A Grand Canyon river trip is no ordinary experience. From Lee’s Ferry to Lake Mead is a distance of 280 miles, and there are close to 100 named rapids along the route, many of them serious business for even the most experienced river runners. The scenery is beyond breathtaking, and constantly changing.  There are magical side canyons accessible only from the river.  There are Desert Bighorn sheep, deer, mountain lions, eagles,  and ravens so darned smart they’ll unzip the zippers on an unattended pack to steal any food or shiny things they might find within.  On a motorized raft, the trip takes eight days, and without the motor, as many as fourteen.  So that’s a week, possibly two weeks in the purest wilderness, with no phones (yikes), no television, no showers.  At night, the sky is so clear you’ll actually see the milky way. It’s like traveling in another world, completely disconnected from your normal routine, and it’s that disconnect, and the very real sense of grand adventure, that inspires so many people to categorize these river trips as “life changing”.

Before taking my own river trip, I studied up.  I read everything I could find on websites, I looked at pictures, watched video clips, talked to friends who had done it before, and after all that, I figured I knew what to expect.  Not so, as I discovered.  When I was actually out there on the river, I was constantly surprised, usually for the better, and when the trip concluded, I was determined to write about it, in a way that would truly describe it to someone who has never been there, to someone who may never get an opportunity to see it for themselves.  I’d taken over a thousand pictures, and I wanted to string those together and create a comprehensive multimedia journal to document my journey down the Colorado. This post is the first in a series of nine, one for each day, ending with a finale, and each of the nine posts links to an associated gallery of photographs.

This blog is new, and it will grow.  I have many adventures planned in the next few years, and the blog will document all of them.  This story of my Grand Canyon journey will be the first of a much larger series, and that’s fitting, in many ways.

Click image above for a complete list of named rapids in the Grand Canyon; Photo courtesy of Crateinc.com

THE BEGINNING:

Rafting the Grand Canyon was never one of my dream adventures.  It’s always been on my bucket list, sure, but it wasn’t in the top ten. Not even in the top twenty–mostly because it’s so darned expensive, and because the notion of risking my neck in dangerous rapids didn’t exactly tantalize me.  So, when my friend Rick approached me, in the spring of 2012, and asked me if I’d be interested in signing up for a river trip he was organizing, I surprised the heck out of myself by not turning him down. There was a voice in my head whispering, “why the hell not?”, so instead of saying “No”, I said,  “When?”

“June of next year,” was the reply.  More than a year away?  I have trouble planning ahead for the weekend, much less planning an elaborate trip a whole year ahead of time, but my friend pressed me.  “If I can sign up enough people,” he said, “we’ll get a group rate, a terrific discount, and by planning it now, we’ll be going at the absolute best time of year.”  He knew these things, as he explained, because this was going to be his third river trip, and he had the inside track.

“How much?” I asked.  And he told me.  It was a lot, of course, but I was still intrigued.

“If you want to go,” he urged, “you’ll need to put up a $300 deposit before the end of this month.  And the balance by March 1st, 90 days in advance of our launch date.”

“Let me think about it,” I countered.

“Don’t think too long,” he said, “or you’ll miss out.” He gave me a link to the website of the rafting company–CRATE, Colorado River And Trail Expeditions.  “They’re the best”, Rick said.  “If you decide to go, I can guarantee you won’t be sorry.  My first river trip was the most amazing thing I’ve ever done.  The second trip was even better.  I can hardly wait to get back out there again.”

I did my research, I really liked what I saw, and, long story short, I wrote out the check for the deposit.  March 1st was still a long way off, so I tucked the notion of a rafting trip into the back of my brain and went on about my business.  Time flew, as time tends to do, and when I received notice that the balance was suddenly payable in full, it actually caught me by surprise.  “Whoa,” I said, looking at the invoice.  “That’s a lot of money!”  Was I having second thoughts?  I checked the CRATE website again, looked at the amazing pictures, read the testimonials.  “Life changing” was a recurring theme.  So the answer was: no! I was not having second thoughts! I wrote out the other, much bigger check, signed all the paperwork, and formally booked my place on the raft, leaving from Lee’s Ferry on the 1st of June, just 90 days away.  At that point I was committed, and I started getting excited about it.  “I’m really doing this thing!” I said to myself.  “Damn!  This is going to be great!”

