Friday 31 August 2012

Rio Santa Teresa


31/08/12


The Rio Santa Teresa is a tributary that flows into the Rio Urubamba at the town of Santa Teresa. We paddled a 10-15km section of this river to the confluence. It took a few hours and was continuous grade 3 read and run. A very pleasant run! Unfortunately no photos this time.

Thursday 30 August 2012

Rio Urubamba - Santa Teresa to Santa Maria

Mono, our Colombian kayaking friend
30/08/12

The section of whitewater between Santa Teresa and Santa Maria became one of our favourite day runs in Peru. A non stop roller coaster ride of continuous IV+ (V) that didn´t let up for 20km! We ran this section 4 times as read and run with no portages. What also makes the section particularly special is that part of the way down there are some hot springs where filthy kayakers can take a much needed bath!


Alby and Mono


Tom
Three Amigos Alex, Tom and Adam

Wednesday 29 August 2012

Cola de Mono

Cola de Mono campsite
For our final leg of the trip we were lucky enough to stay at Cola de Mono camping and Zip line, run by Peruvian kayaking legend Gian Marco Vellutino. We spent 10 days here and the campsite is ideally placed for kayaking different sections of the Urubamba and it's tributaries as well as visiting the great Inca ruins of Machu Picchu and Vilcabamba. If you are ever in Peru on a paddling trip you should definitely pay Cola de Mono a visit and paddle some of the fantastic rivers the area has to offer!

http://www.canopyperu.com/


The man himself - Gian Marco Vellutino

Monday 20 August 2012

Rio Colca - Lunar Canyon


The team paddling towards the impressive "Condor shower"

14/08/12 - 19/08/12

The Cañon del Colca is a stunning canyon which is beaten in depth only by its nearby cousin the Cotahuasi. Unlike the Cotahuasi the banks of the Colca are totally deserted and uninhabitted - even the Incas coundn´t muster the strength to build along it´s infertile and vertical walls. We found it a truly remote and exhilerating adventure through moonscape rock formations and azure blue waters.

Day 1-2

The Lunar Canyon section of the Colca took us 3 days to paddle and 3 days of transport to get to the put-in from Arequipa. The journey began with the team pilling into a bus from Arequipa at 2pm to Cabanaconde where we checked in to a hostel for the night. The following morning at the less sociable time of 5am we took a second bus to the town of Huambo. From Huambo the plan was to hire Burros (donkeys) to carry the boats down to the river.

Arriving in Huambo at 7am we where greeted off the bus by a group of Spanish kayakers with there tales of woe with regards to hiring donkeys to get to the river. They pointed us in the direction of their donkey driver in the hope he could aquire a few more and get us to the river with them. Unfortunately this was not possible and we spent a day wandering around town under intense negotiations to try and reach the river the following day. By evening there was still no confirmed plans so after checking into a hostel alarms where set early to get organised and leave Huambo the following day.

Alex in negotiations with a donkey man.

Huambo all became too much for Alby

Day 3

Awoken before the sun was up we were out and continuing our search for donkeys, within minutes we found the man used by our Spanish compardres! By the time the Sun was properly up over the surrounding mountain peaks plans where in place to take a truck to the end of the road before loading the boats onto donkeys and then trekking down to the river, all that was left to do was have breakfast! A dose of egg sandwiches and coffee later and we were ready to move.


Adam with Derek the Donkey

By 11am the donkeys were all loaded and the 6 hour trek down to the put-on hamlet of Canco could begin. The first km or so was nerve racking with boats falling off donkeys about every 100m. Eventually we refined our tieing-on technique and continued down the valley of the Rio Huambo which after 12km meets the Rio Colca. The scenery was stunning and the donkeys easily negotiated the difficult terrain with the boats - traversing scree slopes with precariously balanced kayaks on the back of tired donkeys above an almost shear 400m drop into the whitewater below was a testing experience.

Adam ensuring the donkeys went the right way

The view down to the river

We reached Canco at 5pm having decended a total of 2000m from Huambo and after a brief discussion with the locals headed to the aguas calientes (hot springs) in the river! The only access to the springs was via a rope bridge but getting into the hot springs, I say hot springs but perhaps "tepid eddies" is a better description after the day of stress in Huambo followed by the arduous trek was bliss!

Tom bravely crossing the river

A quick spot of male bonding in the hotsprings

Day 4

After the long couple of days the decision to have a lie in until 8 was made. However we were all woken during the night by rock falls down the face of the cliff on the opposite side of the river. At one point sitting up in the tents we could see sparks flying down as the rocks bounced into the river.

