Liquidlogic Kayaks and the Outdoor Retail Show 2009
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
From 2009 Outdoor Retailer Show |
The Liquidlogic Weekend Tour: Biscuits, Playboat Creeking, and Raft Carnage
It was an awesome day out there with an eddie load of friends.
Yonton, Grace, and Mefford getting ready to taste the Biscuits
You can check out the rest of the shots from this day by clicking this link. |
Yours Truly, Biscuit boofing the first drop of the Cascades called “The Horns”
When you boof in a playboat you don’t necessarily stay on the surface.
We stayed the night in the area and it rained most of the night. Only thing is we didn’t have our creek boats, but we knew there was going to be some extra fun out there. On Sunday morning we jumped up and headed up to the Cascades on the Upper Nantahala before heading back to the Ocoee. Its not far above the normal put in for the Nantahala run but its a completely different thing if you haven’t seen it before. The steep section is only a half mile long but its really fun, with a handful of nice rapid nuggets. Mefford and I knew it well enough that we thought it would be fun to take the Biscuits down.
Mefford coming up from seeing “Chinese Feet”.
Click the link below to see more photos from our trip on the Cascades. |
After paddling all day on the Cascades and then jamming down the Ocoee we came across this at the Put-In. I don’t know how to explain this other than we had a feeling something was going to happen when we watched these guys putting on the river as it was rising rapidly. They looked fairly together and they had a couple of guidely type folks at the helm but for some reason we decided to walk down and see how the run through Entrance went for them.
I was guessing the flow to be around 3 or 4 thousand but it was hard to tell because it was coming up by the minute. The scene on the put in ramp was a tell tale sign. In this photo if you know the spot it makes sense but if you haven’t seen the put in ramp before this photo might look normal. The spot where they are standing in the water is 30 feet from where you normally put in. There usually isn’t a standing wave where you might normally put your skirt on and the river isn’t usually going through the hand rail.
We watched them slide the boats in the water and immediately get pushed against the river right bank. This I thought was going to be their saving grace. If they had only managed to scrape down the right bank they would have been fine but unfortunately they made it out into the main current where within the first 3 waves they nearly flipped and then found them selves staring into the pit of Grumpy’s Ledge.
Raft Guide just gets back up from nearly flipping to see where they are going.
From this point on it was total chaos. If you have raft guided before you know what happens to the guide at this moment; either he holds on or he flies into the front of the boat like a sack of potatoes. Believe me I know I have landed in a heap with the bow paddlers. I have actually completely cleared the front of the boat right here at Entrance rapid.
No time to brace himself before impact.
Shouting commands from the middle of the raft. It is easier for them to hear.
This raft proceeded to get a 3-4 minute pounding in the hole. The guide was trying to keep people high siding but it was all happening too fast. First a couple folks fell out then one by one it was down to just the guide and one person who wasn’t stoked. The folks that fell out seemed to go for one recirc and then flush out of the hole. Some, unfortunately, had a brief under the raft experience. In the end everyone was fine. There were some rattled nerves but it seemed as though folks were dealing. All I know is I wouldn’t want to be in there.
In the end the guide pulls it out and calls it a perfect ride. The “Dump Truck”.
For the whole slideshow of the action click the link below. |