Sunday, September 24, 2006

Micos!

Well we made it into Mexico an on our second day we made it into the tiny town of pago-pago to run the now famous Cascadas de Micos in the mountainous state of San Luis Potosi. These are a set of seven cacadas or waterfalls that range from 7 to 30 feet. These are all fairly forgiving although the rain brought up the water for our last run down, and the holes at the bottom of the drops started to get a little stickier. They are not to bad though, and are fun enough that we have been lapping he short stretch almost constantly. The high water has made three or four lines possible for each drop which creates an almost never ending variety of slides and falls. We also found some fun surf waves in the class II-III- section below the waterfalls that have sprung up in the high water. We knew the whitewater would be fantastic, but we didn´t know that there would be beautiful rainforest mountains so close to the border. Our preconcieved notions that Mexico was all a desert were quickly erased.

We hadn´t planed on staying long in Micos, but the people and the quality of the whitewater has made us stay. We have many knew friends who are all so helpful. Anna, the owner of Huasteca rafting has helped us with shuttles and beta. Also a mexican kayaker named Jorge has opened his home, offered shuttle help, and has given us a list of his Mexican kayaking contacts for help in some of our future stops. JOrge also brought us some much needed purified water as a gift. We paddled with Jorge and his son down the Micos, and they truly are wonderful people. Jorge, a doctor, explained that while he was living in Colorado for 6 months in the early nineties the climbers and kayakers he met were so helpful that he wanted to return the favor. So we want to thank the Colorado kayaking community for being so cool.

Anyways here are some pictures of Micos. The pictures of the falls are in the order they come in on the run, and some of the smaller ones have been left out. Click on the pictures for a better picture.

This sign means your in the right place


The big falls. We put in below this 70 foot monster. Altough it has been run succesfully many times it has also broken enough backs to make it more or less a crap shoot.


Jorge´s son Jaistemae on the first waterfall


Uldis on the second falls which has a little hole at the bottom. This drop is bigger than it looks here. The first and big waterfall are in the background.


After a decent drop with no good photo angle and a smaller drop comes this drop which is a fun slide on the right, a slide to a five foot drop in the middle, and this drop on the far left. Each are so fun I recomend them all.


After the last drop comes the smallest pool and the largest fall. This is rumored in the guidebook to be thirty feet, but I think it is a little smaller. There are big fun vertical falls on the far right and left and a big slide to a ten foot drop in the middle.


Nelson jumping the big falls.


This is the last rapid. It also has many routes, but my favorite is a long slide, maybe 100 yards, into a drop that is supposed to be nasty hole, but at the flows we saw it was pretty flushy.


The takeout for the lower run.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

About to Leave

Well the summer is winding down, and the trip is right around the corner. Our crew had one goal for our second season of kayaking, and that was to kayak Gore canyon, which we did along with many other personal firstd's. Pics of us in Gore are lost in somewhere in Arkansas, but we have them forever in our minds. The bus is nearly completed, and Joe's crazy bunk bed/couch plan works better than I ever imagined. We are now just waiting for Uldis to return from his recent trip around the world, and we can get underway. Here are the bus pics and some pics of the season.

Here are the bottom bunks right after instalation.



These are the top bunks on chains, and the last pic shows them in couch mode. We have some pretty fancy mattresses to go on those beds, but due to time contraints we can't show them to you now.






Though not kayaking here is our raft race team at Gore fest, or as I call it the new christmas.

On the way to Gore with 6 Kayaks and a raft on our newly created roof rack.

The team in Kirschbaum



Tunnel, and amazingly no one swam.


The team holding up bottles of our sponsor's famous and delicious Major Tom's Pomegranite Wheat beer.


In closing here are some kayaking pictures that I just wanted to post.

Uldis underwater practicing for next years Guide Hole Rodeo


One of the last pictures of our friend Lane before he was lost in the trecherous Sea of Elaina


Wheeeeee!


Finally this picture best sums up the summer, and perhaps every day working for A-1 Wildwater.