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A whitewater rafting blog for anyone interested in California whitewater rafting, Idaho river rafting, rafting in the Grand Canyon, as well as rafting throughout the U.S. West, national parks vacations, multi-sport vacations, adventure travel, and all things related to the world's waterways.

Archive for December, 2009

Grand Canyon To Be Flooded More

December 28, 2009.

“We must find a way to protect one of the world’s most treasured landscapes — the Grand Canyon — while meeting water and clean energy needs in the face of climate change,” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced recently in a video message to the Colorado River Water Users Association in Las Vegas.

His department will begin experiments testing if manmade floods — flowing into the Colorado River — will better protect wildlife and archaeological sites. The floods would be released from the Glen Canyon Dam and could cause a buildup of sandbars and beaches along a 277-mile span of the river in the Grand Canyon.

Man-made floods are an attempt to restore conditions that existed in the canyon before the Glen Canyon Dam was completed in 1966. The dam traps sediment formerly carried by the Colorado River, leading to the erosion of beaches in the Grand Canyon downstream.

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Written by Tracy

Writer, Photographer, former Waterblogged Editor

Happy Holidays Fellow Adventurers!

December 25, 2009.

However you celebrate the season, warm wishes from all of us at the O.A.R.S. Family of Companies.

Written by Tracy

Writer, Photographer, former Waterblogged Editor

Does Oil & Gas Drilling Belong In Utah’s Red Rock Country?

December 22, 2009.

According to a recent communication from The Wilderness Society, large oil and gas companies and lobbyists are trying to kill new protections for Western treasures like Utah’s Red Rock canyon country, Otero Mesa and Wyoming’s Red Desert.

The Wilderness Society and its partners won a recent lawsuit that not only granted temporary protections against oil and gas leasing in Utah’s Red Rock country – it has prompted the Obama Administration to revise Bush-era oil and gas leasing guidelines, which could mean long-term protections for millions more acres of wild lands in early 2010.

 

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Written by Tracy

Writer, Photographer, former Waterblogged Editor

Tropical Depression? Not This Guide!

December 21, 2009.

 Well Bula from Fiji!

Well we have had an exciting couple of weeks here in the Fiji Islands.  Mostly because we had our first tropical depression hit the islands.  I am not talking about a mass movement of sad people, but a cyclone. What is a cyclone?  Technically speaking they form when the energy released by the condensation of moisture in rising air causes a positive feedback loop over warm ocean waters!  What does that mean? Well big winds and lots of rain! But for a more technical explanation I am going to quote Wikipedia.  

“A tropical cyclone is a storm system characterized by a low pressure center and numerous thunderstorms that produce strong winds and flooding rain. A tropical cyclone feeds on heat released when moist air rises, resulting in condensation of water vapour contained in the moist air. They are fueled by a different heat mechanism than other cyclonic windstorms such as nor’easters, European windstorms, and polar lows, leading to their classification as "warm core" storm systems.”

So what does that mean on the ground? Well being my first storm I have to say it was awesome.  Jeff Hommel  (Rivers Fiji Operations Manager) and I spent the afternoon checking in on the families that help support us, i.e. guides and drivers.  Driving through blinding rain, downed trees and power lines we headed up the Coral Coast to make sure everyone was safe and not in danger.  While looking for our driver Nareesh (he was already gone to higher ground) we evacuated Fijian family from their house that was about to be blown apart. As we packed the nine of us into the Rivers Fiji Landcruiser and headed to safety we were dodging roof sheet metal flying through the air! We had to get them to a cousins cement home.  We did, they were grateful and invited us in for a bowl of grog. But better judgment said we should get home, the eye of the storm had not yet reached our part of the island.  

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Written by James

O.A.R.S. California & Oregon Regional Manager

Waterblogged Guest Contributor, James Rodger

December 21, 2009.

Please welcome a Waterblogged Guest Contributor, James Rodger. James is the O.A.R.S. California Regional Manager who typically spends his winters south of the border. Last year James guided and participated in trips in Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands, Peru and Chile. This year James is in Fiji, poor guy…

Written by Tracy

Writer, Photographer, former Waterblogged Editor

Want to discover Fiji? Come take a look!

December 10, 2009.

Bula and greetings from Fiji, O yau o James, and over the next couple of months I am going to be reporting on Fiji and the O.A.R.S. experience.  My goal is simple; Provide an inside glimpse of the Rivers Fiji daily adventures and the people that support them. Now that is a daunting task, considering the fact that I am a newly arrived visitor to this island nation. But I am sure with help from my friends here and all of you out there that you can help me on my way. So what exactly will I be writing about?  Everything that I come across, from kayaking down the Luva, Rafting down the Upper Navua, Visiting our partners like the village of Nakavika, and hopefully any little adventures you want to send me on. That’s right! This is going to be an interactive record that you will help with. Do you want to know how fresh water eels are caught? How about the pounding of Kava, Perhaps how traditional tattoos are given (Please don’t ask me to get one, I hear they are very painful) I have a couple of tools with me to help capture these details of life here, a handy video camera, a still camera and my laptop.  So if you want to send me on an adventure, just make a suggestion and we will find out where it leads us. Along the way I will try and give you little tidbits of information, like the fact that Tongans used to visit the islands in order to get feathers from the endemic red-breasted musk parrot. Or the fact that pottery shards dating back to 1290 BC have been found in the Sigatoka valley, just up the coast from our office.  Fiji is an island that holds daily discoveries, and I hope you will enjoy the adventure along with me. Au sa liu mada (see you later) James

Written by James

O.A.R.S. California & Oregon Regional Manager