Aug 05 2010

When a gathering can be Solitary.

Something that we’ve wanted to do for a while is paddle out to ‘Split Solitary island’, offshore near coffs Harbour. It’s only 3km offshore but most of the marks around the island are about 4km offshore from saphire. This is a bit of a slog in my bus of a kayak so I’ve never made the trip. Even though i’ve travelled further offshore in my kayak previously I’d been saving this trip for when my parents were up as I could use one of the their hobie revos, making the trip far more inviting. This last week was when it all happened. It didn’t look like the weather would be kind as the only day that looked good (friday) was the only day I had to work!! After a call on wed from the boss, things were looking up. The fri trip had been moved to next wed so I was now free on friday and the weather was looking good. After a few calls and messages we’d only been able to rustle up one other contender (juztaylor).

Lined up and ready to go, our island destination in the background.

Lined up and ready to go, our island destination in the background.

At 5:30am on fri we lined up on saphire beach ready for a hectic shore break launch and a bit of a paddle. All of us got out through the surf without too much drama. We got out past the saphire reefs, dropped our trolling lines and set off for an island that was far closer to other islands than the name would suggest!!  On the way out dad had a sizeable fish take his BIG (25ishcm) lure and it went for a run or two before rejecting the lure as nutritionally useless and leaving dad with his lure but no fish. As we paddled around the sanctuary zone on the western side of the island, I caught the obligatory bonito for the trip, and so with runs on board and the threat of more with the addition of dead calm conditions it was looking up for the rest of the morning!! We all know something had to happen cause it just doesn’t come that easy (for some of us anyway).

Almost exactly at the time we reached “split” the wind picked up from the NW effectively pinning us to a small zone on the lee side of the island to fish. This was not great as the majority of the lee side was sanctuary zone and the main marks we had were actually 1km east of the island. We persisted in the wind as we’d made a big trip out there we may as well make the most of it. If anyone want the marks, I’m happy part with the lat and longs of the healthiest population of red rock cod on the east coast, possibly all of australia. We had no trouble swiftly and efficiently having the tails of our plastics removed within the first few casts of replacing them and if you were lucky you might even catch a RRC or 7 while your at it!!! I got over that and decided to throw a metal into the wash and got several nice hits from leaping tailor and then caught a RRC on the halco twister!!! :bb: oh well back to the plastic but still in the wash and I finally pulled out a “sport fish”! A small silver trevor. Little silver trev

After this we got over the one spot so dad decided to troll around the whole island and I decided to paddle around and drift along the northern side of the island. I was flicking plastics into the wash and had a couple of hits then bang, a proper take and a little run. I thought probably a tailor cause it came to the boat easy as but as soon as it got to the boat I determined it was a kingy and he determined I wasn’t friendly and took off. After a few nice runs and a good, unusually clean fight I had him to the boat. Only small (50cm) but more fun than RRC!! I could be mean at this point and mention that Juz was only able to get 1 fish, a RRC, to the kayak all day but I won’t be that mean……….. I WILL still mention it, but I’ll also add that JUZ, at the same time I got that kingy, hooked up TWO of them!! :ll: The first one took his plastic on his bream rod and 1000 size reel!!! Whilst fighting that fish, he also hooked up on his hard body that was still out the back! To Juz’s credit, he kept the kingy on the bream rod for quite a while before the inevitable “oh no” was heard in the back ground as I fought my fish. By that time the other fish had shredded the trolling rod’s leader around the reef, so it was a double “oh no” for Juz!!

50cm rat king is 1000% more fun than RRC.

50cm rat king is 1000% more fun than RRC.

