wasn't as nasty as it appears in this photo


Southeast in the Summertime 6-14-2013 from Michael Reber on Vimeo.

I was upright and my right ankle was numb from the pain.  I eddied out and hopped out of my boat.  The pain level was still high but I had no choice but to get my bulkhead back into alignment and keep going.  Mike came down a few minutes later, having narrowly avoided a similar line.  With no time to spare, I floated through Igor and caught the eddy above Marginal.  I hobbled down while Mike portaged my boat before going and portaging his own boat.  We rallied through to Pinball and Mike portaged my boat again.  At this point the swelling in my ankle was getting bad enough that my paddle had to be repurposed to a crutch.  Mike ran through Pinball and we were off stroking for the take out.  I had to stop a few times to let the pain subside, but we made it.  Fortunately upon arriving at the take out, we ran into Charles, who was a shuttler for Scott, who was completing the last lap of an Overflow vertical mile that day who not only agreed to help us with shuttle but also had some ice for my ballooning ankle.  Big thanks to those two for taking pity on me and helping in all ways possible.  I sat on the side of the road with the ankle iced and elevated as the rain misted down, just waiting for Mike's return.  Self-diagnosis at this point was a badly sprained ankle and I was hoping I could walk it off in time to make the Alsek trip in a week.

Self portrait at the take out.  The boat healed itself a lot faster than I did.
I offered to run shuttle the next day if Mike wanted to stay in NC but he was tired and feeling bad for me, so we pressed home to Knoxville.  We made it back by midnight and I stayed at Mike's cause driving with a busted right ankle didn't seem smart.  We chilled and watched some movies the next day while icing and elevating my ankle.  The thing just continued to balloon.

I went to work on Monday and decided part way through the day that I should get an x-ray since the swelling was still increasing.  I went to the clinic at work and got my ankle x-rayed.  They didn't see anything definitive but they were nervous about ligaments and tendons and declared me unfit for work and sent me to an orthopedic right then and there.  The orthopedic was able to fit me in that afternoon and was about to say my x-rays looked okay when something subtle caught his eye and he declared that I had broken my Calcaneus (heel bone).  I was quickly put in a hard splint and signed up for a CT scan and follow up later in the week.  I was still holding on to hope for going to Alaska, thinking that maybe the x-ray was so subtle that the bone wasn't broken.

Fast forward to my follow up, and within a couple of minutes of walking through the CT scan it's clear that my Calcaneus is indeed fractured, although in an abnormal fashion.  The doctor wasn't sure whether or not I needed surgery so he referred me to a foot specialist.  What is clear is that I won't be starting to walk for at least another 6-8 weeks.  Crushed, I go home and cancel my flight to Alaska about 26 hours before I was set to leave, informing my family and friends they'll be doing the Alsek without me.

It feels like forever waiting until my visit with the foot specialist on the following Tuesday.  When I finally get there she examines my foot and looks at my CT scan with some degree of perplexion.  She identifies that I have sheared my sustentaculum tali off the inside of my Calcaneus.  She goes through a myriad of options outloud with me, ultimately deciding that I should wait and see how it heals, but qualifying that statement with the need to get some second opinions on my unusual break.  I go home and start researching my condition, and it sounds like if I want to walk without a limp and on uneven ground, I need the surgery.  I decide to give the doctor a few days to check with her sources before pressing things.

The next morning at 8am I get a call from the doctor's assistant letting me know that I need to have surgery.  About 2 minutes later I get a call from the surgery scheduler saying I'll be having a pre-op screening the next day and surgery the following day.  Given my research the night before, this is exactly what I was looking for (eventually walking properly is well worth a little pain and an extracted recovery), so I signed up.

One of these is not like the other.  And this is after 12 days of ice and elevation.  This also might win a nasty ass feet contest.
I'm first in line for Friday, requiring a 5:30 am drop off at the hospital.  I'm whisked away to my room, put in a gown, and taken to the anesthesia area.  They shave my foot and leg and insert an IV.  As they are setting up the local block on my leg, the Versed kicks in and my memory turns off.  I awaken back in the same room around 10:30 with some new hardware in my foot.  Quickly, my awareness grows and I realize that my local block has already worn off.  Fortunately, the pain isn't too bad.  I end up waiting about 1.5 hours for a discharge room to open before they take me out of the anesthesia area (pretty interesting watching people slowly come to).  In the discharge room they feed me water and crackers (requisites for leaving) and a Percocet after a little arguing that I don't need it.  The nurses definitely looked at me like I was crazy when I followed up trying to refuse the pain pill with telling my roommate we won't need to fill the prescription I was given.

