JC and I did a little research and found an area about an hour and a half north of where we live called the Rio Negro. The commercially rafted section is about 4 miles of class III-IV depending on the rainy season. The gorge section is only run able in the dry seasons and is a class IV-V run that is much like the Upper Yough…albeit a little more narrow.
A few weeks ago, we set out and ran the commercially rafted section and enjoyed the scenery, but the water was so low it was 4 miles of class II. After ordering my new Burn, this past weekend we decided to explore the gorge section. The gorge has only been run by a handful of kayakers, so this trip was going to be interesting.
The pic above is of myself, JC and our host, Paola. She owns a small rafting company and also represented Colombia in the Greece Olympics in the slalom. She didn’t join us that day in the gorge. She said that she has only run it in a raft and was a little hesitant to do so in a kayak. Hearing that we were even more interested in checking the canyon out for ourselves.
Our shuttle...
Our shuttle...
Paola followed us to the entrance to the canyon and bid us farewell and good luck. She warned us of the class V rapid, “La Bomba” and told us that we should take the right line. The canyon section is about 4 miles long and consists of about 10 rapids. The first rapid was one of the 3 biggest. The next pic is the approach, and the second is the main 10-12 foot drop. FUN rapid.
The next pic is my favorite rapid. It’s just above “La Bomba” and is a Class IV+, 12-foot drop, with a ramp rock that shoots you forward after your initial boof. This is the RR side that wasn't runnable at this level…
Oh, by the way…here’s a pic of something we found while scouting this rapid…looks to be a human femur. Apparently years ago the rebles would kill people upstream and dump the bodies in the river.
This was the final part of it…
The 3-mile hike back to town over an old railroad track was pretty cool…minus the allergic reaction to something that bit me and the 2 days of bed rest following ingesting something in the water. I thought I would have been pretty immune to most things in the water being the Potomac is my home river…
Well, what did we learn after my first jungle-kayak expedition? I need to buy more static line, a machete, carry penicillin, and buy a back yak for those walks out of the canyon!
Stay-tuned for the next report from the rainy season…we’re going to hit about 2-3 rarely run creeks!
C
4 comments:
Awesome, Calvin!
It's about time! Miss you!
Wow - that place looks pretty amazing! Hope you don't get sick anymore and get several first descents under your belt - soooo cool.
oEven though the water is low, it's WAY more than we have here...yes, envy factor is high right now!!
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