We wake up in Tena and ask around about water levels. It sounds like
the Piatua should have enough water for is, and as a rarity for
Ecuador, it has clear water. Looking upstream from take out.
It's a longer run and the dirt road takes about forty minutes of bumping to reach put-in. We
gear up as a cloud cover rolls in and head downstream, with flows a bit
lower than anyone in our group had seen before. Keirith Snyder and Keith Kishiyama.
It's great class IV boat scouting, with the occasional scout for a few
blind rapids. Apparently it's easier higher as eddies and visibility
improve. Shannamar Dewey.
Keith Kishiyama enjoying a nice boof.
The river never stops, but at our flow it gets a bit manky for the last few miles.
Even at the low flows we really enjoyed the Piatua and it's a shame to hear that a dam is being put in on it.