I spend that afternoon and the next 3 days sitting on the couch with my foot elevated under a bag of ice constantly refilled from the cooler next to me.  I'm bored out of my mind but the pain isn't too bad (no where close to the shoulder surgery) and I don't have to eat my words about not needing the pain pills.  Overall, I'm pretty useless as every time I start hopping around on my crutches the blood pressure in my foot creeps up followed shortly by a throbbing pain.  It's a good reminder to lay back down, elevate, and throw the ice back on.
This is how I spent the majority of the first 3.5 days.
Now, 5 days out from surgery, the pain and swelling have come down quite a bit.  I've gone to work the last two days which is quite a bit less boring than sitting on the couch.  The worst is over, but I still have a long road ahead of me.  I should go from hard splint to boot and get the stitches removed in about 3 weeks, and be starting weight bearing in 6-8 weeks.  Then it should be another 4 weeks before I'm walking without a crutch, walker, or cane.  I've been told I'll be close to full speed in 4-5 months, but only time will tell.

A huge thanks to my friends who have helped me out along the way so far.  I couldn't have done it without you and you have treated me far better than I deserve.  It's been rough going through this without my parents and brother for support (they're incommunicado on the Alsek and don't even know I had surgery), but between all of you and my extended family, I've been able to deal quite well.

Obviously I've done a lot of thinking about what happened.  The rapid was not above my head, and knowing what happened, I could probably run it 100 times in a row without smashing that shelf.  The missing ingredient was focus.  It was exactly the same case as when I dislocated my shoulder 3 years ago.  And it's not that I'm someone who takes paddling class V and the associated dangers lightly.  I just need to find a way to keep that same focus for every rapid, regardless of how innocuous it looks.

The other factor is that the bulkhead system I was using probably contributed to the extent of my injuries.  I was paddling a Pyranha Karnali (I love that boat) with a modified bulkhead as I find the stock one to be far too flexible (I mangle it paddling flatwater).  My modified system consisted of a set of old dagger aluminum rails attached to a U-channel with the Pyranha foot plate on the front (similar to an LL set up).  I only had 1 inch of foam on this plate, but the key mistake is that the U-channel was too high on the plate.  Therefore, upon impact my heel bent the bottom of the plate forward, violently hyperdorsiflexing my foot (bending the top of my foot towards my shin), which the doctors claim led to my Calcaneus fracture.  I hit hard enough that I was probably going to do damage regardless, but additional foam and the support channel in the right place likely would have prevented my heel from breaking.  Good thing I have plenty of time to do some bulkhead experimentation before the next time I paddle.

Safety first,

Jim

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Southeastern Overnighters

While the Southeastern US may not be known for overnight kayak opportunities, there are certainly quite a few that are great as practice for their big brothers in the Western US and are absolutely worthy of exploring in there own right.  Over the past year I've been fortunate enough to dabble heavily in the available options.  Starting last September, I've been able to overnight the Gauley River, Raven Fork, Clear Creek, Obed River, Daddy's Creek, and Chattooga River.

As everyone knows, the Gauley is classic.  I'm fortunate enough that my Dad has been rowing a raft down the river at least once a year since before I was born.  I'm also fortunate enough that he agrees to put up with me and my kayaker friends as tag alongs in exchange for helping with rigging and breaking down rafts.  This results in a night in the lap of luxury on the side of a beautiful river with better food and drink than I ever get at home.  While the 26 miles from the damn to Swiss can easily be paddled in a single day, there's still plenty to be offered for a two day trip.  Despite the less than ideal camping (rafting companies own most of the nicer camping spots) and less than full on wilderness (logging roads in the canyon are frequented by locals on ATVs), the Gauley as an overnight offers a great opportunity to experience the river in a new way.

