Headwaters of NanXi Jiang

We’re now moving into the dry season here in Eastern China. Some how I had foolishly hoped the wet season here would be the same as back home in the Southeastern USA, the winter. Our wet season here happens to be more convenient for kayaking, the summer months is when we receive most of our rain! Alas, this is many, many months away.

I have taken a job teaching English and I work five days each week. My days off are Sunday & Monday. The Sundays are great since this is when the hiking clubs usually take a trip. This past weekend my friend let me borrow his SUV for the weekend since he was going to be out of town Saturday - Monday.

The weekend got off to a terrible start when I came outside ready to hit the road and found one of the back windows had been smashed. The thief had seen an empty sports bag my friend left in the back, reached in, found it empty and left it. *sigh* I spent 550 RMB (nearly $75) to replace the window. The car was ready about 5pm, so I decided to try again on Monday.And just to let you know I used common sense about parking the car, I parked on a lite street with other cars, beneath a security camera. I wasn’t aware that the camera was a fake until the next morning when the police arrived and questioned the security guards. I should have checked the car for any left over items but as I was empty handed when I received the car I assumed it was empty. Assumptions tend to kick so many of us when we’re down.

I had been planning to go alone but one of my friends, Angel, expressed concern that I was going alone and I was happy to have her company. I met Angel on a hike a few weeks before and she is the one who so kindly took me to the outdoor adventure stores in Wenzhou. I met her again the previous weekend at an orienteering competition. She is a little older than myself with an 11 year old daughter. Angel works for an American company and works out of her home, so she sets her own work hours.

In my excitement to be traveling on my own (almost) I forgot to bring along food, water and *sigh* my camera. Angel proved more prepared than myself. She had brought a little food and and a bottle of water. When I mentioned lunch at some point she suggested she could go shopping for us. She doesn’t trust the healthyness of any food made along the streets and even prefers to avoid established restaurants in small villages and towns. She found a grocery store with sealed food packages, carefully checked expiration dates and brought the goodies back to the car where I waited.

I had entertained myself by watching the people passing along the street; students, parents or grandparents with little children, some people carrying huge loads of items hung from poles over their shoulders. One little boy noticed me in the store next to the car. His parents and I thought it was pretty funny, he wouldn’t stop staring at me. I tried some Chinese and English on him, his parents encouraged me but he wouldn’t try saying hello or waving. He just didn’t know what to make of the foreigner. ;)

Angel and I hit the road again. I was driving very conservatively, buses, cars and trucks all passing me. At some point I realized we had been driving for more than three hours and we finally reached the headwaters. If my brother-in-law Liu Jian had been driving, no doubt we would have arrived an hour earlier. Here you must use your horn. If people walk in the road and don’t hear the horn, they don’t move. I think using a horn is a rude thing to do but I am now convinced that it is a necessary tool.

The headwaters area looked beautiful (Angel was sick of how many times I said, “I wish I had my camera.” but I’m saying it once again now). The valley we had been following upward now broke into three valleys that climbed steeply. The road took us to the right and we had nice views of the left most valley. There were huge slides of rock faces with just a little bit of water trickling down ward. The valley straight ahead had a number of car sized rocks piled in it and I couldn’t really grasp how the water may flow down here without numerous undercuts and tiny pools. The right valley was very narrow and creeky. At a curve in the road we crossed over the creek and saw a trail. This is where we finally hoped out of the SUV and had our lunch. We hiked up stream and ate sitting atop of a rock. I felt confident there must be a dam further up at the top, there was a steel water pipe running the length of the creek that we could see.

I believe there was likely a dam at the top of the straight ahead valley. The road seemed to lead in that direction so we mmight soon know but we had dinner plans back in Wenzhou and with the long road in front of us back home we decided to stop our all too brief exploration. My confidence in driving in the mountains of China had been greatly encouraged and I made the trip home much more swiftly, however once on the city streets we hit a traffic jam that had snarled everything. We sat for 45 minutes waiting to go two blocks.

The steep valleys are no place for me to be kayaking alone. They are far steeper than anything I’ve ever tried and usually more of what I see in the magazines and rarely in a video. The Tellico Ledges and Little in the Smokies are more my style for creeks. There appeared to be some sweet buggie water in the valley below these steep creeks and when the water comes again I’ll be there for the fun.

