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26
Feb

Mexico 2013 Part I: Welcome To Mexico!

Below: Matt Beauchamp, Rio Minas Viejas, photo by Adam Goshorn

MB Minas 15 by Ag

From my house in Mentone, Alabama it is almost exactly a 27-hour drive to the take-out for the Cascadas Micos section of the Rio Valles in San Luis PotosiMexico.  For the eighth time in the last nine years, friends trickled into my house the night before departure so we could wake up early and start the drive the following morning.  In additional to myself, this year’s crew included friend and coworker Evan Alfano; another friend and repeat from last year’s crew, Matt Beauchamp; and my fiancé at the time (who is now my wife) Shannon MacMichael.  This would be Evan’s first trip to Mexico, Shannon’s and Matt’s second, and my eighth.

Below: Packing the truck in Alabama, photos by Evan Alfano

Truck Packing 3 by EA

Truck Packing 2 by EA

The drive from Alabama to the Mexican border went as smooth as possible with us arriving in BrownsvilleTexas right on schedule at 3:00 AM.  After a stop at the most evil of all big-box stores for a couple last minute items and a quick bite to eat we cruised through the paperwork at the border in record time.  Leaving the border and heading onto the mostly deserted streets of MatamorosMexico, I was anxious to get through out of the city and out of the whole border zone as quickly as possible.  I don’t remember what distracted me, but I momentary looked away from the road and looked back up in time to realize I had just run a stoplight… right in front of a parked police car, the only other vehicle on the street.

Below: Adam Goshorn, Micos put-in, photo by Evan Alfano

AG Micos Rainbow by EA 1

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26
Feb

NZ living- Okere Falls

Being based in Okere Falls at the banks of the Kaituna for the summer is awesome. Amazingly beautiful location, super good folks to paddle with and an amazing local run to lap and lap everyday. Besides surf within 20 minutes drive and amazing mountain bike trails in Rotorua.

Amazing sunsets on Rotoiti lake where the Kaituna flows from.

Time’s been flying between laps on the Kaituna and Wairoa, some surf trips to Gisborne and the East Cape, Waihi… and of course some work too!

 Paddling some fun old school boats!

Lots of events happened on the river this season already, first of was the 6 hours Enduro team race which I had to miss due an injury on my ribs while kayaking another river early December. Next up was the Xmas @ Kaituna event held just before Christmas; progressive BoaterX with 4 different courses while going down the river, 8Ball race, beach ball team race and blow up toys float. This was a super fun event and I was stoked to be back in my boat after a few weeks off due injury and really happy after taking the boaterX and the 8Ball race with some lucky rounds! The swim/float down the river with another 30 persons was sick! Cheers Brendan and Lou for organizing it!!

On Jan 11th we had the Andy Duff Memorial, where you get to race down the river in play boats, creek boats, tandem, swimming and rafting. It was a super fun afternoon and very exhausting, specially the swimming, but really cool. Thanks Douglas for organizing that year after year! A week after that was the Okere Falls Champions a multi sport race organized by Jamie Sutton. You start sprinting to your bike and biking for a couple k’s around the lake, then running a bit and swimming on the lake and down the slalom course, after that you jump on your kayak felling dizzy and with no power at all and try to make it down the river as fast as possible, carry your boat up a bit and run up the road to the Okere Falls Store where you have to skull a beer, which after doing all that is probably the last thing you want to do… Anyway a really fun race which includes 4 different sports and takes about 30 minutes of going all out. Mad props to Tim for crushing everyone on that one! Ben Robson was second and I was happy with third place!

Next up was the first round of the NZ Extreme Racing Series, with the Kaituna Time Trial and the Wairoa Extreme Race. The Kaituna’s been really low for the last couple weeks, at about low 200’s, so the race was really physical with some nice and long flat stretches but still fun and fast rapids. Mike killed the time trial with a 7’16” and I was third after local legend Kenny Mutton.

