Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Upper Cherry Creek
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Getting a Little Dinkey
When my wrist finally recovered from tendinitis I was pretty fired up to finally go kayaking. I got a couple of runs in on the South Yuba and South Silver and I was beginning to feel good in my boat again.
Me on South Silver’s Skyscraper – Photo Dee Harrington
So when Laura said that she was heading to Dinkey Creek I was pretty stoked to go too. Dinkey Creek is one of California’s many multi day trips and is done over two days. Getting to the put in for Dinkey can be a bit of a mission with a maze of dirt roads to find your way through followed by a relatively short but scratchy walk down to the river.
Gareth Tate making his way to the river
However it is well worth the effort. Dinkey may only be six miles long but it is packed with some amazing rapids.
Adam Bixby dropping into Willie Kerns.
Photo – Laura Farrell
One of the only two portages on Dinkey followed by more sweet rapids. Photo – Laura Farrell
The Fourth of July weekend (United States independence day) proved to be a busy weekend on Dinkey Creek. In a place that you can only get to by paddling class five, on a river that only flows for about a week every year, there were 35 people camping on the same night. Everyone ended up camping pretty close and the late arrivals into camp were given plenty of encouragement as they dropped into the last rapid. There were even some fireworks that night!
Ben Blake Boofin’ Photo – Laura Farrell
Me on yet another fun rapid – Photo Laura Farrell
After Dinkey I headed south down to the town of Three Rivers. Three Rivers is unbearably hot but is home to the Kaweah Drainage. The Kaweah Drainage has a number of great creeking runs and is an awesome place to hang out, relax and of course kayak. While I was down there I paddled the Hospital Rock section on the main Kaweah and the Upper and Lower Section of the East Fork of the Kaweah.
Gareth Tate entering Triple Drop on the Lower East Fork of Kaweah
Photo – Laura Farrell
Nick Urquhart about to go deep. Photo – Laura Farrell
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Cali Update
On the first day about 6 hours into the drive Terry started shuddering violently. Luckily we were savvy enough to identify the fact that the shuddering was caused by those ‘pluggy things’ ie spark plugs. After a quick stop at an auto parts store we had the shuddering fixed. However at this point a man in the parking lot was nice enough to point out the fact that our tire was in the process of disintegrating. So we stopped by a tire store and got ripped off, but soon had a new tire that wasn’t about to explode on us.
We made it to Vail two days later without anymore incidents but didn’t end up having time to do a run on Homestake Creek to get ready for the race as we had hoped. I was a little nervous about racing as I hadn’t been in my kayak for two and half months and Homestake Creek isn’t exactly a great warm up run. So we ended up getting two runs in the day before the race and after having a swim I can’t say I was feeling very confident.
However on race day things went well and even though I didn’t have fast lines I had clean enough lines to make it though to the finals. So I was pretty happy ending up with seventh place in the women's race. It was also an awesome day to be a Kiwi in Vail with Sam Sutton winning the mens, Nikki Kelly coming in 3rd, and Leela Samuels getting 6th!
So at this point things were looking good. I was back in Cali with two months off and the season was looking to be a good one. However after two runs on Slab creek my right wrist developed some serious tendonitis. Unfortunately it took three weeks for my wrist to get to a point where I can paddle on it again. However after letting myself get depressed about it for awhile I decided it was time to find out what other people who don’t kayak do when their not working. I had some good adventures driving shuttles for South Merced, Middle Feather and Royal Gorge. I have also had some good hiking missions into the South Merced (where I managed to get covered in poison oak and nearly bit by a snake) and into Royal Gorge to take some food in for the ‘A team’ on their second night on the river.
So it is now the start of July and I have one month left before I have to go to work. Things are looking good though, there is still a lot of water around and I am beginning to feel good in my boat again. So hopefully my next blog will actually be about kayaking in California!