High on Adventure |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2021, OUR 25TH YEAR |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This was different.
Years ago I eagerly aimed my whitewater canoe into Class 4 and 5 rapids on the Rogue, Salmon and other big water rivers. More recently I’ve mellowed, claiming the front seat in paddle rafts through bursting whitewater on the Illinois, Cataract and Upper Klamath rivers. In between I’ve kayaked calmer but scenically beautiful areas like the Haida Gwaii in British Columbia and Glacier Bay in Alaska.
After descending 200 feet on a trail carrying our small, maneuverable inflatable rafts, or “rubber duckies,” from the appropriately named Slippery View River Access, the water we reached was evocatively different. Its clarity was amazing. Translucent. Bottomless. Crystalline. No wonder it’s named Clear Creek.
Clear Creek is no broad, glacial carved passage. In sections it’s only about 10-feet-wide. While not regarded as seriously challenging, Clear Creek flows quickly, shifting angles as it rambles downstream, providing paddlers with both continuous challenges and serene pools to rest for the next series of riffles.
Our first day began from Indian Creek to our glamp-site about 10 miles downstream. Although the Klamath parallels Highway 96, the road is mostly unseen, partly because the wide-flowing Klamath is flanked by tall trees – a mix of ponderosa pine, madrone, various oaks and firs. The paddling often entailed gently watching-the-river-flow, but there were enough big, bouncy rapids to require focus and attention.
At times I wasn’t attentive enough. While paddling Rattlesnake Rapids, a series of thumpy up-and-down waves drenched my boat, and I flew out of my duckie. It was my first, but not my last, involuntary swim. Before our trip ended, only one of seven kayakers didn’t take a quick dip.
Our meals were less dramatic. I was part of a group hosted by Momentum River Expeditions, a small guide-owned and -operated rafting company based in Ashland, Oregon. A trio of guides led the way on the river and creek, and, without the raptor drama, created and served delicious meals.
Before lunch during our Clear Creek day, at one squeeze-through section, our group took turns doing limber-river-limbos, bending to slip under a tree hanging only a foot or so above the creek. Because of extremely low water conditions we sometimes paddled frantically over rock-butt-rumpy sections. After lunch, two channels were so shallow we carried rafts to passages with just enough water that we could paddle. Back in the duckie after one of the portages, we blazed a new passage, generating a cacophony of noise from suddenly freed, rumbling-tumbling rocks while careening down the drop.
Clear Creek eventually flowed into the Klamath, where we paddled back to camp. The trip was three days of joy, from the exhilaration of the rapids to the kick-back time at camp to experiencing the nature of nature. But traveling Clear Creek was the clear favorite.
Located 60 windy road miles from Yreka, the region is surrounded by the Klamath Mountains, The town of about 1,000 is located along California Highway 96, the Bigfoot Scenic Highway along the 263-mile long Klamath River.
Clear Creek and several other river excursions, from gentle family outings to expeditions for serious, experienced boaters, are available from Momentum River Expeditions. For information visit their website at www.momentumriverexpeditions.com or call 541-488-2525.
Lee Juillerat is a semi-retired writer-photographer who lives in Southern Oregon. He writes for newspapers, magazines and is the author of books about Crater Lake National Park, Lava Beds National Monument and, more recently, “Ranchers and Ranching: Cowboy Country Yesterday and Today,” which features stories from a 40-plus year period. He can be reached at 337lee337@charter.net. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||