Trip dropping Metlako Falls, Oregon
Photo courtesty of Epicocity
Boaters have been dropping waterfalls since the 1980s, setting
the bar for biggest in Norway, Mexico and a few times in Canada.
But in Oregon, where it's wet and steep to say the least, the
record has been set and reset three times in the last eight years.
Shannon Carroll made a first descent of Sahali Falls, a 70 to 80
foot rolling beast that is rumored to have rocks at the bottom, in
1998. Then 16-year old Pat Keller "fell" the 75 feet off Koosah
Falls to set the junior world record. Most recently Dave Grove
dropped off Eagle Creek's Metlako Falls to claim the prestigious,
if somewhat odd title of the person to run the highest waterfall in
a kayak cleanly.
These falls have become, for Trip Jennings of the Epicocity
Project (EP), the Triple Crown of kayaking waterfalls. This last
weekend Trip decided to run the Oregon trifecta just outside of
Hood River, where the infamous Little White Salmon, the Green Truss
and Eagle Creek plummet into the slumbering Columbia River. It was
Metlako Falls, the tallest and most intimidating of the drops, that
Trip would tackle first in his quest for waterfall glory.
"I'm stoked. It was definitely the biggest hurdle of the three,"
Trip said.
Running big waterfalls is Trip's signature in the kayaking
industry. Over the last year and a half of filming for EP's latest
video, Mission: Epicocity, he and his crew have logged footage and
first descents of nearly a dozen waterfalls, flirting with drops at
or above the 70-foot mark. The crew has traveled throughout South,
Central and North America. So it's somewhat ironic that these three
monsters are in Trip's backyard. Despite his hopes, Trip knew it
would take a rare combination of skill, knowledge and confidence to
safely run more of the biggest waterfalls ever run in a kayak. To
do it, he's have to conjure the right headspace over the preceding
week.
"I'm not some crazy idiot trying to set records or pin
waterfalls on my wall like heads of animals. This is just a
challenge that I'm ready to take," Trip said.
Based out of Eugene, Oregon, Trip has gawked at the big three
for five years, but has not run any of them. Koosah and Sahali are
less than a mile apart and about an hour and a half from Eugene.
Both drops are roadside, with easy access. Even though Metlako
Falls on Eagle Creek takes a bit harder to access, it is still
pretty easy, requiring only a three-mile hike on a well-used
footpath, compliments of the US Forest Service.
The trail straddles the ridge south of Eagle Creek as it
meanders through old growth Doug Fir and past bands of broken
basalt cliffs. Metlako, despite its size and beauty, is not a main
attraction on the trail because of the challenge of building a safe
viewing platform across from it. Below the drop, Eagle Creek has
notched a hundred foot deep slot canyon between two of Mt. Hood's
foothills. The canyon makes filming, shooting stills, setting
safety and getting out once Metlako is run a task complicated by
rappels, ascenders and the thick moss and vegetation that comprises
Oregon's perpetually damp forests.
"Metlako is one of the most beautiful places I've been. Tons of
people walk by it everyday, but few know it's there. It's so cool
to think that I stood on a bank that only one other person has
probably ever stood on," Trip said.
He put in about a half-mile upstream. The paddle down to Metlako
included running 30-foot Punchbowl Falls and soloing through some
class IV before eddying out in front of a horizon line that sucked
water surprisingly calmly over a waterfall well over 80 feet tall.
Trip got out and scouted again. The roar of the falls is less than
many other drops of its size, but impressive nonetheless. Andy
Maser and Lane Jacobs prepped for stills and video around Metlako's
high-browed amphitheater while Karl Moser set safety creek-side
just beneath the drop. From below Karl watched while Trip walked
tentatively to the edge of the falls and peered over. Trip watched
the water exploding below then followed with his eyes his desired
line to the fold in the lip he would try to bury his bow into. He
then made eye contact with Karl, and flashed a thumbs-up before
disappearing from the lip. Karl prepped the camera and laid out his
throw rope. Trip walked to his boat, adjusted his helmet and
splashed a handful of water into his face.
"I felt really clear, really clean above the drop. I just felt
ready. It was a drop I had waited to do for so long because it
looked perfect. The lip was clean, it had the right amount of flow
and I felt confident," Trip said later.
He rehearsed paddle strokes. A peel out into the eddy, a soft
left stroke, a long pause, then tuck. Trip went through the process
three times before looking to Lane, then Andy and flashing the
thumbs-up.
"I was definitely nervous. It's kind of crazy to watch your
friend kicking it above the eddy of a really big drop, especially
knowing that in the next few minutes he's about to run it," said
Andy Maser.
Trip pushed his boat from the rocks surrounding the eddy and
took a left stroke into a soft current, then waited, the blade of
his left paddle erect in the water, for the current to bring him
slowly to the lip. It wasn't until feet above the lip that the
water began to aggressively pull the boat downward. As his bow dip
Trip followed though with his stroke and shifted his weight
slightly to his bow. An natural movement that takes precise timing,
but if it is done correctly it would set his weight for an easy
transition into the desired tight body position that large
waterfalls are run in.
"I counted to one and a half seconds before I tucked. I knew
that if I tucked too soon I would pitch pole and that wasn't
something I was prepared to do," Trip said.
Time slowed down for Lane, Karl and Andy when Trip hit the
water. Their eyes searched the boils for anything solid. They saw
the paddle Trip had intentionally released launch from the boil
like a cork from champagne. They strained their eyes; then the boat
surfaced. The line had looked clean and Trip hand rolled. He pumped
his fists, stoked, a perfect line.
"I did exactly what I needed. I hit the line where I wanted to,
tucked when I needed to and the impact was softer than I would have
ever thought a low water 80-foot plus waterfall would have been.
Now I've got two more to do," Trip said.
That was last weekend. Now Trip is thinking of the frigid water
plunging over the grand ledges high up on the McKenzie River. This
weekend, he plans to finish up Oregon's waterfall Triple Crown.
There's only Sahali, Koosah, 150 feet and the challenge of
maintaining proper headspace left between Trip and accomplishing
his goal. For more information, or to check out video of the
waterfalls, go to Epicocity.com.