Wednesday, July 11, 2007

keet seel








hiked a couple days ago with some friends to keet seel, an 800 year old cliff ruin on the navajo reservation. The canyon we followed 18 miles roundtrip is called Tsegi, and is on the southern flanks of Navajo mountain. We got started at sunset and walked through the night under stars and thunderstorms to where we camped a night under the dwelings and woke the next morning and had a navajo woman ranger show us around. A nearby rain rose the creek about a foot within minutes on our dark hike in. Extremely amazing place.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

baja pics

Here are a few photos from baja with scott. Been back to the river a couple times in june and will be changing gears to doing some higher elevation recreation in the weeks to come. The beer business is keeping me really busy during the week. Life has been really great and I thank you all for sharing in it with me.













Tuesday, June 12, 2007

not the most timely site on the web, but oh well. back again from a fort tuthill weekend, rowed a diamond down river expedition. bunch of work for such a short trip. had a multigenerational fighter pilot squadron with us, really strikes me how young pilots in the air force are. we had a set of twins in the group of 16 and brought their dad, veitnam vet- super mellow, rode with his wife, son-in-law and me on a three boat trip intersting to all of us I'm sure. they traveled in from texas just for the weekend- we night floated into the lake and had a couple bizaar cameos from the river's finest. feedback from these trips make me hopeful that folks come from these canyon experirnces with a fresh persective. looking forward to some higher elevations these next 10 days or so.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

well I haven't got any photos yet of baja, though I hear there are some good ones. I'm about to leave town again for a few days for another fort tuthill diamond down river trip. I'll be back monday so look back soon.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

vive la baja.. numero uno

Dang, what a doosey! Returned yesterdy evening from a five day tour de force through upper baja mexico with Scott. Amazingly the only casualty of the week was water getting into my waterproof camera, so check back soon for photos. Baja is really a nutty place- tops just about anywhere I've been. It's neat how a little good judgement takes the stress out of anything. You gotta stay lose, recognize and heed advice, good people will attract good people. Thanks for looking and stay tranquillo.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007






Spent a few days with friends in southwestern Colorado this past holiday weekend. We brought our inflatables and ran the daily on the wild headwaters of the San Juan river, twice. Its a really different place than the sandy-juan I'm familiar to in the canyonlands through Utah. Pictures didn't come out too clearly but in the background are the still snow-capped peaks of the Rockies. I'm on the small blue boat, or "duckie." It was great being in the mountains. We then returned a friend to Dolores and ran that river as well before returning to Arizona. I've had some good times lately but that weekend was one to challange the best. Today I'm off to the Baja with my good friend Scott. We have lots to celebrate as he and wife Julie just learned are going to have a child! The Baja 500 is running saturday as well as my 32nd birthday... Thanks for looking and check back next week for a few stories I'm sure of our days ahead in mexico.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

I seem to be having some technical difficulties with the blogger site uploading photos from my recent trip to the skywalk. I'll get those posted as soon as blogger.com frees up some bandwith..
In the meantime let me tell you a bit about my weekend. I started my roadtrip with a visit to a group of about 40 boy scouts and their dad's camping in the Hualapai mountains south and east of Kingman. There they have got one year permit to 620 acres of state-trust land and will do their best to clean it all up. They had me and Patrick from the GCNP river permit office speak to the groups about the Leave No Trace ethics. It was way productive and a really fun and querky group! Way to go you guys.
Next I drove the infamous dirt road to the Hualapai's skywalk at Grand Canyon West. They've got phase one in place with the skywalk out and over the rim and a shuttle service herding Vegas-spawned tourons among the various "attractions." The skywalk itself is a neat piece of architecture and engineering. The noise pollution from the billions of helicopters coming and going however is a real drag. Kinda of a funny thing they got going out there with big plans in the near future. A hotel and restaurants are soon to follow and an IMAX and a made for television Indian village are on the way as well. The price of admission included a stop at the historic bat towers, the debunked mining site where in the 1950's some ambitious investors mined bat guano from a cave on the north side of the river and extracted it by way of a 9000ft long cable tramway. The tower mass is still on the rim and was interesting to visit.
My bottom line opinion on the place is complicated. I've been asked if the skywalk is worth the price of admission- $75.00. Well I'd recommend that if one was looking for a Grand Canyon Experience, then it's certainly not. I beleive that a quality Grand Canyon visit should be personal, one should be left with time to listen, look and smell the vastness of rock and sky. With the grumblings of a steady line of diesel belching motor coaches and the screetching buzz of litereally hundreds of helicopters above and BELOW the rim, it is nearly impossible to find the peace needed to absorb the grandness of the western canyon. The skywalk is a made-for-vegas attraction that the Hualapais are hoping to profit from, perhaps motivated a chance by the witnessing what their neighbors, the Havasupai, have done with their waterfalls...

Tuesday, May 15, 2007









Did a fun river trip with fort tuthill this weekend on the Colorado in another lower Grand Canyon, or "Diamond Down." I rowed my raft, the Odyssey...redemption at rapid 231. It's getting hot down there and the reservoir mead is drying up a bit quicker than getting flow from the river. Should be interesting in the months and certainly years ahead. A decade ago the standard take-out for a lower gorge river trip was at Pearce's Ferry. Now, nearly 110 feet lower, the reservoirs nearest usable boat ramp below the Canyon is at South Cove, 16 miles further. The lake continues to drop 5' a month! Just last week the park 'service' graded a new ramp there to accomadate canyon motor rigs, but word is that the ramp extends to maximum low elevation due to some unsuitable below surface conditions. For our last night on the river we talked the folks into doing a night float, where we rigged all boats together and cruised river currents till sunrise under stars and spires. A good time! But with droping lake levels there are lots of newly exposed obsticles- mostly rocks and pre-lake vegetation. Maybe oneday they will just cut a hole in the dam and we can just float on thru? We also had a good look at the Hualapai's newest attempt to cash-in on their canyon with a river level viewing of the Skywalk up on the rim- really bizaar, like something from outerspace! I'm gonna get a closer look this weekend from ontop and recon the Skywalk for fort tuthill. I'll be volunteering a day for the Leave No Trace program this Saturday workshoping with some boyscouts in Kingman and plan to camp near Spencer Canyon and do the Skywalk- Check back for a full review...

Wednesday, May 9, 2007







Heres a few pictures of the fort tuthill "diamond down" training trip. Put ourselves through one great adventure. Notice anything wrong in the first photo? Here's how you right a boat after its been upside down through a rapid. Going back down there tomorrow, but will be rowing my personal 14' this time. The Odyssey will get its first Grand Canyon trip! Should be a really great time- thanks Andrew, I'll keep the rubber side down. Welcome to my new blog. Be sure to check-in often to catchup on my latest shinanagens...