I won't say too much about the Raven Fork overnight trip here other than it's the best class V overnighter in the Southeast.  This is also the most true overnighter.  It could be done in a day but it would be a long day and the water levels work out better if it drops for the second day.  The logistics are a little difficult as you need high water, good weather, and an open straight fork road.  The upper section is rarely paddled and is some of the best class IV wilderness paddling around.  The campground at Enloe Creek is one of my favorite official campgrounds anywhere.  The lower section is the best class V creek on the east coast.  It's all tucked in one of the most remote areas of the southeast.  It's as good as it gets.
Ben Warf killing it on Caveman on a non-overnight trip through the lower Raven Fork Gorge.
The upper section of Clear Creek between Clark Range and Barnett Bridge is somewhere between a float trip and a whitewater run, but the scenery and over all experience make up for the lack of exciting rapids.  Great camping in rock houses and a cool hike to a nice 50 ft. waterfall round out the experience.  For class II-III paddlers wanting an overnight wilderness paddling experience, this is where it's at.  I don't think I'd do this run every year, but the overall experience is good enough that I'll go back again.

Kirk Eddlemon enjoying the serenity of Upper Clear Creek.
Sometimes the scenery is big too.

The comforts of rock house camping.
Priorities...
Four Mile Creek Falls is just a nice little bushwhack away.
One of a few spots where the family canoe is not the vessel of choice.  Still, it works.
The Obed River from Potter's Ford to Nemo might be the longest stretch of bridgeless whitewater in the Southeast.  While there are a few rough access points in between (hiking or 4 wheelers), a full twenty miles of canyon, protected by Catoosa WMA and the Obed WSR, await you between the two bridges.  While the whitewater in the upper is not classic, it's enough to keep you entertained between the cliffs.  The second day, below the Daddy's creek confluence, passes through the main Obed canyon and its classic class III rapids.  This is the best overnight trip in the Obed system, and probably all of Tennessee.

Mark Newton drives into the awkward pinch at Billy Goat Bluff.
This photo tries to make it intense.
Glamor shots at camp.  Look at that body...
Classic whitewater in the main Obed Canyon.
Daddy's Creek from Antioch Bridge to Devil's Breakfast Table is a classic Tennessee class III+ run; however, add in the extra 12 miles through the Obed Canyon and you've got a great 18 mile day or short overnight trip.  This year we chose to do it as a quick overnighter, putting on at 6 pm and taking off by 8:30 am the next morning so we didn't miss any work.  The whitewater is fantastic in both the Daddy's Creek and Obed Canyons, as is the great plateau scenery.  While not really a true overnighter (the run can be done in 3-4 hours with good water), the camping is great under the main Obed wall and there's no reason to rush through this place. 
 
Daddy's Creek Canyon is classic.  Even when it's low.
Camping in the Obed Canyon does not suck.
The Chattooga River from Earl's Ford to Lake Tugaloo was the first overnighter I did after moving to the Southeast.  Alongside great scenery and camping, this river just has soul.  Section III is a nice adjustment to loaded boats and the Narrows is magical.  Section IV has great camping (right below seven foot if you've got a small group) and a great finish with five falls.  This river also runs when little else is going in the summer time, which means great weather.  All in all, it's a classic.


Full moon camping on the Chattooga is where it's at.
That's it folks.  Just a few ideas on where to go to find some overnight whitewater enjoyment.




Jim

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

If No One Takes a Picture, Did it ever Really Happen?

Sometimes you just need a break from reality.  Usually this break consists of just a momentary flicker of a daydream before the real world shakes you back.  On rare occasions the fantasy goes on further, with vivid details coming together until the line between fantasy and reality blurs.

I woke at 5 am after a night of heavy rain.  There were plenty of early morning options, but with no takers for true dawn patrol and the potential for high water skunking, I loaded up the boat and headed to work, planning on an early afternoon departure for the certainty of partners and water.  After a morning of productivity (it's amazing what an empty office can do), I glanced at some gauges during a brief break.

One thing stuck out, the Oconoluftee River at Birdtown was over 3000 cfs, it was early October, and the forecast was calling for clear skies and warm weather for the next 2 days.  A rare combination which indicated the Raven Fork had lots of water in it, the road up the straight fork would be open, and an overnight kayak trip could be attempted in relative comfort.  I had been waiting for this combination for years, but there was only one catch, I was supposed to work the rest of the day and the next day.  Maybe the opportunity, a two day decent of the Raven Fork starting from 3 forks, would just have to wait.

Fortunately, I have a weak will to resist opportunities like this and I started looking around for partners despite my scheduling problem.  No takers from the usual suspects.  But the seed had been planted and I was having a hard time coming up with excuses for not just going by myself, convincing myself that a few key portages would reduce the risk to an acceptable level.  A few minutes later I had a day pass for the afternoon and the next morning and I was en route.

