Saturday, September 18, 2010

Extended Park Boundary and Park Boundary_Kweah River (IV~V)

In the early July of 2010, my son Ken-ya and I had a great opportunity to run the extended park boundary and park boundary run of Kweah river with Albert Sticker, Konrad Pehl, Albert's friends Jeff Gymer and Sean Sangree. Jeff and Sean guided us. We got to know Bill Pooley who is a friend of Jeff and Sean and who is the author of "The Kweah River Page. Bill has been spending his passion into everything about Kweah River. The Kweah River Page is awesome! and covers all information, river flow, weather, water temperature, and of course, river guide, etc. His house is located on Hwy 198 and a part of his backyard is a wonderful beach of the river. Thanks to Bill, we had a great camping experience there. Huge thank Bill for his hospitality. We definitely want to visit him again and paddle together next time.

Extended park boundary run is a 0.5 mi long stretch and Park boundary run is 0.6 mile. Both are very steep and continuous and have 190~200 fpm gradient with classIV~V difficulty depending on the flow. In our three times run, flows changed a little in a range between 5.25 feet and 5.45~5.5 feet, but the difficulty changed a lot. When we ran, they were rated classIV+ (with two V-). Because they are short runs, people do the two stretches three times a day. Kenya and I joined the group after others had done once, so we ran both runs twice on the first day and once on the following day.

Shown is the dreamflows flow at Three Rivers that is located several miles downstream than the gauge at Park Boundary, just west of the entrance of Sequoia National Park and the end of the Park Boundary run. The gauge indicated 5.3 feet at 14:00 (7.11.2010), 5.25 feet at 18:00 (7.10.10), 5.45~5.50 feet at 11:30 (July 11,2010), which would be 840 cfs, 800 cfs, 960 cfs at Three rivers, respectively, when they were added flow from East fork of Kweah and reached Three rivers.



The put-in of both the Extended Park Boundary run and Park boundary run is located inside the Sequoia National Park, because of which entrance fee is required. Kenya hiking to the putin of of the Extended Park Boundary run. It's about quarter mile long, no hike up, not bad at all.


The river view from the hiking trail.


Upstream view (Ash Mountain run, V~V+) from the putin. A big drop is seen.


"Double Bubble" the Put-In drop (IV+) seen from downstream


Jeff running the Double Bubble.




Korand Pehl running No name rapids (III+)


Albert Sticker running No name rapids (III+)




The upper Slalom (IV).


A video for the Upper Slalom and Slalom rapids. At gauge 5.45/5.50 feet high, it's rated V-. Video was taken at gauge 5.3 feet.

video

Kenya ran the Slalom. He hand-paddled in the mid-last part of this rapid, but not intentionally. Here is the "Boater and Kweah News" from The Kweah River page

# 07-11-10 The Extended Boundary saw many runs in the last three days. Your webmaster entertained guests Masa San and Kenya San from Sacramento. Kenya San at thirteen years old demonstartated himself as a solid Class 4+ boater with 4 runs on the Extended Boundary at levels of 5.20 feet to 5.45 feet on the Boundary gauge. He can be seen coming through the Chute at the completion of his Extended Boundary run on Saturday as Picture fo The Day. Not only is Kenya the youngest ever to run the difficult Extended Boundary but his run at 5.45 feet is a very stout level at the high end of the normally runnable range. Kenya sports a bulletproof hand roll on both sides that he used when a hole depaddled him and he hand rolled up out of the hole, ran the next drop hand paddling, and reteived his paddle no problem. Impressive! Watch for this youngster up on Hospital Rock someday as soon as Dad gives him the OK.


The upper part of the Slalom.


The middle part of Slalom


Jeff running the Upper Slalom (gauge 5.3)










Jeff running the Slalom (gauge 5.3)
















The exit of the Slalom from downstream


The Dam (IV), which is still inside of the National Park and the putin for the Park boundary run.




Jeff entering No.11 rapid (VI~IV+ difficulty, V consequence) that has the ugly undercut hazard on the river right.










On the right of Jeff, there is the undercut hazard. Bill says that many people had problems there. I ran this rapid at gauge 5.45/5.5 and had no problem.





After the No.11 rapid, there are several III~IV+ rapids. At the Dinely bridge on Hwy 190, there are no parking space for takeout. We got into Gateway run and kept padding to the Bill's backyard. Kenya running the Chute (IV). Photo by Bill Pooley.
This image is copied from "The picture of the day" at The Kweah River Page.


Kenya swimming in the pool below the Chute.



Takeout. Photo by web camera that is linked to The Kweah River page This camera shoots images every hour.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Giant Gap_NF_American (IV~V)_updated

Giant Gap is more upstream than Chamberlain falls (IV) run at North fork of American river. Its difficulty is class IV+ with three classVish rapids and it has ~120 fpm gradient at mile ~4 and 100 fpm at mile ~6. Despite we need to hike down for 1.5 miles and it has long streach (14.5 miles, long flat water in the late half), I love this run and do it for a few times a year. Usually, I spend 4 ~ 4.5 hours on the river including lunch time. I have done this run when flow was 825 ~1,250 cfs, but I think the flow below 900 cfs makes some lines more difficult, so 1,000 cfs is the optimal flow. In this blog, pictures taken on different days are shown. In 2010, my son, Kenya, 13 years old, has grown up big enough for dragging his boat down to the putin, I took him there. One of my dream has come true, since I started teaching him whitewater kayaking. More info is available at American River North Fork Giant Gap.

Hiking for 1.5 miles to the Euchre Bar putin bridge. No hike up, so it is not bad at all.


The trailhead.




Kenya, Dan (behind Kenya) and I ran it on that day at 1,000 cfs


Upstream view from Euchre bar bridge.


Kenya's favorite is Jumping into water and swimming.


Goggle is his essential gear to play with fish.






Nice waterfall behind Bruce Farrenkopf


Dan Sadowski and Kenya, maybe at mile ~1


Giant Gap canyon begins after mile 2.


Greater (IV+) at mile 2.6


Greater.


Nut Crucker (V-) at mile 3.1


Nut Crucker (V-)


Larry Horne entering Locomotive Falls (IV ~V-), easy entry with high consequence. The hole is extremely sticky.


Michael Quirk running Locomotive falls.


Entire view of Locomotive falls from downstream


Unknown rapid (IV) in the gorge.


Unknown rapid (IV) in the gorge. Far right has undercut danger, so I recently run it in the river left.


Go Chute (IV) in the river right.




Dominatortrix (IV)


Dominator (V- ~ V) at mile 5.1. The hardest rapid on the run.





David Greenleaf running the last part of Dominater rapid.


Larry Horne running the same.




Dan, nice boof!


Kenya portaged the upper section of this rapid, running the last part.


Unknown rapid (IV ~IV+) below Dominater.


Larry running second unknown rapid (IV ~IV+) below Dominater.


Kenya running second unknown rapid (IV ~IV+) below Dominater.


Lunch spot at mile 5.5 where Canyon Creek enters.






Last rapid (IV) at nearly takeout.


In that canyon, NF runs!