After a couple more drifts past the wash, a few follows and some extra gear adopted by the reef, Juz decided to work his way in and back home. Dad and I decided at that point to head out toward this mark that I had about 900m east. The wind dropped down and the conditions were perfect, although i was unsure whether this mark would turn ok. Turned out a top mark, a very large area of peaks and gutters coming up to about 10ft and down to 70ft. There was plenty of bait schools and it didn’t take long to bring a fish to the yak, only it was a RRC!! :sad1: There was a few more of them and some more plastic tails bitten off so we headed back towards the island. On the way back I had a very large mouth engulf my lure and the tail attached to that mouth decided to propel that mouth as far away from my kayak as possible. I couldn’t even get the rod out of the holder for the first run and when I finally got it out i’d lost a fair bit of line. I began playing the fish. He had several runs, head shaking and peeling off line as I chased with the hobie. I finally got closer to the fish till I ended up a bit too straight up and down on the fish. He had started to come up when……nothing…. he was gone. I still had the lure, he’d just thrown the hooks :doubt: . I was spewing. Exactly the same thing had happened to me with that lure on my last trip off sawtell. I think it’s time to replace the trebles!!! With that i’d kinda decided that this trip was over with no fish to show for the trip and a long 4km paddle home. On my way back I dropped into the island and got another rat king before continuing home. When I was about 1km from shore i started trying to contact dad on the radio as I could see him. The radios were breaking up a bit and worked out dad was down the beach a bit but I was trying to work out exactly where he was when my trolling rod jumped into life again. A quick look at the sounder showed that I was over a very boring bottom, flat, 35ft deep and sandy. I immediately thought a bigger bonito may be responsible or maybe a tuna or salmon but it was fighting down the bottom and had a lot of head shakes. After about 7 or 8 mins he came up to the boat and i saw that glimpse of red. “oh no a giant red rock cod!!!!” ….just kidding… It was a very nice snapper just to save a trip at the last minute. I estimated about 4kg but when I got home it measured closer to 5 at 4.9kg. A very happy end to a long day.

Benchtop size 4.9kg snapper ready for the table.

Benchtop size 4.9kg snapper ready for the table.

The beach landing was very hectic with a very fierce shore break which I only just managed to avoid. Dad ended up hurting his knee in the shorey when the wave pushed his kayak into his leg after getting out! I don’t have any in situ pics of the snapper so Juz or dad might be able to put one up. Stephen

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May 10 2010

Local MISadventures of Worleybird!

Ok so here it is.  The infamous (read: a couple of people may have heard about it!) misadventure of the bobo!!! It took a while to get this report done as i’m waiting for some other pics (which i’ll get later) and also as the full story was only revealed once we went back to get the kayaks to see what went wrong!!

The basic story is that we were doing a creek that we haven’t done before (bobo gorge section) and so it took a while to get the car to the take out. We had to walk a couple of kms down to the river to see exactly where the take out was. We placed a bright pink towel on the river to signal the track and then headed to the put in.   We didn’t really get onto the river till about 10:30-11am and from the moment we got on I just had this feeling that I wanted to get to the bottom and go home.   I was worried about getting home late to Mel (who I had told we would be home before dark!).  But with the whole river ahead of us there was also a heap of anticipation for running a VERY hyped creek that’s been on my list since before I even started kayaking!!  The level was JUST above the min level for running the creek (.5m at frog hollow, which I would now argue is too low to be worth paddling!!).  There were a lot of rapids that were easy read and run and some fun rapids from the beginning but then there started to be a heap of rapids that were not big OR fun looking but we had to scrape down or portage because they were too rocky and/or dangerous.  Most of these rapids would be more runnable with more water but NOT that much more fun as there were a lot of straight forward rock bolder rapids.

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Tom on one of the less rocky rapids.

Tom on one of the less rocky rapids.

The highlight, definitely, of the trip was a nice 25ish footer that was relatively straight forward and a nice aerated deep landing, which we all ran.

Kyle with a great line over the 25footer.  He almost didn't get wet at the bottom!!

Kyle with a great line over the 25footer. He almost didn't get wet at the bottom!!

A highlight in a day of mediocrity.

A highlight in a day of mediocrity.

As it got later and later we eventually got to a waterfall portage that corky had said was 2/3 of the way through the trip.  It was 5ish when we got there so we were hoping that the end was closer than a 1/3 away!!!  Fortunately it was!!  A bit before 6 we hit the junction with the Little nymboida river.

Sketchy portage around a sketchy waterfall!

Sketchy portage around a sketchy waterfall!

This is where the maps show the track is about 500-1000m UPSTREAM of the junction. We had also been told by someone that it was just a quick paddle up the river to the take out. As we pushed up river we never came to anywhere that even looked similar to where we put the towel and no sign of it anywhere.

This is the point I realised my paddle was NOT in my boat and had to go back downstream about 200m to get it.

This is the point I realised my paddle was NOT in my boat and had to go back downstream about 200m to get it.

We kept pushing as it got darker and darker whilst constantly referencing the maps I had photographed on my camera, we were starting to get concerned about what was going on.  Either we had missed the track, overestimated how far we were traveling or the map wasn’t right (we had kinda dismissed this option as i’d referenced several maps including topo maps)!!

