A River Runs Through it


A view that would overwhelm a painter. Stephen Greenfield replied, “Photography can't do it justice either. More than any place I've seen, the Grand Canyon requires 3D, to appreciate the immensity of the space.” After a few years of waiting on a list to even get the opportunity to go on this special once in a lifetime, trip, we were able to get on with this very special expedition of the Colorado River organized by Beverly Price of Phoenix. It would be her 11th organized trip and her probably last such adventure, she is retiring and so, unless someone takes up the mantle of organizing this, this near annual event may end. It was a trip those other rafter also down on the river last week on other trips that ran into us will be talking about for years maybe more so than their own trip and it wasn't to see Olaf. It should also be noted that 2019 is the 100th Anniversary of the formation of the Grand Canyon National Park, a park the US government has tried repeatedly to destroy by placing dams as recently as a few decades ago and as recently as last year, someone tried to convince the Navajo Nation to allow a cable car and restaurant to be built at the mouth of the Little Colorado River which would be almost as toxic as the building of the Glen Canyon Dam. This trip was to both celebrate the 100 years of the park and Bev’s ideals of what you should wear or not wear on a rafting adventure, and it was this that made the trip extra special. For my efforts, I earned a cute t-shirt, made new friends, and and fell in love with a place I had only seen from the top. We also tested sunscreen, and it was really good sunscreen. Later, we made a pilot laugh flying in, and got cheers from passing rafts all in a sense of wonderment, and some from Australia, I think were envious, but then again those from "down under" are more open minded. The trip started in Vegas and it ended in Vegas. It was a gamble of a different type. I have never been to Las Vegas before one of just three major US cities I've never been to, New York, Jacksonville FL, and Vegas. I can't say that any more, I'm down to 2. We met the group and got organized. Silja and I took in two shows of Cirque du Soleil. One featured very skimpy clothing while they spun around, and the other, well, the other, they had even less on, what is less than "skimpy"? This would set the tone for the trip. I took Leroy the penguin to see Hoover Dam, I can't show you the picture later from Arizona.



Now mind you this was not a trip for everyone as you might guess, but for different reasons. In fact, floating this part of the Colorado is not for the meek. There are serious rapids, and just following the Park rules makes for quite a hardship for some. Bodily functions seem to freak people out. Dave even told stories about it. You cannot be shy about the body on these trips. First, urination is only in the river., men and women, if you go on the sand, it smells like a cat box soon enough. "The solution for pollution is dilution." A least that is what Dave said. Special toilets are set up at the edges of camp for other bodily waste that are quite open, only this last one had any cover at all.

Toilets with a view, and sometimes like this one directly next to or below my cot. Showers or baths are in the cold river, and it is unbearably hot outside, peaking at 107 the last day. Luckily we did not have any freak storms which are historically ferocious. We slept under the stars, with camp sites separated by rocks, a few ants or less, but at least off the ground on a cot and generally were in the sight of everyone and everything but the 13 women, 16 men, and three guides on this trip were not shy, in fact, we were the opposite of shy. Honestly, I’m not sure how the other groups do it. Like I said, we were testing sunscreen and well, it worked well, 8 days in hot sun on a river with nothing between me and the sun but just this sunscreen and I have a nice light tan, and no burns, nothing even red. The trip details, we had two rafts built out of surplus army bridging supplies, and we went 187.4 miles. The canyon was literally overwhelming both in scope and terrain. The group really meshed and was the most together group I've ever been with on an adventure. In some respects, we had to be, but everyone noticed this and that was the real highlight of the trip. The couples were all cool, adjusted and calm, there was no fights, no nothing but pure enjoyment of the outdoors and we worked as a team to get the gear moved and made sure no one got left behind. Sadly after it all, the food, the rapids, the hikes, the laughs, the hugs, the "duffel lines" to move gear, we dressed the final morning at dawn and waited for a helicopter to take us to Bar Ten Ranch


We then boarded three planes from the ranch to take us back to Boulder City and then home

Sights:Certainly other people took better photos, and not having the releases myself, I am careful of what views of people to include on these but the views are stunning. Someday I'll get the official trip pictures and I may share some of them, and again, you might have to read the book to get the full story.

















Butterflies:












I also had a mouse in my shoe, that was unphotographed
So that is it, a crazy and fulfilling trip, tiring and exhilarating. We got some sun, some birds, and we got wet, very wet. It was something we will always remember. It was the seeds of paradise, a flavor and a trip for the ages that I hope, hope others get to go on at least do the regular river rafting adventure.
Published on June 15, 2019 09:03
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