We also raced long boats and after a nice lap with the Hurricane I got first place which I was stoked about! We finished the afternoon with a three person team relay that was really fun as well!

On Sunday we had the Wairoa race with a 5 minutes time trial to start with and a head2head down the ‘Roller coaster’ rapid. I managed to get second on the time trial behind Mike who again did a great time trial run but unfortunately I got knocked out on the earlier rounds. Overall a great weekend that wouldn’t have been possible without the time and effort of Brendan, Lou and Tyler, thanks guys!!

Here’s a link to full results of both events and a little write up by Brendan: http://nzextremewhitewater.com

All and all summer’s been great so far, lots of good kayaking with friends and having fun on the water, the best way to get ready for next spring!

I just want to thank everyone in Okere Falls for being one of the best/coolest kayaking communities out there and helping us out with everything! Super happy and stoked to have made it this way for the winter and hopefully I can come back next year!

22
Feb

A very WNC January

Matt and I enjoying Chinese Feet
Taken by Kirk Workman

Yellow Creek Falls

Yellow Creek Falls
Taken by Kirk Workman

So this year we had an amazing January and early February in WNC. During my time back around there was a possibility to do a little bit of everything. There was rain, snow and sunshine so the triple threat of kayaking, snowboarding and mountain biking were all in play. When I got back I returned to find the Cascades at a decent level which was a nice way to get that redemption after an injury out there last fall. Sadly there was a nice piece of wood blocking one of my personal favorite moves on the run. So on lap number two I decided to hop out and shift the piece around a bit so the move opened back up and it was glorious to snag the three foot wall boof again. So a few days of rallying out to the cascades got me feeling back in the game again and then it started to snow so it was time to head to the mountain to shred until the fateful day that it dumped in WNC. One of the better and less run hometown goodz was in, Yellow Creek. Yellow Creek is somewhat dynamic as the last third of a mile of the creek before it enters the Cheaoh River kind of drops off the face and provides some quality slides and boofs with some really sketchy stuff chalked in there for good measure. Aside from a few massive siphons, sketchy water quality and wood galore it is a quality steep. If you only run the lower portion you start with the cleanest twentyish foot drop

The pinch boof, the best possible way to end a cascades lap

The pinch boof, the best possible way to end a cascades lap

in the south with a sometimes tricky entrance (level dependent) and roll into three fun slides before portaging a nasty siphon. After a quick jaunt through the rhodo hell of WNC you putin below the siphon just in time for a rapid with a sketchy piece of wood that leads right into one of the most intimidating drops of the run which features a few siphons and undercuts but ends in a super fun slide. Theres a double boof and you have then made it down the Mini Raven. Also thanks to a major rain event many other area creeks came in and provided much needed time in the smokies on the always beautiful Big Creek. All in all it was an amazing time off from work and tons of goods were had.

 

 

Big Creek Quicky from Paul Butler on Vimeo.

Some go pro of my favorite rapids from Big Creek.

 

 

 

 

 

 

16
Feb

Dreaming of New Zealand

It has been a few months now since I returned to the UK from New Zealand but I can’t stop thinking about the time I spent there.

New Favourite River

The first couple of weeks were spent in domestic servitude for the Great British Ladies White Water Rafting Team, at their World Championships near Roturua. With only time for five or six runs of the Kaituna a day in between our duties we had to be pretty quick..

Domestic ServitudeSpeedy

The ladies were training super hard, doing everything they could to prepare.

Training Hard

waterfall practiceHold On

 

Of course, it would have been rude not to join them on the river…

Tutea FallsBoil Slam

and occasionally we’d be allowed to load up the beast and follow the team to one of the other competition rivers.

The BeastBob on Jeffs Joy

 

After a week of solid training it was competition time…….

Competition Time

More on that story in the next episode….