However, I still had plenty to take care of.  10 minutes at home and I had overnight gear and a bike for shuttle.  10 minutes at the store and I had food for myself and beer for a gift to Mr. Watty.  10 minutes at Sugarlands visitor center and I had a camping permit for the Enloe Creek campground.  Then all that was left to do was endure some traffic on the beautiful drive up to Newfound Gap and back down to Cherokee.

Arriving at the gauge in Big Cove I found a healthy and somewhat brown 20” awaiting me.  More would be better, but 20” seemed like enough, so off I went to Mr. Watty's house to drop my bike.  After explaining to Manuel what I had planned, I dropped my bike in his carport.  He seemed somewhat concerned with my solo plans but wished me well as I headed back down to the confluence and up the Straight Fork to Round Bottom.

It was a little after 1 as I pulled into the trailhead and quickly packed my gear into my boat.  The plan was to be superlight with no one else to share group gear, so the stove and plenty of other conveniences got left behind.  After a final check for essentials, I started heading up the hill.  It's not the steepest trail in the world, but I was trying to make good time so I would have plenty of time to figure out the bushwhack down to the Right Fork.  3 miles, 2500 vertical feet, and plenty of times thinking that I would top out just around the corner, I finally made it to the top of Hyatt Ridge.  The views up to the crest of the smokies were spectacular and the foliage at high elevation was peak.

After a quick jaunt along the ridge over to campsite 44, I found the small creek out of the back of the campsite that leads down to the Right Fork.  I assumed this bushwhack would be the worst part of the journey in, and while steep, it wasn't too bad thanks to the fishermen's trail which was actually in pretty good shape.  Soon enough, I broke through the rhodo and arrived at my put in on the right fork.  The banks were overgrown with rhodo everywhere, so I found a nice perch on a rock in the middle of the tiny creek.  I geared up quickly, and nearly fell in as my leg cramped while pulling my skirt up.  It was by far the most difficult hike in I'd done in the Southeast, and I was pretty wrecked from moving so quickly, but it was time to move and find out if it was worth the effort.

Within 10 seconds of pushing off, it became obvious that the right fork did not have enough water to actually paddle down.  Still, I banged on, with too much water to easily walk down the creek and no desire to put the boat back on my shoulder.  Despite the dragging, the Right Fork was a beautiful tour through a rhodo tunnel with old growths and fall colors blocking out most of the sky.  Finally, after a few portages and plenty of abuse to my already cracked boat, I popped out of the micro creek and into the bottomless pool at three forks, the birthplace of the Raven Fork.

After a brief stop to admire the forks joining under the back drop of huge old hemlocks, it was time to start the real paddling.  Although the cobbles for the first mile or so were a touch shallow, there was plenty of water and I was finally making good progress.  The scenic tour continued as great vistas blanketed in a sea of yellow fall foliage appeared around every corner and huge old growth trees draped over the creek in their fight for light. 

As the cobbles continued, I eddied after rounding a sharp right bend, confronted by a huge log jam on the left and increased gradient downstream.  I peeled out, noticing a log stuffed in the only slot to the right of log jam just feet before I got there.  A quick adjustment of angle and drive over the rock forming the right side of the slot saved what could have been an extremely nasty situation.  A little flustered from the surprise, I hopped out to scout the slides and calm my nerves.  Fortunately what I saw looked perfect for getting back in the groove, 3 slides with small moving pools separating great moves finishing with a nice boof over a juicy little pocket hole.

Thoroughly calmed, I slid back in, linking the slides and planing over the final hole, hoping the rest of the way down to Enloe Creek would keep the same quality.  I wasn't disappointed.  The bedrock had broken through and was here to stay for a while.  After getting into a rhythm of entertaining but not threatening slides and drops, the walls tightened up for the first time requiring a tight eddy to inspect what lay around the corner.  After some scrambling to get a reasonable view, I was excited by the prospect of what I saw.  3 drops to freedom: an awkward slide against the left wall followed by a small drop with a powerful hole in front of a sieved out drop with a nice boof on the left.  The tight walls magnified the boily pools separating the drops.  Manageable but certainly not a place for mistakes.  There was nothing left to do but commit.  I slid in, blasting through the slide and charging straight over the next hole.  I eddied quickly above the sieve drop to enjoy the upper Raven Fork's inner sanctum, admiring the power of pristine water pulsing chaotically under me and against the walls before peeling out and driving left off the final boof.  I could have stayed there longer, but I was running short on daylight and had an unknown distance to cover.

