ESCALANTE River PACKRAFTING Adventure - Part 2 | Lake Powell, Pollywog Bench and Hole-in-the-Rock

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Escalante River Packrafting Adventure - Part 2
    If you missed Part 1: • ESCALANTE River PACKRA...
    In this Part 2 video, we continue our 11 day adventure on the Escalante River of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in southern Utah.
    As we continue our float down the Escalante River, we find the river cutting a new course through decades of sediment build-up, now exposed as the lake level has dropped 175 feet over the last decade. We drag our boats along miles of shallow and braided river, finally arriving at Lake Powell. We find the old abandoned Black Trail to climb up onto Pollywog Bench (called "Alternate Black Trail" in Steve Allen's book "Canyoneering 3", map 37). Finally, we paddle to Hole-in-the-Rock and scramble back up to our car.
    Note that the canyon at 2:16 is mis-labeled in the video. It is The Bobway (p. 218-219 in Steve Allen's book "Canyoneering 3"), not Ichabod Canyon.
    Packrafting playlist here • Packrafting
    00:00 Day 7: Escalante River RM58 to Stevens Canyon, The Bobway, RM64.5 portage
    03:50 Day 8: Escalante River Stevens Canyon to Lake Powell first camp, dragging packrafts
    07:02 Day 9: Black Trail to Pollywog Bench and paddle to Lake Powell second camp
    09:42 Final Day: Scramble up Hole-in-the-Rock
    Trip beta:
    - Dates: March 11-18, 2022 (packrafting portion: March 13-18).
    - River flow measured far upstream at Escalante: 2.2 cfs dropping to 1.8 cfs.
    (waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?si...)
    ROUTE GUIDES:
    Canyoneering 3, by Steve Allen: amzn.to/3rE09Nd
    www.roadtripryan.com/go/t/uta...
    www.americansouthwest.net/slo...
    www.americanwhitewater.org/co...
    Packrafting Gear List:
    www.bradmitchellphoto.com/202...
    SUBSCRIBE:
    / @bradmitchellphoto
    LET'S STAY CONNECTED:
    Photography: www.bradmitchellphoto.com
    Blog: www.bradmitchellphoto.com/my-...
    Facebook: / bradmitchellphotography
    Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product or service with these links, I may receive a small commission for the referral. There is no additional charge to you! Thanks for your support so I can continue to provide you with free content!
    Thanks for your support!

Komentáře • 17

  • @jimmcgregor4598
    @jimmcgregor4598 Před 6 měsíci

    Thats where we got the raft stuck in 1980, carried out at crack in the wall.

  • @burntsugar
    @burntsugar Před 2 lety

    A wonderful video trip narrative through a starkly beautiful terrain. Thank you for taking me along!

  • @frankeberhart2189
    @frankeberhart2189 Před rokem

    Thank you so much. Virtual travel is all I am able to do for health reasons. This was spectacular. Thank you and God bloess you.

  • @HunterTravels
    @HunterTravels Před rokem

    What a great film hoping to find some peeps to do this with.

  • @delvxe
    @delvxe Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing this. Was it cold enough for you to need dry suits?

    • @BradMitchellPhoto
      @BradMitchellPhoto  Před 4 měsíci

      I wore a drysuit. My three friends wore wetsuits. I was warm the whole time and rarely hot. My friends seemed comfortable during the mid-day, but were cold in the morning (putting on damp wetsuits) and afternoons.
      Drysuits are much more expensive than wetsuits and are more easy to damage by abrasion.
      We did this trip in early-March, when it was not hot.
      When we do the San Juan River this late April, most of us are taking drysuits, but it may be warm enough that we don't wear them all the time.

  • @williams2840
    @williams2840 Před rokem +1

    Great video Brad! What is your criteria for using the whitewater skirts or not?

    • @BradMitchellPhoto
      @BradMitchellPhoto  Před rokem +1

      The spray skirt (on your waist) and spray deck (on the boat) are used together. I wear them if there are rapids that splash water up into your boat or if it is particularly cold weather. This is both to keep you warm and to avoid having to go ashore to drain water out of your boat too often.. We didn't have either condition on this trip. And we anticipated that we would be getting in and out of our boats alot for shallow water. It takes a minute or so to reattach the spray skirt to the spray deck each time. All of this logic assumes you are also wearing a wet suit or dry suit and that the weather is not hotl.
      A spray skirt, spray deck, wet suit or dry suit may not be needed if weather is very hot and you don't mind being wet, but I don't have much experience with these conditions (being from Washington State).
      Also, if you have a self-bailing packraft, there is much less need for spray skirt/deck, unless the weather is cold.

    • @BradMitchellPhoto
      @BradMitchellPhoto  Před rokem +1

      I just started paddling with a guy who uses a self-bailer ... without a spray skirt or spray deck, even in winter (he wears a drysuit to stay warm).
      I don't have any experience with these boats myself, but my fist impression is that they would be a good option for front-country whitewater-focused day trips, where you might want to push your whitewater limits a bit and not need to stop to drain your boat and deal with that pesky spray skirt all the time. But I still lean towards closed boat with zip on/off spray deck for multi-day wilderness whitewater (my passion), where you don't typically push your limits, and for an extra measure of warmth.

    • @williams2840
      @williams2840 Před rokem

      @@BradMitchellPhoto You have so much knowledge and experience. I would love to see gear and trip planning videos sometime to help newbies like me.

  • @danbosch1621
    @danbosch1621 Před rokem

    I just got back from a 200 mile bike packing trip through this country. We hiked along this river too. I believe your packrafts are Alapacka Expeditions?

  • @KarlDeckerPresents
    @KarlDeckerPresents Před 5 měsíci

    Can I ask what your water sources were? Thinking about doing this next April or May

    • @BradMitchellPhoto
      @BradMitchellPhoto  Před 5 měsíci

      Many of the side streams run clear. We each carried 10L and a 4L dromadory bags. Pretty sure we found good water at least every other day, so maybe we didn'tneed that much capacity. We used a 1 micron pre-filter while filling the bags from the creek to minimize any sand particles, then standard water filter when transferring from dromadory bag to water bottle, or just poured from dromadory bag to cook pot if boiling for a meal.