Saturday, November 30, 2024

Pearce Ferry Rapid 2003 to 2024

 

Pearce Ferry Rapid November 29, 2024 courtesy Tom Martin

I put together a 12 minute video showing pics of Pearce Ferry Rapid from 2003 to 2024. Here's the link to Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/1035697861
 
You have to wait till almost the very end to see Jonah Shaw run it in his kayak!
 
Here's the Blurb for the film: Before the construction of Hoover Dam, no rapid existed at Pearce Ferry. After the reservoir filled behind the dam and made Lake Mead, there was no rapid at Pearce Ferry. As covered in the book Dock Marston, Vol 1, the reservoir dropped low enough in 1952 that a rapid formed where today's Pearce Ferry Rapid is. The reservoir rose again in 1953 and no rapid existed until 2003. Between 2003 and 2024, the reservoir has dropped. Just like in the early 1950s, the Colorado River started cutting down into the reservoir sediments roughly 1/4 mile south of the pre-dam channel. The new river cut through a low pass and Pearce Ferry Rapid was formed again. These images and film clips show the latest iteration of Pearce Ferry Rapid between 2003 and 2024. 
 
Thanks to Dulce Wassil for the suggestion to do this.
Enjoy, Tom

Saturday, November 2, 2024

November Colorado River History Dates

Photo of Stone party lining 25 Mile Rapid in Marble Canyon October 30, 1909, courtesy The Huntington Library.

 

November Colorado River History Dates
 
November 1, 1907 - Charles Russell and Ed Monett say goodbye to Bert Loper at the Stanton Dredge in Glen Canyon. Russell and Monett start slowly for Lee’s Ferry panning the various bars while Loper heads upriver to Hite for camera repairs with plans to join the other two by November 21, but not later than December 1 at Lee’s Ferry.
 
November 2, 1909 – The Stone party is “busier than ants on a hot rock” as dunnage is portaged 300 yards around Hance Rapid and reloaded at the beach below.
 
November 3, 1951 – Bert Lauzon passes away in the Grand Canyon Hospital. After his river trip with the Kolb brothers, Bert joined the staff of the National Park Service at the South Rim.
 
November 4, 1938 – Buzz Holmstrom, Amos Burg, Willis Johnson, the first wooden boat to run Grand Canyon twice, and the first rubber raft to run Grand Canyon at all, nose out of the current at noon and camp at Pearce’s Ferry.
 
November 5, 1952 – Immediately after Barry Goldwater’s Senate win, Otis “Dock” Marston writes his friend Goldwater “Orchids Senator. Now that the campaign is over we can put the mud back in the River where it belongs.”
 
November 6, 1960 – Lewis Ransom Freeman, boatman on the 1923 USGS river trip, passes away. In a most unusual series of events later that year, Dock Marston saves Freeman’s photos from a quick trip to the dump.
 
November 7, 1960 - The San Francisco Examiner reviews the latest Disney film, Ten Who Dared. The reviewer notes there are four or five scenes of true excitement, an equal number of superb scenic shots, and the rest “laden with meaningless trivia.”
 
November 8, 1909 - Otter tracks are seen at Fossil Creek Rapid, but Nathaniel Galloway’s resources and stealth are insufficient to find the game.
 
November 9, 1948 – Grand Canyon National Park Superintendent Harold Bryant writes Dock Marston in a classic understatement that “you are putting in some good study of problems – something that has been lacking heretofore. Our problem apparently will be to select those who have the proper preparation and equipment, but that is not going to be easy.”
 
November 10, 1947 – In his reply to R. D. Smith’s request for a permit to boat through Grand Canyon, Acting Superintendent Lon Garrison writes Smith that “Frankly, we wish to discourage ventures such as you propose. It is extremely dangerous and the record of fatalities from such trips should set as a strong deterrent. The trip has been made so many times that nothing of scientific value could be gained from another expedition; it is simply a dangerous stunt.”
 
November 11, 1879 - Rexford Clyde La Rue is born in Riverside California. No matter that his father, brother and most everyone else in the family calls him Rex, given that dogs are called Rex, he changes his name from Rexford to Eugene.
 
November 12, 1928 - Several people wave to the tiny sweep scow from the highway bridge then under construction as the scow floats by far below. Four days put the Hydes at the Little Colorado River on Monday, November 12, 1928.
 