After a lesuirely start we were on to the clear blue waters of the Colca. The river started with pleasant grade 3 white water through massive cathedral like structures gouged out of the rock walls. After a few kilometers the Rio Mamacocha enters and the warm crystal clear waters and doubles the flow of the river. The rapids now start to pick up and the gorge opens slightly. Here we came across our first big rapid of the trip.

Tom leading the way

This rapid began with some nice grade 4+ boulder gardens before rounding a corner and forming 3 terminal looking holes up against a huge wall. Not knowing what lay in wait around the corner we all dropped into the first half of the rapid before jumping out to inspect round the corner. No one fancied the questionable line weaving through the huge holes on the second half of the rapid so we had a quick walk followed by lunch!

The team enjoying the first big rapid

Alby charging in

After lunch the gorge began to steepen up around the river and the rapids became fun read and run grade 4, giving out to some absolute gems within stunning surroundings.
 
Tim enjoying the fun!

Adam

The day ended when we found a nice grade 5 where the water dropped between some huge boulders, the left hand side held some slotty mess whereas the right had a nice clean toungue charging into a big curling wave. Alby, Alex and Tim elected to run the rapid in the evening, perhaps to avoid carrying their boats from the campsite in the morning, whilst Adam and Tom saved it for the following morning.

Tim barrelling down the last rapid of the day

Alby doing the same

Tim savouring a birthday cigar!

Day 5

This morning we awoke early to our morning gruel as we still had a lot of ground to cover in the canyon and after yesterday´s late start wanted to crack on. Sliding into the river from the campsite we were to discover a huge landslide had formed a massive grade 5 rapid, it looked fairly recent as there were still smaller pebbles on top of the boulders. After a good hard look and soul search everyone decided it was too early to attempt something this big so boats where shouldered, roped and dragged round.

Below the big rapid the river continued to give more classic read and run grade 4 for a few kilometers until the canyon opened up and we reached the spectacular condor shower. This is a water fall which crashes down the entire canyon wall, giving off nothing more than a fine spray at river level. We had been told that in the afternoon Condors fly through the spray using it like a shower! Unfortunately none made an apperance whilst we had a chocolate break on the rocks below. Past the condor shower the canyon again gorged up and the rapids came thick and fast. Before long the walls had become a chocolate brown colour and we were deep in the Chocolate Canyon.

Alex heading away from the siphon!

We stopped for lunch at a grade 5 rapid, although the line was not the hardest half the flow went under a rock and into a siphon on river right. Because of this only Alex stepped up to run the rapid the rest of us snuck past sheepishly on the bank!

Alex adding to the excitement of the rapid

As we continued through the canyon the walls really closed in into a steep sided gorge with the gradient picking up some rapids required bank scouting with everyone making their own desicions on what they wanted to paddle and walk.

A classic steeper rapid

Adam getting his gurn on

Finally the walls closed into an ominous looking gorge with a corner we could not see around, Adam snuck into an eddy and clambered out onto rocks and peered into the depths of "Reparaz" - the must portage siphon hell at the end of the Chocolate Canyon. Everyone jumped out in the last eddy and we started to pace the boats through the bouldery caves fromed by various landslides across the river.

Alby waiting for the boats

It took us about an hour to complete the portage and below it we were rewarded with the canyon opening out and soon found a sandy beach to set up camp on. Having been on the water by 8am and only stopping at 5pm this was our longest day on the river and everyone was excited about the dinner of pasta, sausage with tomato sauce!

Day 6

This would be our third day on the water and we awoke to find everything covered in dew. The stove was lit and we sat with coffee waiting for the sun to get up and dry out thermals for the day´s adventure. With everything packed away the team was on the water by 9am. After a few kilometers of grade 3 warm up we rounded a corner to discover a steep walled gorge with another ominous horizon line. This was Poles Canyon - eddying out we discovered an unrunable boulder jumble with no way to portage from our current position but a promising looking ledge on the opposite side of the river. A must make ferry to a small eddy on river right and we were underway roping the boats up the vertical cliff to the ledge before carrying them down to an even smaller eddy above an unscoutable must run grade 4 drop.

The portage in full swing

Unfortunately Tim had an explosive bowel movement midway through the portage and then had a tactical chunder in the eddy above the must run rapid! He made the line and everything was fine.

Tom and Alby enjoy the must run drop at the end of Poles Canyon

After the portage the gorge again opened up and the river contined with beautiful rapids in stunning scenery down to the confluence with the Río Andamayo. From here down to the take out village of La Central was, for me, some of the best read and run grade 3/4 rapids so far on the trip!