After traveling upstream in the dark for over half an hour we got to a larger waterfall that made us CERTAIN the track was NOT further upstream!!!  How could we have missed the track??? We had the towel signal out there and Tom and I both memorized what the surrounds looked like at the take out???

This is actually a picture of the waterfall!!  I think!

This is actually a picture of the waterfall!! I think!

This is essentially the same picture as above except with more generous lighting!!

This is essentially the same picture as above except with more generous lighting!!

We decided at this point to stash the boats and just try and make it out so we could get home (I was particularly worried about Mel not knowing what was happening and her having 6 week old James at home to look after!!)

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we placed our boats to sleep.

We kept our paddles as walking sticks and some safety gear and dry bags. We left the boats at 8pm and walked downstream for a bit to make sure we had not gone past the track in the dark.  After this we decided to try and find the road up on the ridge of the valley so we then headed up hill, and by up i mean UP!!! VERY steep rainforest in pitch black. Interestingly there were luminescent fungi everywhere. Glowing blobs across the rainforest floor. It was kinda trippy (and we hadn’t even eaten any!!)

I had a head torch with me and we had two cameras which we took close up photos of my white helmet to display on the screen as torches for the other guys.
This was our impromptu torch for tom and kyle. Worked quite well.  Couldn't have done what we did without it.

This was our impromptu torch for tom and kyle. Worked quite well. Couldn't have done what we did without it.

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Another small highlight in a dim night. Never seen a forest dragon till this night!!

It took forever to climb as it was thick undergrowth and after a long day it was a strenuous task with ‘wait a whiles’ and other vines and spikey things everywhere!! At about 11:30pm and reaching a flat spot, in which it became really hard to navigate with no stars or moon to see and no slope to determine which way was up hill, and our impromptu camera torch batteries dead, we decided that we were going to have to stay the night (a very distressing thought of what Mels’ night would be like flashed constantly through my head!).

I had some dry matches with me and so we attempted to make a fire (A VERY hard thing to do in a rainforest!!!) You could actually squeeze water out of the leaf litter on the ground so finding dry kindling was hard work. We tried dryish leaves a few times but it didn’t work. The matches were old and only about 1/4 of them actually lit properly!! Once getting down to the last few matches I decided for a different tactic. I hunted around and found a few bunches of ‘old mans beard’ (lichen stuff that hangs from trees) which worked well but would go out once the match went out. Finally we were down to the LAST match!!! :shock: (I know, it’s like a movie.  If this was on tv it would go to an ad just as I struck the last match!!  ”LOST- the bobo saga! will be back after these words from our sponsors!!”) I searched around for every bit of old mans beard i could find. I struck the match and it lit, I then lit the match box, which then burnt long enough to get the kindling lit properly and we franticly tended to the fires every need for the next hour, slowly building it into a nice size fire. I also had a folding prune saw in which we were able to cut larger wood which was priceless as we were able to stoke the fire up with logs to keep it going while we slept around it. It only required the odd replenishing every couple of hours.

For me it wasn’t that big a deal staying out overnight. i knew we were not in danger, but the night WAS TERRIBLE knowing that my wife was at home with a 6 week old baby having no idea what has happened :?: :shock: :-? :-? . I kept imagining what she’d be doing. How she’d be coping. Who she’s contacting. etc..

It was a mild night considering how cold it can get up there but i’m sure glad we had the fire otherwise it would have been a very long night. I ended up sleeping about 3 lots of 1.5 hours, which I thought was pretty good for sleeping on the rainforest floor with a dry bag for a pillow, only wearing our river gear (polypro top, spraytop, shorts, pfd, kayak deck and helmet and booties(all worn for entire time out) (‘mmmmmm 30 hour wet bootie feet!!’)

Once the morning came we ate some of our food whilst warming ourselves by the fire. We were undecided whether to keep heading for the road or head back down to the river where we could try and find the original take out as well as being in a place that people would look for us if they were. We decided to head for the river. We were sure we would be able to get to the car either way ourselves but at the time my main priority was that Mel know we were safe as soon as possible. This meant that if the search chopper came, I wanted to be seen!! As a last minute thought I suggested we throw a heap of greenery on the fire to pump a heap of smoke out just in case there’s someone looking. Literally 5 mins after doing so a helicopter flew straight over our heads!!! There’s absolutely no reason for a helicopter to be out there, in the middle of nowhere, on the easter weekend, other than to be searching for missing kayakers!!! I rushed with a space blanket (shiny, silver blanket) to a nearby clearing and the boys kept the smoke coming. It came so close we saw the westpac sign on the side and saw people inside!! But it seemed they did not see the smoke or us!! It kept flying around in circles working down to the river. We decided to pump the smoke out with a heap of leaves and then make the dash back to the river.