November 13, 1937 – Buzz Holmstrom lets Emery Kolb row his boat from the mouth of Bright Angel Creek to Pipe Creek. Kolb thinks the boat is very good and is surprised at the little water that is shipped.
 
November 14, 1911 - Twenty rapids are tallied by the Kolb brothers on this day with a stop at Nankoweap for lunch. The fine water patterns put the Little Colorado behind them at 3:00 p.m., and by 4:15 p.m. they are beyond the Tanner Trail. Camp is on the right near Unkar Rapid, at 72 Mile.
 
November 15, 1909 - Shimmering light filling the alcoves on this clear, quiet morning stir Julius Stone’s emotions, but Nat Galloway reserves his elation for 10:20 a.m., when they cross the majestic fault of the Grand Wash Cliffs and exit Grand Canyon
 
November 16, 1928 - The Hydes register at the uncompleted Phantom Ranch where they meet Adolph Gilbert Sutro, a young San Francisco financier. They grant his request to ride to Hermit Creek with them in their sweep scow.
 
November 17, 1911 - Scheduling their arrival to give the trail riders a treat, the Kolb brothers row to Pipe Creek and the bewhiskered brothers then walk to the rim.
 
November 18, 1946 - Acting National Park Service Director Hillory Tolson notifies all National Parks of “the two parties who floated down the Colorado River from Parashant Wash, Arizona.... That... trip... was clearly prohibited by section 2.54 of the General Rules and Regulations, which prohibit the placing of any privately owned boat, canoe, raft, or other floating craft upon the waters of any park or monument without a permit from the superintendent.”
 
November 19, 1907 - Twenty-five miles above Lee’s Ferry, Monett marks his name and the date, November 19, in a shallow cave on the right bank. He and Russell climb out of Glen Canyon to view the surrounding country and reach Lee’s Ferry on November 21, 1907, the day Loper is to meet them at the Ferry.
 
November 20, 1937 - A gray-blue boat rhythmically oared by a bearded compact husky man in a red hat and collarless kapok preserver appears upstream. “There’s Buzz” shouts one of the Cal Tech river trip participants. This is the first recorded meeting of two river trips in Grand Canyon.
 
November 21, 1921 - The Chenoweth party runs a level line thirty-one miles up the Escalante River and camps under what will be named Gregory Bridge.
 
November 22, 1915 – Leslie Clement, Charlie Russell, and August Tadje work a 500-pound steel boat down the Bright Angel Trail. In The Devil’s Corkscrew below Indian Gardens, the craft makes every effort to drop over the precipice at the edge of the trail. The new hull arrives at the river on this date after a seven-day ordeal.
 
November 23, 1846 - W. H. Emory reports the Colorado River below Yuma will always be navigable for steamboats.
 
November 24, 1918 – The Tombstone Epitaph runs a story titled “Grand Canyon At Last To Be A National Park.”
 
November 25, 1953 – Leslie Jones launches a canvas-decked Penn Yan Kingfisher canoe named Honey The Rapids Queen on a solo canoe trip from Lees Ferry heading to Phantom Ranch on a flow of 7,660 cfs.
 
November 26, 1955 - The Trustees for Conservation is formed. Based in San Francisco, Ansel Adams is the president, Wallace Stegner serves as one of three vice-presidents, and there are twenty Trustees including Horace Albright, Francis Farquhar, Wilderness Society executive secretary Howard Zahniser, and Dock Marston.
 
November 27, 1889 – The Stanton Expedition leaves Green River, UT, headed for the Colorado River at Cresent Creek near Hite, UT. Two horses haul each of the three boats, while a two-horse team and a four-horse team of prairie schooners transport the supplies and equipment over roads that are “four spokes deep.”
 
November 28, 1956 – Dock Martson writes Bill Beer a long letter full of details about how to attempt an up-run of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon.
 
November 29, 1919 – The Mohave County Miner runs a story titled “Will Complete Dam Project Survey” in which it is reported that “a party of government engineers will soon be in the Boulder Canyon country completing the survey of the big dam project.”
 
November 30, 1928 – Dock Marston’s research leads him to the conclusion that this is the day Glen and Bessie Hyde’s sweep scow collides with the rocks in the wave train of 232 Mile Rapid.
 
Ps... Yes, this post is a challenge to see if I can find a Colorado River Basin fact for every day of June... Done! If you like this sort of stuff you will enjoy reading the 4 e-book series Dock Marston: The Colorado River Historian Volume 1 on Amazon Kindle or the hardback book at Vishnu Temple Press.