 

 

 

 

 

31
Jan

Hurry Up and Wait: CO Quickie 2013

Below: Source of the SlateRiver, photo by Adam Goshorn

Source of the Slate by AG

Below: Adam Goshorn OBJ Rock Sledding, photo by Matt Jones

AG OBJ by MJ 3

Flashback to June 2013… I was in my last week of work before a much needed and much anticipated two-week paddling trip to California.  Despite the fact that California was experiencing another low water year, my good friends Matt Jones and John Kern were both still willing to make the most of it with me and we had come up with a hit list of rivers that we thought would still be viable.  Unfortunately, around this time our plans hit a wall.  John flipped over while playboating on the Ocoee and when he instinctively went for a back-deck roll, he face planted on a shallow rock.  The result was several cuts to his face and forehead and a lot of stitches.

Below: Boofing big on BigWoodFalls on Daisy Creek, photo by Adam Goshorn

Daisy Boof by AG 1

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30
Jan

NEPAL – THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY

Myself (Ric Moxon), Maxi Kniewasser, Si Rutherford, Brian Fletcher and Steve Arns headed out to Nepal this fall to see what the land of the Himilayas had to offer. It did not fail to impress, endless read and run class 4+ with plenty of class 5 sprinkled on top! Perfect.

For the first 4 weeks we paddled all the classic ‘easy’ access rivers, Bhote Khosi, Modi Khola, Madi Khola, Upper/Main Marsyangdi, Upper Kaligandaki and the Upper Seti. For the majority of these rivers we based ourselves out of the little paradise of Pokhara. This town has it all, views of 8000 meter peaks, a lake front, amazing food, cheap accommodation and motorbikes to rent! What more can you ask for?

For the last 3 weeks we headed West to the Humla Karnali and the Thule Bheri. Two self-support 7 day trips back to back!

HUMLA/THULE

The Good!

The trips were a great success! Logistics were incredibly easy compared with Maxi’s experiences back in 2008 when rising prices and days and days of delays seemed the norm. Top tip, fly from Surkhet not Nepal Ganj! We paid $1500 total for each flight, after a lot of negotiating. But the guys there were great, they kept there word and it all worked out perfect!

For the Thule we could not fly into the usual airport right on the river due to construction, so we had to fly into an airstrip a 6 hour hike from the river. There was no porters available, so we had to embrace the hike ourselves. With 45kg’s of boat, gear and food and over a 1000 meter elevation drop you definitely felt the burn in the quads! Flying into this airstrip did turn out to be a blessing. The views from the ridge were unbelievable, top 3 views I have scene in my life! Plus there is no feeling like earning your boofs!

Both rivers offered phenomenal whitewater, the Thule is a little easier as there are less big class 5 land slide rapids. However, both are definitely class 5 expedition runs. Check out some of the photos, words can not really describe! The Thule, however, was the scene of one of the scariest situations I have ever been involved in …

The Bad

Sieves are a major problem on these rivers. There are countless locations where huge landslides have sent gigantic boulders into the river creating significant sieves. On one of the read and run rapids Si pulled in behind a large boulder into what he though was an eddy, it turned out that all the water was flowing straight under a second large boulder behind. Realizing last second he managed to point his kayak nose first into the sieve and sketchily brace himself as he got chocked up to his waist. Steve, who was closest to him, although could not see him quickly realized that something was not right. He jumped out of his boat and was able to stabilize the situation and hold onto him. Myself, Maxi and Brian also jumped out of our boats and ran upstream to help. We safely managed to get Si and his boat out. This was a very close call and an emotional experience for all. We all felt we learned a valuable experience. When there are large boulders on the banks be very, very careful!

Also, see if you can spot the photo where paddling blue angle into a wave train back fired!

The Ugly

If you want to go to Nepal go ASAP, in a few years there will be a lot less free flowing rivers. The damming situation is the worst I have ever encountered. Chinese and Indian corporations are behind the projects. The amount of devastation and the speed of the construction is unbelievable. In the space of one week on the Marsyangdi the river bed had completely changed and a new bridge had been put in!

This trip was everything I had hoped it would be. Stunning views, epic rivers, crazy culture, great food, big missions, strenuous hike-ins, ridiculous bus rides and great people!