When the day arrived, I was ready.  I’d been to the sporting goods store, bought a floppy hat and the right kind of outerwear and waterproof shoes.  I’d bought a waterproof camera as a backup to my big Nikon, something I could use even with waves crashing across the deck.  I bought extra batteries, extra memory cards, sunscreen, salt tablets, and a leash that strapped my glasses to my head.  “Bring it on,” I said, to nobody in particular.

We were to meet our group at a hotel in Las Vegas, the night before the trip began, and everyone would ride together on a chartered bus from Vegas to Lee’s Ferry. Rick and I drove from Phoenix to Vegas in his pickup, arriving at the hotel just in time for the meet and greet. Despite having organized the trip, Rick only knew two of the people, a couple from Seattle.  The rest were friends of theirs, and friends of their friends, and friends of their friend’s friends, some two dozen in all, counting Rick and I.  Most of the group was retired, or close to it, and pretty much all of them were from the Seattle area.  These folks were veteran travelers, hikers, trekkers, and every one of them was every bit as ready for this as I was.

DAY ONE:

The bus left the hotel quite early–Lee’s Ferry was five hours away, and the sooner we got there, the sooner we’d be on the river.  We made time on Interstate 15, through flat, scrubby desert east of Vegas. passing the town of Mesquite, into the Arizona strip (the isolated northwest corner of the state), on up to St. George, Utah.  We left the Interstate just beyond St. George drove east to Hurricane, then followed Route 59 southeast back into Arizona again, passing through the  infamous community of Colorado City.  (I won’t describe that place here, but you can click the link if you’re curious).  A bit further down the road, we stopped in the tiny town of Fredonia, where CRATE has a small facility. We had lunch there, bought some T-Shirts, and picked up two of our guides, who rode with us the rest of the way to the put-in. The scenery started getting a lot more interesting past Fredonia, as we drove up and over a mountain cloaked in pine forest.  A side road to the south off Highway 89A led to the north rim of the Grand Canyon, but we kept going, past the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, past Navajo Bridge, where we got our first glimpse of the river, then on down  to the Lee’s Ferry camp ground, right on the river bank.  Our two big pontoon rafts were pulled partway onto the beach, and our other two guides were already there, loading the gear.  The rafts had to carry enough food and water to last two dozen people for more than a week, not to mention camping gear, an extra outboard motor, and everything else we were likely to need, because once we got on the river we were on our own, at least as far as Phantom Ranch, which we wouldn’t hit until the end of day three.

The guides gave us an orientation of sorts, showed us how to set up the cots we’d be using, how to properly seal the watertight duffel bags we’d be using for our personal gear, then they ran through a well-rehearsed checklist of how things worked and what we should expect, and what would be expected of us.

Day 1-2

Everyone donned an orange life preserver, we all climbed aboard one raft or the other, and found a spot to sit.  The two rafts were shoved away from the beach until they floated free, and the boat drivers eased them into the middle of the channel.  We were mostly moving with the current, but the beach dropped behind us pretty quickly, and in a matter of minutes we were out there, rafting down the Colorado River, heading squarely into the enchanted depths of the Grand Canyon.

Day 1-9

We passed by a flotilla of slower moving oar boats, smaller craft that hold, on average, four to six people.

Day 1-8

With the oar boat expeditions, you get a lot more intimate with the river, but if you care at all about comfort?  The pontoon rafts are like floating palaces by comparison, and they’re a heck of a lot safer in the rapids.