My friend with the SUV offered it to me again anytime I want so perhaps next weekend I’ll be better prepared for the adventure and take my camera. There is a rather more popular river to the West of Wenzhou that my friends all recommend I go try out. There are stories of a news team who went there with 9 members and came back with only 8. Another friend of my tells about his wife becoming stuck in a whirlpool eddy for two hours (sitting on a ducky raft or a tube, I couldn’t decide). Two hours on a cold water stream just feels like too much of an exaggeration to me but I must take the story of a death seriously. I’ll hope to go check it out soon. The stream is dam controlled and I was warned that someone called and they are not doing releases now.

Ahh, so much to look forward to!

Chuck

Interest is building, now to start planning!

This past Sunday, November 11, my pal Cooper invited me to go hiking with an outdoor club. We counted off to see how many people we had and I was last, #58. Hiking in these mass groups sounds crazy but when you’re dealing with this huge population, you get big groups and my last trip was around 90! It works well as the odds always increase that someone can speak English with me. Cooper introduced Angel and a few others to me. Angel is big into high adventure; hiking, rock climbing, map & compass competition (which she won the women’s category the previous weekend). So I had a lot to talk about with her. I complained that I didn’t have all of the gear I needed for rock climbing. She offered to take me to some of the outdoor sports stores later in the week.

Today Angel stopped at my house. I showed her my kayaks and pulled out all of my kayaking, rock climbing and camping gear. We figured out where I was lacking and then hit the road. She took me to three outdoor stores. Two were small shops featuring a selection of camping and climbing gear. I was excited to see an old PFD in one of the windows but its only purpose was to be looked at.

The other place we visited for a couple hours is a large r company and they organize outdoor events. The owner is “Coach Lu” and he was excited to watch some videos I had with me. I showed him some stickers I had stuck on the back of my laptop and he recognized some of the brand names there (North Face, Petzl) and then I explained about some of the other stickers; American Whitewater, the National Paddle Film Festival, a Dagger boat sticker (I need a JK sticker, hint hint). I tried my best to give an overview of AW and what the organization does for the paddling community. Angel was playing the roll of translator and it was rather limited so we only covered the basics. I explained that likely less than 10% of kayakers (or perhaps it is all whitewater enthusiasts) are members of AW and tried to give him an idea of the sheer size of how many sport lovers (or addicts) are out there. I told him about Gauley Fest, showed him a couple of Tiva & IR commercials to demonstrate how much money US companies are throwing at marketing. Now he’s excited and asked me to plan to teach kayaking classes next summer! I didn’t tell him but I’d do it for free just to share an interest in the sport, what a joy!

I found most of the items that I was after, some new wool hiking socks ($3.40), a collapsible water bowl ($6.15), a cleaning kit for my water bladder and hose ($4.20) and actually this and the bowl weren’t on my list but were a good idea and cheap. I also picked up a pair of zippered pants ($14.70) XL was the largest they had and their a little tight in the caboose but I’ll try to keep loosing weight) and I bought a light weight tarp for $8. Not to bad of a shopping trip. I forgot to look for rock climbing shoes in my size. Their climbing harnesses are about the same as at home, Black Diamond brand. The harness I brought from home I haven’t used in years… I tried it on this morning and there is no way in heck I’ll ever be that small again! I wanted to buy a rescue pulley but I couldn’t find one, so one more purchase from the web.

Anyway I shared my love for kayaking at each store and there is a ton of interest! I’m really excited about next spring and already day dreaming again. It is after 1am here now and I’m not the list bit interested in closing my eyes… what an addiction we are all attached to. I’m hopeful that within three years I’ll be posting announcements about a paddling festival in my part of the world!

Always hopeful,

Chuck

Second trip to Nan Xi Jiang

I had a great time on the water Saturday. Went to another place on the NanXi Jiang and had a great time. My sister-in-law dropped Liu Jian, Hang Hang and I off with my two boats. The proposed idea was for us to paddle and one swim along. The water was good, a little chilly but really not bad!