We’d only gone about 500m when the chopper started back up the hill. Tom rushed back to the clearing with the blanket but the chopper flew straight over and pretty fast. We figured at that speed it was leaving for coffs to refuel. We decided to make the dash down to the river and head downstream to try and find the track or get to the juntion (which is a large, clear, flat spot) and if the chopper came back it would see us. Otherwise we’d get ourselves out. The walk down was WAY easier than up, due both to the prevailing pull of gravity downwards as well as being able to see!!!. We got to the river and headed downstream. We walked about two kms downstream before hearing the helicopter again. Tom rushed out onto a clearing above one of the rapids in the middle of the river. The chopper flew around the corner heading straight for Tom and the shiny space blanket. Immediately they saw us and pulled up like a jockey pulling at the reins of a horse. They took a good look at us (i’d say counting heads), took some photos (I’d say for posterity sake, or maybe we just looked that interesting) then they went up and flew around in circles higher and higher around our spot (we found out later that this was to get high enough out of the valley to radio base and to burn off a heap of fuel as they had just refueled and won’t do winching with full tanks if they can help it). After about 15mins they got closer and closer and eventually (with much protesting by the nearby trees) they hovered right down and winched two paramedics down to the river bed. After some quick checking to make sure we were alright, kyle was chosen to go first with the crewman while we would wait with the paramedic while they flew them to Dorrigo. During this time we had a good chat to the medic and stashed our paddles and other gear we couldn’t take with us (this now meant our paddles were about 3km from our boats when we went to rescue them!!!!).

Tom and I were then winched up (I’m sure if I was injured and it was a more dangerous situation it would be different, but I can’t say that it wasn’t an interesting experience getting winched out of a river in a helicopter!! :D ) once the chopper returned and we were off to dorrigo. We got a great view of some rivers we’ve done before and some we’d like to do as well as seeing the rescue heli crew doing their thing 1st hand!!!

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Me, hitching a ride!!!
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Enjoying my first ever chopper ride!
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The rest of the day gets a lot more mundane!! We got winched out at about 11am. It took us about 3 hours to finally get home after reaching dorrigo in the chopper. The local SES brang pies and drinks for the heli crew as well as us. We took some pics with the crew and chopper. We then went to SES base and waited for police to sign off the case and for SES to retrieve one of our cars so we could drive home.

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bored/Board in the SES base!

It was great to see that Mel did exactly what she should have. She told the police the exact details or our trip (which I leave for her every time I go paddling) and when we were expected home. They then went and found our cars at 2am in the morning to confirm that we hadn’t made it off the river. They talked to my boss to ask whether i was the sort of person that would deliberately stay out all night to drink or take drugs etc, and I’m happy to say they said “no way”!! So after ensuring we were in fact missing they readied the chopper for the morning by which time my parents had driven up to coffs from forster and everyone’s family was informed and now extremely worried!!  I’m sure that this whole ordeal was FAR worse for those at home than for us three who actually slept out overnight!! All i ended up with was wet pruney feet from being in booties for over 24 hours (which I also pulled a MASSIVE leach out of), scratches from climbing through the bush in the dark, and I stopped counting the tiny ticks burrowed into my skin when I got to 80!!!

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This guy must have spent the night in my booty! He couldn’t even move himself. Give me my blood back, you thief!!

Now, What happened???
After talking to a few people who have done that creek several times, the take out is actually a few hundred metres DOWNSTREAM of the juntion with the little nymboida!!! This contradicts what the topo maps say and would only be confirmed once we got up to get our boats.

This, we finally did but not till our boats had been left in the bush for 3 weeks!  I’m glad no-one goes there often!!!

The salvage trip was almost as much of an adventure as the paddling trip.  We drove right down to the river on a very overgrown road (read: windy, steep, slippery walking track).

The track that would later exact it's revenge on the pajero.

The track that would later exact it's revenge on the pajero.