Day 1-6

At mile four we passed underneath Navajo Bridge, where Highway 89A crosses the Colorado River headed south toward Flagstaff.  That’s the only crossing of the river for automobiles between Glen Canyon Dam and Boulder Dam, the entire length of the canyon, so once you cross that line, that’s where the trip really begins.  We hit our first real rapid just four miles later: Badger Creek, and three miles after that another, Soap Creek, followed by yet another called the Sheer Wall Rapid.  We were feeling pretty smug about it–already almost veterans, when Mikenna, the driver of our boat, gave us sobering instructions: “If I yell out ‘two-hander'” she said, quite seriously, “that means you’d best find the nearest rope, or whatever you can grab, and hold on with both hands! I really mean that–both hands!” The instruction was timely, because the next rapid, House Rock, was a two-hander.  The raft started bucking the moment we hit the whitecaps.  There was a good-sized hole on the left side of the river, so we ran to the right, chopping across waves that splashed over the deck and gave us a good soaking. Twice.  Or maybe it was three times? Ha! It was an absolute hoot!

“YEAH!” my friend Rick yelled aloud.  “That’s what I’m talking about!”

Day 1-14

It was already getting on toward late afternoon, so at mile 19 we pulled over and anchored the rafts by a wide beach, our camp site for the first night. The waterproof black rubber duffels, nearly fifty in all, were unloaded by a human chain, the bags passed from hand to hand and piled up well away from the water’s edge.  Each of us located the two that were emblazoned with our assigned number, in my case, the blue #5 with my personal gear, and the yellow #5 with my personal sleeping kit–a folding cot, a sleeping bag, and a tarp.  There were tents stowed separately on the rafts in case of inclement weather, but we didn’t need them on this first night–or on any other night, as it turned out, because (spoiler alert!) the weather proved to be perfect for us throughout the entire trip.  The next step was critical: staking out the perfect spot to set yourself up.  Had to be flat, preferably not too rocky, and with enough separation from the other campers to lend a modicum of privacy. The cots were a challenge at first.  They unfolded a particular way, and the legs had to be inserted into carefully aligned holes in the frame a particular way and everything stretched tight. If you got the sequence wrong you had to start over, and there was quite a bit of fumbling and scratching of heads until we figured out for ourselves exactly how the danged things went together.  Personally, I hadn’t been camping in years, and I hadn’t slept tentless under the stars since I was a kid.  This was likely to be a very long night–but I was ready for it.  At least, I hoped that I was.

Day 1-15

While the passengers were busy messing around with our cots and whatnot, the crew was busy setting up tables and cooking equipment, getting started on our dinner, the first of the many great meals prepared for us alfresco on isolated Grand Canyon beaches.  When the food was ready, we all straggled over to the buffet and served ourselves.  I can’t recall exactly what we ate that first night, but I do remember that it was good stuff.  It’s a universal truth that everything tastes better on a camping trip–and this was truly the ultimate camping trip.  After dinner we sat around in folding camp chairs, getting acquainted, sharing travel stories, some of us drinking canned beer that was reasonably cold from being suspended in net bags, towed behind the rafts in the icy water. By 8:00 or so, the last of the light was fading.  It seemed a bit early to be going to bed, but we were all tired from the journey, and once the last of the light was gone, there was really nothing else to do.  Campfires aren’t allowed on the Grand Canyon beaches.  If they were, the available fuel would soon be exhausted, and the pristine nature of these wilderness camp sites would ultimately be spoiled.  The goal was to leave the camp site exactly as we found it, no trace of our stay in that spot, aside from our footprints in the sand.  That meant that if you had to relieve yourself, you did so in the river (seriously), or you used one of the two portable toilets that were set up each time we made camp.  Those things were a story unto themselves, but it was all part of a routine that became very familiar by the end of the trip.

When darkness fell, it fell like a brick.  I laid on my cot, staring up at the stars, the multitude of stars, ALL of the stars.  I listened to the small sounds and quiet conversations going on around me until they faded away, leaving nothing but the surge of the river, flowing steadily past, leaving me, drifting…

 

The slide show below has a few additional pictures from Day 1. Click any of the images to expand them to full screen, with captions.

(Unless otherwise noted, all of these images are my original work, and are protected by copyright. They may not be duplicated for commercial purposes.)