We had a number of people to watch us and alas, I forgot the skirts at home. I left them out of my gear bag to add some sealer to them, opps.  So no rolls today to show off right? Wrong! I couldn’t resist, I flipped over a few times and rolled up without the skirt. :) Fun stuff and just glad it worked! Of course I had to go empty it each time.

We planned to paddle a couple of kilometers to meet Cathy and she’d drive us back for a second trip. We set off and it wasn’t long till Liu Jian was holding on to the back of my kayak. I’m used to pulling someone across an eddy line, not down a flat water river. I told him it wasn’t going to work and maybe he should hike back on the bank to borrow a cell phone and call Cathy for a ride.

We stopped on an island and I could hear some water running on the other side. I’d have bet it was just some shallow shoals but I climbed up and over the hill to see and it was a great Class II rapid! It was as classic and straight forward as you could ask for. Flat water approach, the shores narrowed and formed a rapid. I ran it first for Liu Jian to watch, Hang Hang wanted nothing to do with it.

Liu Jian ran it and soon Hang Hang was cheering. I got him into my Huck, Liu Jian went again in the Hoss and I swam the rapid in front of them. Where the water began to accelerate and build into a wave train the water was about 8-10 inches deep. Then in the later part of the wave train it was a few feet deep. There was a good eddy on the right.

Alas, we had no means to contact Cathy and needed to hurry so we could get back here for the second trip and just play in this spot. I was out of the boat anyway at this point so I decided to walk/job along the beach and let them paddle the flat water a little ways. We came to a shoal and I’d rank it a Class II- rapid. Easy bouncy waves with a couple of shallow rocks. Hang Hang paddled up to it but then quit paddling. It was a long shoal and his boat rotated side ways in the wave train… he stayed upright and all was good! I told him (via his dad translating) that his balance was impressive, that it is challenging to stay upright in waves when your side ways. But I pointed out if he had kept paddling then he would have stayed straight. Little pats on the back and lessons mixed in.

So they had a good time, finally Liu Jian swapped with me and I paddled with Hang Hang. In the end Hang Hang’s arms gave out, like I said it was a few kilometers of flat water and in white water boats, it wasn’t fast going. A number of bamboo boats ferrying tourists (funny, I think of them as tourists and me as belonging there) up and down the river for sight seeing trips had been passing us. We got him a ride on one of those and us two guys paddled the home stretch.

By the time we arrived it was getting late and couldn’t make a second run. I was just thrilled to have seen them run their first two rapids and very successfully! It was a big day for them and I couldn’t have been happier to have seen it!

The bad notes… shortly past our take out (I kept paddling the few hundred meters to go see and paddled back) the river is dammed up by piled rocks. They have nets set to catch crab (which we ate fresh last week) across the river. I felt confident I could navigate through the maze but not the other two. The other thing was I noticed a terrible smell (rare for me as I have a terrible sense of smell) and behind me was a dead goat, bloated from being beached in the sunlight. Yuck!

Lastly… as we left the island I had earlier mentioned, there was a man who had swam across to the island and was just walking up the beach in his underwear. He proceeded to drop said undies and dump in the river… Ack! I mean, he’d just swam from the parking lot where there was a working bathroom…! I wanted to scream some obscenities but I don’t know how in Chinese so I just shook my head and walked along the beach refusing to allow myself to step in water for five minutes.

I’m looking forward to getting the guys back in the boats in two or three weeks. I’m traveling this weekend and all of next week. Visiting five cities for various markets and trade shows in the optical business.

Patton’s on Nantahala River, NC

Since I’m still looking for rivers to paddle here in China I’m still actively reading the forums back home and on the AWC pages there has been a little talk about Patton’s classification as a Class III rapid when it used to be listed as Class II rapid. I chimed in there but then got to thinking about the river and this rapid specifically and I miss it so much! I got enthusiastic and decided I’d share my favorite line at Patton’s with you.

The photos below are from this time last year (2006) on a cold October day. Click on them for added details. Andrew, Garth and Terran were leading Brad Berryhill and someone else down on their first run that day. Some of us were early and decided to run the falls. I swam the falls twice and was cold & disheartened so I decided to skip the run and shoot photos before going home. A few months of cold weather paddling on the Chattooga and other class III rivers and creeks and Nanty Falls didn’t scare me any more. I’m glad I faced my fear and came back later and ran it again (now with a solid combat roll).

