Scott Anderson, Dropping into the Cauldron below 'Big Splat', Big Sandy West Virginia
Waterfall on my Journey Out of the Big Sandy
This was the third installment in a series of episodes that have ocassionally crept unsuspectingly into the confines of my being like a paralyzing viral infection, rendering me utterly immobile and useless. I am not sure of the cause, although I suspect, it is rooted in the more logical interior of my cognivite functioning, perhaps a flag of self presevation, 'no, no, not this time Brett...walk around the class II... that a boy, rhodendendron are your friends...'. In any case, I was frustrated to say the least, but more importantly a bit vexed. Did this moment have any large conotations, was it a moment of truth, a moment of decision, or simply a bad day? In retrospect, I think it was a little of everything. I missed my friends from home, my old and original boating crew. Paddling difficult whitewater is a very personal experience... it likely means something different to everyone. Although there are many shared perspectives and motivations, deep down, the decision to run a rapid, to choose the left slot or right boof, is a decision not to disimilar and just as mysterious as understanding the depths of personal character. I knew one thing, I still wanted to paddle, but I wanted to paddle my way. I missed the old days where I would practice for hours, in perfect bliss, on the reservoir near the crew dock in Charlottesville. I wanted to take my time down a run, really feel the river beneath my bow before I continued to move forward in my life as a waterman.
I like bony runs. Steep, bony, lots of rocks and big launch pads. I am not a big fan, of big water, gnarly holes, and no chance for rescue. If I could experience a few steep drops of the good stuff, maybe it would translate to my level of comfort on other stretches of water.Enter Batman. A ten foot drop, where the first five feet is a pourover on to a flat rock shelf. You must keep the nose of you boat up and as you fall, the rock shelf automatically boofs you into a large cave. Visually, it looks heinous. In reality, there are few dangers besides flipping over and smashing your face on jagged rocks.
Dropping 'Batman'
Dropping 'Robin'
'Batman' was a success. Shad laughed as whooped my way off a dry rock perch into the approach and was launched into the back of the cave. We continued downstream to the next big drop, a fifteen foot near vertical slide into what I hoped was a relatively deep pool. Otherwise, the piton was going to hurt. I named this drop 'Robin'. I ran 'Robin' four times and contemplated how much fun this enitre stretch would be at a high flow. It was bare minimum. We were running out of time, so we had to make our way downstream. I ran two other drops, a shelf like six foot boof, called 'Big Mouth' and a tight twisty cascade into a small pool, 'The Pinch'.
Sliding down 'Big Mouth'
It was a nice day to be out. Great to hang out with one of my best friends, and experience some new water. My work on this tributary is far from over. I have visions of catching it at high flow this fall after a big storm rolls through. Above 'Batman' the slides are bigger and stepper. Until then, I'll just have to keep wondering. I felt good as I packed my boat on the car, a renewed faith in my ability as a boater, but more importantly, the beginnings of a changing perspective on what boating means to me and its place in my life.
Hey man, good to see you on the water again! Those drops look a lot better (and wider) than the one at the confluence. Maybe I shouldn't have poo-poo'd that creek after all. You going to Cheat Fest next weekend?
ReplyDeleteP.S. My last two times down the LBS I've run the bottom half of Big Splat. It's totally blind from above, but the landing is softer than it looks!
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