The old faithful large burn was my weapon of choice! Paddles awesome in every situation, loaded, empty, steep or deep. I cant wait to try out the new Large Burn!!

Cheers team!

Photos by fellow team paddler Maxi Kniewasser and Steve Arns

Kniewasser_M_nepal-7638 Kniewasser_M_nepal-8174 Ric Moxon hiking in to the Thule Behri Ric Moxon putting on the afterburners, Nepal Riding the roof of the bus, Nepal Woman porter, Humla Karnali, Nepal Humla Karnali camp, Nepal Kniewasser_M_nepal-8907 steve-nepal-111 steve-nepal-115 steve-nepal-208 steve-nepal-203 steve-nepal-106

26
Jan

Why I love the New Burn… and What’s the Dang Difference Anyways

burnIII_ts

There she is – Above = New 3rd Gen Burn….. Below = Well-loved 2nd Gen Burn

 

photo-29

photo-24

 

I paddled Pyranha’s 2nd edition Burn for years and loved it.  It was my go-to kayak and I didn’t ever want to try anything else.  So, when I heard Pyranha was re-vamping my beloved Burn, I was excited, curious, but mostly just scared.  Worrying was worthless because the 3rd edition is indeed better (FACT, not just my opinion) and here’s why I’m so stoked.

#1(#2)  – Immediately, first difference I noticed was it’s speed.  Noticeably faster, the 3rd edition Burn, is longer and has a different Rocker profile than it’s predecessor.  It has a fairly flat hull, with significant bow rocker,  and less stern rocker.  Not only helping to create a faster boat, this hull design makes the Burn exceptionally easy to boof, which was my second observable difference.  The nose of the new Burn wants to stay on the surface of the water; it cruises over holes, resurfaces quickly, and boofs effortlessly.  BAM!!

#3 – Burns are known for their edges and the 3rd generation’s have been tweaked.  I’m not a scientist and can’t tell you what Pyranha did to make the edges better (I noticed less in the stern).  But, the boat carves and I like that.  Catching eddies is snappy and easy.   And, the boat holds a line, which is real nice for getting exactly where you want to go!  These edges are particularly noticeable and appreciated in pushy or swirly whitewater.

demtitz-2

#4 – The cockpit rim has been redesigned so spray skirts stay on better!  Nicer to carry as well.  Win!

DCIM100GOPRO

#5 – The new Burn has a lower deck profile, which means I don’t have to make a booster seat.   Less volume directly in front of where you’re sitting is also nice for paddling, rolling, tucking, and all things which are done in a kayak.  This also brings your knees in a lower and more secure position, leading to greater control of your Burn.

DCIM100GOPRO

The new Burn is your river running creek boat dream machine.  But, seriously, it is.

Oh yeah, and there are also some other slightly tweaked improvements; such as metal grab loops and a self-draining recessed drain plug.  (I’m trying to say that water doesn’t pool up in the recession for the drain plug)… New logo.. cool colors

She be LOVIN IT BRO

DCIM100GOPRO

 

13
Jan

NZ living – South Island

I’ve been in New Zealand for over two months now, and time is flying here. It’s nice and warm, super beautiful, there’s paddling every day and long days working and paddling keep you so busy!

 I flew mid november straight into Queenstown, where I met up with Dylan, JV, Shannon, Willz and Brendan. We paddled the Nevis river near Queenstown which is still one of my favorites, just super continuous, lots of fun and technical moves, good drops, good water, steep and really long. Such a good run with nice weather and good friends to show me the lines.

After that we drove south to Fiordland to explore some unpadded rivers and waterfalls. The scenery over there is amazing, and however we didn’t get to paddle much we got to see some amazing places. After a few days hanging out south we drove back up to Queenstown/Wanaka for a few more laps on the super fun Nevis. It was already lower but still really nice. After that we drove to Christchurch and flew to the North Island.