For the next mile, the bed rock slides and drops continued.  Again nothing on the scale of the rapids below Enloe creek, but great stuff with a few large enough to warrant a scout.  I was torn between hoping the Enloe Creek bridge would appear around the next corner and hoping that the rapids would just go on like this forever.  Gradually, the bedrock transitioned to boulders while the gradient held constant.  Shortly thereafter I caught glimpse of a log just over the horizon I was entering, requiring a quick scramble for an eddy on the right.  I was immediately on edge again, as the log had blended in perfectly from above and could have been a real problem if blundered into.

After the portage, I got out to scout a bigger boulder garden and caught a glimpse of the Enloe Creek Bridge.  I quickly ran the rapid before portaging the sieved out mess just above the bridge directly into camp.  I erected my sleeping set up before I gave a half-hearted attempt at starting a fire, but it just wasn't in the cards in the rain forest that is the Smokies immediately after 3 inches of rain.  I crossed the bridge and ate my dinner overlooking the downstream rapids as the light faded.  Sausage, cheese, and a few slices of bread is rarely so satisfying.  The day had been a total success.  And with darkness arriving and no fire, I drifted off immediately.

Despite a dry and warm night, I'd already woke several times before I open my eyes to see dawn creeping in.  I head back across the bridge to eat again, this time enjoying dried mangoes and trail mix for breakfast.  One thing is obvious from my perch, the water has dropped significantly.  Regardless, I'll be heading downstream soon.  I efficiently break camp and don my kayak gear.  A little colder and wetter than the previous afternoon, I slide back into the Raven Fork.

The river here is somewhat familiar as I've done this trip a few years back.  The first drop below the bridge has changed for the better and the cave is filled in.  A few quick boofs later and I'm through the first set below the bridge.  The river down to Lord of the Rings is magical in the dawn despite the flow.  More good slides, a big boof, and a portage around fluffy deliver me to the pool above Lord of the Rings and fully familiar territory. 

Despite the familiarity, everything is different.  I've never been here alone.

A quick scout for wood and I enter the Raven Fork gorges proper.  What is normally the best warm up rapid around is equally satisfying after the mile from camp.  It doesn't get much better than blasting through the alcoved middle drop straight into the runout.  I get out above Anoconda, shouldering my boat immediately.  I'd already been leaning towards portaging the tricky slithering beast, and my decision is cemented by the low water exposing the shelf in the landing of the first move.  I blast into the bottom of the rapid via a sliding ramp of rock before immediately scouting again.  Headless horseman is clean of wood but the low water is making the boof look touchy.  I decide to charge off it anyways, after all this is probably the most unique move on the river.  A fading boof off the right wall followed by a quick edge switch to get the left knee up results in a paddler planing over the left side of the nasty cauldron with a tight arc back towards the right and away from the undercut right side of the slide responsible for the horseman's decapitation.  Unfortunately, it doesn't go like that for me.  Low water coupled with excessive greed on the boof leads to a kick flip to inverted landing in the cauldron.  A quick roll and charge right deliver me to the right side of the slide and safely into the pool below.  I continue downstream, fully aware that I got away with one in an unforgiving arena on a day when the stakes are even higher than normal.

The adrenalin flowing from the botched line sharpens my focus before I quickly scout and clean up at Right Right and Razorback.  The gorge is perfect in the sea of fall foliage and the crisp lines have me back to enjoying the solitude as I cruise through the mellower stuff down to Hail Mary.  A quick portage through the nettles and I'm on my down through Jedi Training, Mortal Combat, and Wet Willy.  Despite my growing comfort with isolation, I have no delusions or time to mess with Big Boy and portage down to the top of Mike Tyson's Punch Out.

I take a moment to take a drink and a look at Mike's from the big rock that overlooks the first boof, reveling amongst the cascading water and falling leaves while examining the last nerve racking challenge of the day.  I scurry back into my boat, sliding into the out flow of the Elbow Crusher.  A quick stop in an eddy and a brief self-reassurance that every time I've ever run first here at Mike's I've been just alone as I am today, and I'm peeling out with that sole focus.  A small slide planes me into the big top boof, off the curler hanging on it and bringing the boat back under myself, land on the pillow while starting my charge right, enter just off the right wall, staying neutral and center, white out into the pillow, wait for the current throwing left, keep the momentum heading left through the hanging hole, catch the pop that sends you skipping across the pool.  The stoke carries me into the eddy above Harjes' Rapid, where a drive for the nub on the right leads to a nice pop up boof in front of the cave. 

