Saturday, November 26, 2005

Part II – The White Nile

Words and photos by: Karl Moser

The Nile is an incredible river that flows from the heart of town out into the Ugandan jungle. The river offers paddlers a mix of big water class V, ginormous waves, and fun creek lines. You can spend an entire season there and never get bored because of vast number of channels that create a near endless combination of rapids.

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Karl Moser keeping his bow dry. To check out more photos, click here


Most of my time was spent living on the tropical island paradise called “the Hairy Lemon.” This island is situated only five minutes downstream from one of the world’s greatest waves, the Nile Special. This wave is a super steep monster that is notorious for snapping paddles and paddler’s egos. In all I saw four paddles break in only a month, including my beloved AT2 which met it’s end at the hands of a violent donkey punch.

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Karl Moser hucking on Kalagala. To check out more photos, click here


At the end of my trip I got the chance to run the two of the largest rapids on the river, Itunda and Kalagala. Itunda is a long rapid where you have to make a river wide ferry through some very big holes. The best part is that the rapid is inaccessible from the shore, so you have to drive in to scout it and then come back the next day to run it.

Kalagala lies in the farthest channel over from Itunda but drains into the same lake. The rapid is basically a 20 foot pour-over that plugs into a massive hole. The line is fairly straight forward, but the consequences of not going deep enough… well, sometimes it’s better not to think about the consequences.

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Karl Moser goes big. To check out more photos, click here


Big thanks to Rayno from NRE rafting for showing me down the river and filming some of the bigger rapids.

For more info on the White Nile, or to plan your own trip, check out KayakTheNile.com

Up next: Part III – The Zambezi

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Argentina First Descents...

Words by Trip Jennings:

OK, here´s what I love most about kayaking. This is what keeps me smiling for days and fuels the addiction: pushing the limits. Either my limits, the limits of the sport, whatever. I´m not sure why, but running a waterfall that has never been run before that scares me, is my crack. To arrive at a drop, know that it´s ridiculous thing to attempt to run and that I might be better off staying in bed, yet at the same time, see the perfect line, know deep down inside that I can hit that line, and then do it...that´s adrenaline. That´s what gives me the satisfaction I feel for days afterwards. That´s what keeps me coming back every time.

This week LJ and I were lucky enough to have one of those days. At the end of the last No Big Names video, there was a drop featured called the Nilahue. It´s in one of the most beautiful valleys in the world, with huge unrunable waterfalls dropping in all over the place and super nice locals all around. I don´t remember much from the video except they didn´t run it and said they´d save this one for next time.

When we arrived, the river was roosting high. Maybe 10,000cfs. Huge. Many times the flow we saw in the No Big Names video. The drop itself had turned into a gnarling death trap where the NBN could have run it, but in the center the high water opened up a pretty intense line, that we called runnable. It was a 40 foot vertical drop into a transition of 6 feet deep exploding foam pile/landing pad. The landing pad had about a boat length and a half before falling off the final 30 feet of the drop. The line was to boof in the center of the river, transition on the soft but not so deep landing pad, become enveloped by the bottom drop and pop up on the right side of the pool to avoid the death cave on the left.

LJ and I both knew we were going to run it almost instantly when we saw it. Actually getting gear on, getting in your boat, and calming your nerves enough to huck a totally flat boof off of what is a 70 foot horizon line from the top, is a bit of a different story.

In the end we played rock, paper, scissors for who would go first. Whoever `won´ would get the first descent. LJ won, and I´ll never forget running safety from the bottom and watching his hull fall 40 feet before reconecting and dissapearing for at least 20 seconds. I´m pretty sure I held my breath the whole time, until he finally reappeared, rolling up and smiling. A few minutes later, I followed.

Now normally, I wouldn´t choose to boof anything over say...25 feet. This was a 40 foot boof. Very intimidating, but after extencive scouting we decided it was so areated it would be soft and we would dissapear of the ledge before we could even slow down. Paddling full speed up to the horizon and then boofing burned the image of my boat flat as a pancake with the valley, 70 feet below in the background. Quite a unique lip shot. As it turned out, it was so soft and fun, we both wanted to run it again I wasn´t even a bit sore the next day. Alas, it was late and the next big drop was calling...

Boof safely,
Trip