 

Right now I’m living in Okere Falls where I work and kayak everyday on the Kaituna. Warm water, amazing canyons and scenery, great friends and people to paddle with and super fun white water, overall a greta place to spend the summer. Super happy to be here and having lots of fun just hanging out and paddling daily.

Photos by Justin Venable

10
Jan

‘Merica, the Southern One

Ty Caldwell Rio Gol Gol Photo: Bernie Engleman

Ty Caldwell Rio Gol Gol Photo: Bernie Engleman 

 

 

Ty Boof to Swim Photo: Jon Clark
Ty Boof to Swim Photo: Jon Clark

It is coming up on two months that I have been traveling around Chile and what an unbelievable experience to say the least.  Since watching the first Demshitz videos of Chile, it has always been a dream of mine to visit this magnificent land of waterfalls and Chile is just that… magnificent.

Ty on La Princesa Photo: Eric Mount

Ty on La Princesa Photo: Eric Mount

 

While the whitewater is amazing, the culture of the Chilean people is what truly blew me away.  My first few weeks in Chile were occupied by homesteading just outside of Futaleufu. While I lived with a few Gringos, my only outside contact was that of rural Chileans.  Viewing their lifestyles was similar to traveling back in time 100 years.   It is truly amazing to see people living off of the land and tending to their livestock.  After chopping wood to cook breakfast on the on the wood stove, most of my days were filled with climbing over cattle fences to reach the Rio Futaleufu.  Oh man, what a river.  With strong winds, whirlpools, and waves/holes the size of cars this river is fierce, but oh so fun.  Kayaking can only get better with good places to fly fish on the trek downstream.  The Futa is home to some beautiful trout and gorgeous mountains.  Make sure not to only get views of the bottom of the river but also from the tops of the surrounding peaks.

 

Ty on top of the world Photo: Theresia Hinton

Ty on top of the world Photo: Theresia Hinton

After spending a few weeks in Futaleufu, I headed North to help assist in showing the NOC Youth Paddling Team around the Country.  Three very experienced paddlers from the Team made the flight down and spent their winter break in a warmer environment.  Upon their arrival we met up in San Fabian to set off on an overnighter on the Rio Nuble.  The overnighter ended on Christmas Eve where we were able to experience a traditional Chileans Christmas.  With the festivities over we headed south to Pucon.  David Hughes hosted us at the Pucon Kayak Hostel and we centralized ourselves for some amazing rivers.  Near Pucon we paddled the Rio Trancura, Palguin, Llancahue, Fuy, San Pedro, and even made it a bit further south to the Rio Gol Gol.  Each river is phenomenal in its own way.  After two weeks of paddling the guys headed home and I found my self back on a bus to Futaleufu.  Chile continues to amaze me each day and I now prepare to the next adventure of paddling from the Argentina border to the Pacific Ocean, crossing Chile in less than 24 hours.

Taylor and Bernie Brotraining Photo: Ty Caldwell

Taylor and Bernie Brotraining Photo: Ty Caldwell

Bernie on the Palguin Photo: Ty Caldwell

Bernie on the Palguin Photo: Ty Caldwell

Overnighter on the Rio Nuble Photo: Ty Caldwell

Overnighter on the Rio Nuble Photo: Ty Caldwell

Waking up Photo: Ty Caldwell

Waking up Photo: Ty Caldwell

Taylor Cofer on Rio Llancahue Photo: Ty Caldwell

Taylor Cofer on Rio Llancahue Photo: Ty Caldwell

Bernie checking out the cave Photo: Ty Caldwell

Bernie checking out the cave Photo: Ty Caldwell

Theresia at the Pacific Photo: Ty Caldwell

Theresia at the Pacific Photo: Ty Caldwell

 

Do yourself a favor and visit Chile, the adventures never end.

 

 

10
Jan

China’s Intense: Ch 1 Landslide

Here and there we are going to start putting together short stories about what makes kayaking in China never boring.

Enjoy Ch 1!

 

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