The Adventure Continues:

This is an interactive Table of Contents. Click the pictures to open the pages.

A Grand Adventure! White Water Rafting on the Colorado River

Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 1

The two rafts were shoved away from the beach until they floated free, and the boat drivers eased them into the middle of the channel.  We were mostly moving with the current, but the beach dropped behind us pretty quickly, and in a matter of minutes we were out there, rafting down the Colorado River, heading squarely into the enchanted depths of the Grand Canyon...

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 2

The cliffs and buttes were a perfect composition, the different colored layers of stone were all but glowing in the afternoon light, and we had this incredible world all to ourselves, not another boat in sight. 

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 3

The waters of the Little Colorado are a turquoise blue that is so startlingly bright it doesn't even look real.  There’s a well-defined spot where that warm, turquoise blue water from the small river collides with the cold, deep green water flowing upstream from the big river. The two dramatically different colors mix, forming a shifting, swirling line of chartreuse.  That spot is the confluence. It's magical, and utterly unique.

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 4

I was still a little dazed by the whole thing, scenes of frothing, churning whitewater playing over and over in my head.  Fleecy white clouds were piling up above the canyon rim, nearly filling the narrow patch of sky, until the lowering sun set them afire, a Grand Canyon sunset display that was the finest we’d seen, worthy of the spectacular setting.  A fitting end to one of the most amazing days of my life.

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 5

The trail meandered for a mile or so, finally dropping down level with the creek, giving us access to a series of perfect swimming holes.  There’s something about that exotic turquoise water that welcomes swimmers--you have to get in it, if only to assure yourself that it’s real. The creek was cool, but far from cold, and a welcome change from the icy water in the river.  We stopped at a particularly inviting spot to swim, relax, and eat our lunch. Sitting beside that creek, with our simple repast--it was like having a picnic in the Garden of Eden. 

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 6

“Two Hander!” John called out rather gleefully, and we all clung to the ropes for dear life as the raft picked up speed.  We were headed straight for the boil of Lava Falls, which was roaring like a freight train, bearing down. We entered the churning whitewater pretty much dead center, then moved hard to the right to avoid the standing waves and the big holes in the middle of the channel.  We got good and drenched at least three times, almost like running under a series of waterfalls, bucking and lurching like crazy, but the whole thing was over in less than a minute. 

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 7

Immediately below that beach we hit Diamond Creek Rapid, then Travertine Rapid, where we pulled over to the bank at Travertine Canyon.  The creek that entered the river here flowed across huge, slippery boulders in a series of small waterfalls, and we had great fun taking turns standing in the flow, almost like a natural shower.

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Grand Canyon Rafting Expedition: Day 8

The river broadened as we approached Lake Mead, and at mile 278 we entered the lake itself.  Pearce Ferry was right there, and we were all pretty quiet as the rafts pulled in to shore for the last time. “Thrill of a lifetime” is a pretty strong statement, but it’s appropriate for this journey.  There’s nothing else like it.

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Grand Canyon Rafting

You find a rope, any rope, and you grab on with both hands for all you're worth. The river boils like the North Sea in a gale, great, rolling green waves and troughs. The raft plummets sideways into a hole fifteen feet deep, the outboard motor shrieks, a monster wave towering ten feet above your head comes crashing down across the deck, pummeling the passengers like a gigantic liquid fist that takes your breath away, leaving you suspended, time stopped, frozen in mid-scream.

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There's nothing like a good road trip. Whether you're flying solo or with your family, on a motorcycle or in an RV, across your state or across the country, the important thing is that you're out there, away from your town, your work, your routine, meeting new people, seeing new sights, building the best kind of memories while living your life to the fullest.

Are you a veteran road tripper who loves grand vistas, or someone who's never done it, but would love to give it a try? Either way, you should consider making the Southwestern U.S. the scene of your own next adventure.

A few years ago I wrote a book about road trips in Arizona and New Mexico that's a lot like this website, packed with interesting information, and illustrated with beautiful photographs. Check it out! You can find it on Amazon, and at all other major booksellers.