Day
Three
With all sorts of dubious beta garnered before our
trip,
we
hadn’t heard a word mentioned about the third day of the
Grand Canyon. What we knew from the map was simple, although the
gradient mellowed out a little it was still significant, and the trail
finally left the river, leaving the last several miles much more
inaccessible to foot traffic, a relief to us.
What we did know due to our campsite location we
had a
major slide to
start day three. We all took a look at it while setting up camp, but it
warranted another scout from the camp in the morning, and eventually
one more scout from river right. While it was a low angle slide, it was
also over one hundred feet long and had a big entrance move followed by
a gigantic hole at the bottom.
After
taking a good look at it Chris fires
up the high water entrance of the breakfast slide.
Low
angle slides are ridiculously hard
to do justice to with a
photograph, but here is Ben about to hit the bottom hole.
Chris blasted through the bottom hole but had
several roll
attempts in
the aerated, swirly water made me nervous, but after a few attempts he
was up. Downstream of the epic morning slide the river
turned back
into mostly
class IV read and run with the occasional V that we were able to boat
scout, all backed up by wonderful scenery.
Ben
Stookesberry in the read and
run….no pools and quite
delightful.
The author below a not so friendly cascade.
Chris
Korbulic in the mix, it was just
one good rapid after another.
The author deep in the Grand Canyon with a larger rapid downstream.
The gradient dropped out of sight as we ran the
lead-in on
the above
rapid, and once out of our boats we gave it a long scout before opting
to take a lunch break and continue scouting the rapid. Ben was
convinced that the rapid could go with relatively (to a V+) minimal
consequence. Chris and I weren’t so convinced, and eventually
with some regret on Ben’s part we all decided to walk in the
name of remoteness and safety. Mid scout we noticed how many mean pocket holes the drop had, and
dubbed it “Hot Pocket”. Not content with walking
the whole thing, Ben decided to bite off four “Hot
Pockets” and ran the bottom half through four big
holes.
Ben
dwarfed by all the
Hot Pockets.
Past the hot pockets it was back to excellent
class IV-IV+
read and run
for another mile, until suddenly the canyon opened up and we had
another horizon line. From the lip of the drop we could see a gauge
high on river right, signifying that we had made it to Hetch Hetchy.
The final drop took a full scout, it was comprised of three separate
holes, each looking more retentive until the final, weir like ledge
into the lake.
We’d been grooving along pretty well
through the
day, and I
was surprised when Chris and Ben said they weren’t feeling
the drop. The first ledge was an easy move, followed by all 1,200cfs
pinching through a five foot wide slot, and then a short moving pool
into the weir. Punching the weir in the middle wasn’t a
possibility because of at least ten feet of highly elevated backwash.
However, there was a thin line down the right, a shallow layer of water
going over a slide up and around the hole.
I couldn’t resist the desire to have the
chance of
swimming
into an eight mile long pool, and all of us portaging the final drop
seemed to be a crime. Although there was decent chance the hole was too
sticky to swim out of, so Ben and Chris set extensive safety to rope me
out if it proved to be that heinous. I took one last look while Chris
filmed and Ben grabbed my camera, and
soon enough I was past the entrance hole and lining up for the second
pinch hole. Coming in I realized my original line wasn’t
going to happen, so I switched to the backup plan and paddled hard into
the middle, going deep and resurfacing in a full stern squirt, going
all the way over. Knowing I had to get up soon to setup for the final
hole I was relived to feel strong current on my blade and rolled up
with just enough time to turn around and start driving to the right,
getting far right and sliding around the final hole with a huge grin on
my face.
Sitting in the shade at the lake we had to laugh
at the
classic move we
had made. Talking to the Knapps before hand, they mentioned arriving at
the lake around noon and being too impatient to wait, paddling across
in the middle of the day. With heightened home land security, we
decided that it was time to be patient, and took naps, made several
meals, and in general whittled away six hours chasing shade around.
Finally at nine the sun dropped below the ridge, the wind died down and
we started the slog out.
Good
scenery and a windless evening
paddle out.
Midnight
and moonlight at Wapama Falls
All things considered we thought the Grand Canyon
of the
Tuolumne at
1,200cfs was pretty good. On the whole we
portaged four miles at most, paddled countless miles of IV-V boulder
gardens, got a few good slides and enjoyed epic scenery. I believe the
bad reputation associated with this run is due to most groups going in
with flows around 600. I personally wouldn’t go in with less
than 800 on the gauge. If it was legal it I’d do it every
year, but with the current situation I’d say it’s a
“do once” run.