We had armed ourselves with GPS locaters and a sat phone this time (it would look VERY bad form getting winched out of the same place twice in one month!!).  Once geared up with our river gear and a couple of inflatable riverboards, we headed up the river to see how far we’d gone wrong!!

Paddling upstream on the riverboards.

Paddling upstream on the riverboards.

Well after 500m we confirmed that the maps were indeed wrong and that the take out was DOWNSTREAM of the bobo/little nymboida junction!!! Only 15mins in and the world was starting to make more sense already!!

After another 800mish we reached the point where we got winched out and where half our gear was stashed.  Ok, at least some of our stuff was still there and we know where we are and where our boats are. Just how far away are they?  (hard to tell exactly in the dark).

Our gear exactly where we left it.

Our gear exactly where we left it.

Proof that the papers are all wrong!! "they had no food or supplies".  Then why do I still have food left after 3 weeks!!!  The nutrigrain was still good too, had some this day and then for breakfast the day after!

Proof that the papers are all wrong!! "they had no food or supplies". Then why do I still have food left after 3 weeks!!! The nutrigrain was still good too, had some this day and then for breakfast the day after!

We kept on paddling/swimming/hiking/climbing/scrambling upstream.  Tom and I uttered the words “I think we’re getting close” pretty much at every rapid, which i’m sure was tiring for Chloe and Matt who were on the trip but weren’t on the first adventure!!

Paddling a riverboard with our newly found paddles.

Paddling a riverboard with our newly found paddles.

Eventually we reached the waterfall and could see our boats looking snug high on the bank.  Woohoo!! I have a kayak again!!!

kayaks, after a long sleep.

kayaks, after a long sleep.

After some scouting around the waterfall and determining it was unrunnable we set off back to the the take out (This time we knew EXACTLY where it was!!).

We had some more adventure when we got back to the car.  With a wet and slippery steep road we had quite a time getting the car back out.  After several attempts we were able to get through but for a little while we were thinking it’s all happening again!!

At last!!  Leaving the river with kayaks again on our roof!  It's not nice leaving a river without them!!

At last!! Leaving the river with kayaks again on our roof! It's not nice leaving a river without them!!

It will be interesting to see how the spot 2 messenger goes.  It would have made this whole ordeal a lot less stressful for those at home and we could have just stayed out overnight and got out in the morning without all the trekking to try and get out at night as well as not calling the cavalry in for a rescue!!

Cheers again to all involved in the search and to all those who were concerned at the time.

Stephen

P.S If anyone has seen Tom’s pink towel he misses it dearly!!  It’s bright pink, has “TOM” embroided onto it and it may look like this artists impression below!!

Artists impression only.  Actual towel may vary!!

Artists impression only. Actual towel may vary!!

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Feb 07 2010

The crew chalk up a 2nd descent!!!

Ok. I’m gonna finally put a totally kayak based post up. It’s taken a while but I’ve linked to this from an online guide (Sandys creek into the Little Murray) so I guess this needs to be here in case someone actually clicks the link!!

New years day is one of the few days we are garuanteed to have off, so I took the opportunity to organise a trip with a few guides and friends. Ended up with 6 of us and we decided to do a trip that Tom and I did earlier in 2009, down Sandys creek into the Little Murray to Deervale rd. Tom and I had hoped it would be slightly higher than when we did it as we spent most of the day quoting that ever so often, paddling trip uttered phrase “If only there was 1′ more water!”. It turned out that our trip down Sandys creek was probably a first descent. Not an epic, but I’m willing to chalk that up as our first first descent! And now I’m chalking up our first second descent!!

Tom, Chloe, Dis and I headed up the mountain. We took a while getting breakfast at Dorrigo as the place was swarming with Crime Scene Investigation cops after a serious incident the previous night (new years eve)!! The entire main street was blocked off and there were guys in overalls and shoe covers walking around taking pictures and measuring stuff as well as yelling at the locals that were completely ignoring the signs telling them the footpath was closed!! After meeting two more of Tom’s friends and getting some breakfast, and watching some entertaining breakfast making at ‘juan’s cafe’, we set off for Sandys creek.

It was hard to tell at the take out but it looked like it was the same or less water than our trip in 2009. Oh well, it’ll still be fun!! (and it was!) Up to the put in and we were off and ready. After some fence climbing, scrambling down banks, around trees and some seal launching we were all in the creek keen to get paddling!!

Everyone found there own way in.  As always Tom found a spot to seal launch!!