I eddy out right to scout Caveman, hoping that the wood report I heard a week earlier had changed for the better.  It only takes a few steps to spot the log in the third drop, which would have been lights out to the paddler heading in blind.  Fortunately the right portage allows me to pass around the log but still take advantage of one of the best moves anywhere.  I pretty much sprint down the portage in anticipation of smearing out the left wall before sailing into the pool.  Moments later premonition becomes reality and I'm flying past the rapids name sake cave and down into the small slides above the Mangler.  The normally quick portage is made a little longer with no one to help with boat lowering and the decision to portage into the cave instead of the seal launch.

A few high quality runout rapids along and I'm cruising class II basking in the last bit of pristine solitude as the sense of accomplishing the goal starts to set in.  Soon enough, I arrive at Mr. Watty's house, surprised to see another boater car.  He comes out to welcome me back, glad to see that I'm still all in one piece.  Manuel informs me that it's still a touch before 10 am and that the other boaters, Jay and Joe, had showed up yesterday about an hour after me with the same plan for the Raven overnighter.  It was shocking to find out that while doing an overnighter I had never heard of being done before there were two guys only an hour back.  I tell him goodbye for the moment and ride the bike up the Straight Fork road to retrieve my car.

A quick stop back at Mr. Watty's and I've got all my gear packed up.  I thank him immensely for his hospitality and he goads me into a celebratory beverage before I hit the road for work.  About two hours later I settle into my desk and attempt to bring my focus back to work, still reveling in the daydream that has consumed the last 26 hours.  For all the short lived daydreams I've had in this office, it's great to finally bring one to fruition outside of it.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Smokies Double Dip

No time for many photos, just this one of the author finishing Big Tree on UWP.
Photo Kirk Eddlemon from http://gorgedout.blogspot.com/

I'm a little behind... this epic day only happened about 2 months ago.

After a slightly too late night with slightly too much shit talking, 5:30 am came a little too early, followed shortly by Caleb's truck pulling in. We rallied up to the West Prong to get to the first half of the day’s mission started. Leaving a truck at the first walkway above Sugarlands, we headed up to the loop with a nice low-medium 1.3 ish on the gauge. From there on it was classic West Prong in the early morning haze. Just good boofs and steepness.

At the halfway point, we traded out Todd, who had to go to his brother's live in ex-girlfriend's son's birthday party, and Kirk finished the rest of the run with us. The lower went quickly and we were at the take out at a little after 11 with relatively little carnage (normally on a top to bottom West Prong run, there will be some action) and plenty of time for round two. If you have the time and a decent water level, adding the last half of Walker Camp, from the loop to chimneys trailhead, and the mile below Campbell overlook to just above Sugarlands adds a few great rapids and makes for about 7 miles of continuous bolder boofing. Normally, this would be a pretty full day of boating, but not today.

Heading over the mountain on 441, we made a few calls and Bone and Mc'Lovin would round out the crew for round 2. A perfect 11ish inches greeted us for one of the greatest runs on the east coast. After a little bit of sunshine poked through as we were putting on above Lord of the Rings, the drizzle quickly kicked in to slicken up the already polished walls of the Raven Fork. I was nervous putting on, but the first few paddle strokes didn't feel too fatigued and my run was smooth the whole way through. It was sort of odd, but the Raven Fork felt so in control and smooth compared to the non-stop action dished out on the West Prong. The same can't be said for the rest of the boys, as there was certainly some undercut action at Headless and some creek boat rodeo at Jedi, but everything worked itself out and all too soon we were trading stories with Manuel and his buddies.

Fortunately Kirk and I didn't stick around too long, as we were the second to last car back over 441 before the park closed it due to the inches of snow our “drizzle” was dropping at Newfound Gap. After meandering our way through Floridians who ended up in the ditches on the side of the road, we were glad to make it back to K-Town with only a slight delay instead of hours finding a road back to Knoxville not blocked by a landslide. It was good to know that after a winter of bringing myself back into the swing of things from a torn MCL suffered in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, I could again push myself pretty hard out there, although next time I plan to actually back up the shit talking by following up a top to bottom West Prong, instead of putting in at Lord of the Rings, by hiking over the mountain.

Keep pushing...

Jim