The canyon walls open out

Arriving in La Central we luckily managed to grab a lift from a cattle wagon from the river bank up to the main road. From there we flagged down a local combi who took us to the larger town of Aplao, 30 minutes drive away, from where we caught a 4 hour bus back to Arequipa.

Typical Peruvian transport with the gringo Kayakistas

Friday 10 August 2012

Rio Cotahuasi

The team amongst Inca ruins deep in the canyon
05/08/12 - 10/08/12

The Rio Cotahuasi flows through the deepest canyon in the world and offers a phenomenomal kayaking expedition experience. Great whitewater with historic Inca ruins. From Arequipa the whole trip took us 6 days - 2 days of travelling and 4 days of kayaking.

Day 1-2


We got the interestingly named "Immaculate Conception" bus from Arequipa to the town of Cotahuasi, leaving at 4.30 in the afternoon and arriving a full 12 hours later at 4 in the morning. The boats were not able to come on the same bus as us and had to come on a seperate cargo transport. This created some confusion as Tom´s boat did not arrive with the rest of ours! After a worrying few hours it transpired that his boat was stuck in the Cotahuasi bus depot and we were reunited.

A few hours sleep in the square and a breakfast of "pan con huevo" later we continued our journey down the valley to the put-on village of Vellinga (where the road ends) in a pick-up truck which we hired in town.

Kayakista tramps

Alby letting the girls in on his little secret
On the way to Vellinga we made a quick detour to visit the spectacular 150 metre Sipia waterfall.

Contemplating Sipia falls
Once at Vellinga we carried our boats the 100 metres or so down town to the river. By this time it was 4 o´clock so we paddled a kilometre downstream to find a nice beach to camp for the night.

Day 3

Alby on a typical Cotahuasi rapid
A great first day of paddling in which we covered approximately 20 km. The first 5 km started out as grade 3 read and run, progressing to grade 4 read and run later in the day. We inspected and ran a few harder grade 4/4+ rapids. After a lunch of tuna and pittas we paddled the first named rapid - "The Wall" a long rapid against a left hand wall with a tricky boof half way down.

Alex between a rock and a hard place
Adam


Tim
Alby
Tom boofing the "Wall" rapid
Tim posing for Typhoon´s next drysuit catalogue at the camp on day3

We set up camp above a hard grade 5 rapid which none of the team decided to run and quickly relaxed into the multiday routine of pasta and sausage in tomato sauce before an early bed at 7 o´clock under the stars! To save weight we opted to only take the tent inners and leave the pegs, poles and flysheet in Arequipa - this proved to be a good decision as the moscas (flys) were relentless and the night was warm.

Day 4

This was the best day of paddling on the trip. The day started with several hours of high quality grade 4/4+ read and run rapids until we reached a long technical rapid called "Marpa". The rapid was perhaps 200m long with a number of must make moves and a sweet boof half way down. Alex and Adam elected to paddle the whole rapid with the rest of the team putting in half way down. The final drop catapulted the paddler into an impressive walled in gorge, which three of the team rolled on!

Adam paddling "Marpa" one of the best rapids on the trip
Alex on "Marpa"
After lunch we reached "Metre Canyon" and "Centimetre Canyon". Each of these rapids are given their name as the river passes through a narrow slot at the end of the rapid. Metre Canyon was particularly impressive as it was lined with ancient Inca ruins which the team had a careful peek at.

Metre Canyon
The canyon´s walls started to open out slightly and we began to see sparsley spaced houses with vineyards now growing on the ancient terraces. The wine made from the grapes of the Cotahuasi canyon is a local speciality. A roaring fire fuelled evening was enjoyed before another early night.

Day 5

Today was also packed with lots of great grade 4 read and run, with 3 (runnable) portages. We spent a while looking at the rapid called "High side for your life", but in the end decided to walk it. All the portages involved some interesting seal launches back into the river!

Walled in gorges are a feature of the river
High side for your life

At lunch time we reached the confluence with the Rio Maran which signalled the end of the seroius whitewater. Ahead of us lay 70 km of grade 2-3 on the Rio Ocoña to the take-out town of Iquipi. Here we faced a strong head wind blowing up the valley, which made the paddling particularly arduous.

The confluence with the Rio Maran
Our final camp on the banks of the Ocoña
Day 6

A full day of paddling and a 1km walk out across farmers fields saw us reach the small fishing town of Iquipi mid afternoon. We travelled the bumpy road along the remainder of the valley to Camana in a local bus which took us 4 hours. After some time was spent hunting down a bus to Arequipa we ended up getting a ride in a brand new Mercedes Sprinter still with the new car smell and an owner who fancied making a quick buck. With boats and all stuffed in we made it back to Arequipa at 3am!