Everyone found there own way in. As always Tom found a spot to seal launch!!

Sandys creek was interesting for me as we’d forgotten most of the creek other than the 18ft waterfall (quite a memorable rapid on a grade II creek!!). On our first descent a farmer we talked to had actually warned us not to go on the creek cause of this 18ft waterfall! It only served to get us more keen to try this creek so we asked if it was possible to get around it and whether the pool was deep and everything ticked the right boxes so we went for it. After scratching some plastic of all of our boats for about 1km we reached the falls, which we had named ‘platypus plunge’ after there was a platypus in the pool when we ran it on our first trip.

The whole crew cruising upper Sandys!

The whole crew cruising upper Sandys!

We came across some trees in annoying places.

We came across some trees in annoying places.

After scouting the falls we confirmed that it was probably slightly lower than our first trip which meant we had to do the same seal launch off the bar on the left of the falls. The entry is very straight but at low levels there is a shallow scrapy section which could turn you into a little undercut ledge that looks a bit hurty, so the call was made and I set up on the rock. On the first trip this was the biggest waterfall I’d ever run and for a few people on this trip it was also the biggest that they’d run. The great thing about the drop is it sort of does most of the work for you. You slide in off the rock and it’s just a nice drop until the rooster tail automatically boofs you out into the pool. Everyone who ran had a great run and kyle even went back for another drop.

Seal slide off platypus plunge.

Seal slide off platypus plunge.

Straighten up a prepare to be boofed.

Straighten up a prepare to be boofed.

Kyle on his way down.

Kyle on his way down.

Dis sliding down his biggest drop!!

Dis sliding down his biggest drop!!

Chloe sets off down the plunge.  Also her first waterfall!!

Chloe sets off down the plunge. Also her first waterfall!!

Almost felt crowded with this many.  Last time it was just Tom and I.

Almost felt crowded with this many. Last time it was just Tom and I.

From here it’s about 1km till we entered the Little Murray and the major portage of the day. This is a huge chasm drop of about 85ft. The portage is across part of the chasm on an elevated foot walk next to a pipe running from the weir above the falls. Then following the pipe down the ridge and back to the water.

Tom, Chloe and Dis on there way below platypus plunge.

Tom, Chloe and Dis on there way below platypus plunge.

Chloe walking the paddles across the walk way.  Don't look down!!

Chloe walking the paddles across the walk way. Don't look down!!

The signs of a hard portage.  (on the boats that is!!!).Dis left this south african plastic all over the place.  If we ever have to find Dis lost on a trip we'll be able to just follow the blue trail of gouged plastic!!

The signs of a hard portage. (on the boats that is!!!).Dis left this Liquid Logic plastic all over the place. If we ever have to find Dis lost on a trip we'll be able to just follow the blue trail of gouged plastic!!

The rest of this trip is mostly read and run grade III rapids which were great fun with a big group, watching all the different lines with differing successes and the occasional swim!!

Tom at the top of the mini chute!

Tom at the top of the mini chute!

Read and run amongst the scenery.

Read and run amongst the scenery.

The trip is capped off with a nice grade IV rapid about 1km before the finish. It’s a nice drop and slide rapid but with a bit of an undercut and boulder on the right side to be avoided. On the first trip Tom and I decided not to run this rapid but this time we were pretty keen. Tom ran first followed by Kyle and I. All had a good run, with Kyle even putting in a reverse entry down the slide and into the pool!

Tom leading the way on the dropandslide!

Tom leading the way on the dropandslide!

Tom over the drop getting ready to slide!

Tom over the drop getting ready to slide!

Kyle on his reverse manouvre down the drop and slide.

Kyle on his reverse manouvre down the drop and slide.

Me entering a bit far right on the dropandslide.

Me entering a bit far right on the dropandslide.

Already trying to back away from the boulder on the right of the coming slide.

Already trying to back away from the boulder on the right of the coming slide.

We then continued down the last km with a couple of grade II-III rapids and a couple of longer pools an we reached the bridge.

Dis rescuing his paddle.

Dis rescuing his paddle.

I was again impressed with this run. Perfect run that doesn’t stretch your whole day, easy shuttle, and a great continuous standard with easy portages for anyone not wanting to run some of the bigger rapids. I’ll definitely get back on this section when there’s some more water as I think it’ll be even more fun!!

The salto basking in the sun after another trip!

The salto basking in the sun after another trip!

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