Patton’s offers a lot of fun and education if you want to push yourself. There are numerous slow-down eddies and holes in mid stream approaching it.

Approach to Patton’s Run rapid on the Nanty Running Patton’s

My favorite line is on the left, partially avoiding the fun waves initially, it is a slightly technical line that teaches a little. Eddy out above the rapid on river left. Drop down into the funny water on the left side and catch an eddy.

Little pour over


I like the eddy between the funny water and the main line of Patton’s (which is on river right from where I would be). Here you can ferry back and forth across the funny water, there is an eddy on the left side as well.

Descriptions

When your done, surf onto the waves that make Patton’s fun! You can peel out and head on down stream or you can work the rapid some more catching more eddies.

First WaveSecond WaveThird Wave

You’ll want to watch on the right side of this wave train for a rock that was hidden from your initial view. Expect it and it won’t surprise you. The rock is really far enough right that it usually isn’t a problem for paddlers and in fact it is the source of a long skinny eddy. It’ll be hard to whip into if you have a lot of speed but you can do it with practice.

Long Narrow Eddy


Alright get out there and go practice! Enjoy it while there is enough water. I’m worried about next summer for ya’ll. Plenty of water here in my part of China, feel free to come paddle with me and show off for the locals.

Chuck
http://www.myspace.com/wildmavrick

Second Roll Practice in Wenzhou, China

Liu Jian and I are back for more! We again went to Nine Hills Lake for practice. This time my wife and her sister went along. Liu Jian is actually my wife’s, sister’s husband. Their little girl, Sarah, went as well. So we had three shuttle bunnies along to watch us.

Paddling around in the lake. To the rescue Liu Jian paddling around.

This time we went to the other lake recommended to us the previous occasion. Liu Jian and I hopefully gave a good show for the people watching. He dropped in from the dock fine and I dropped in off a diving board about four feet up. It was nice and wide so I could reach down and slide my boat forward to the edge before tipping over and dropping in. Nothing spectacular but the girls ate it up. ;)

mini-img_6316.JPG  mini-img_6320.JPG  Hand rolling

We continued to work on Liu Jian’s brace. I’m no instructor so this is a learning experience for both of us. I worked on my hand rolls and did very well with them. We also practiced the T-Rescue, which Liu Jian now has down fine! Fortunately the girls brought a camera so we have a couple of pictures to share.

 Sarah was our cute little Shuttle Bunny for the day!  Our cute Shuttle Bunny Sarah!

First Roll Practice in Wenzhou, China

Been here 3 weeks and I finally got into my boats. They made the journey in the bottom of the United Airlines 747 with me. On the day I arrived my brother-in-law and nephew anxiously helped me unpack my Huck & Hoss. Between them I had packed about 200 pounds of gear, clothing, various sports equipment. My Salamandar Bags had barely survived the journey. One had lost a handle and the other’s zipper had blown out. I’m sure the bags were never intended for use with that much weight and they survived the trip pretty well.

Liu Jiang and I loaded the kayaks up on Dad’s Toyota mini-van and he drove us to a local lake in the city here where we live, Wenzhou. The lake has no bank to speak of. It isn’t large and entirely surrounded by a concrete dock/sidewalk. The first time was just to introduce Liu Jian to kayaking.

When we showed up at the lake, there were about 5 people there. By the time the boats were unloaded there were suddenly 20. By the time we had our gear on and the boat resting on a dock it was at least 50-60 people! I had figured on something of a crowd watching us but not so quickly at the start. I had already given basic instructions at home so I went over it again. I made sure he tightened his back belt and his skirt was properly attached. I demonstrated the idea behind wet exiting again as we sat side-by-side. Okay, we’re ready!

The drop was about 15 inches, no big deal for me and Liu Jiang didn’t seem intimidated either. I dropped in off the dock first so I could be in the water to help him. His first drop in went tippy pretty fast and the wet exit lessons paid off. He was out and standing up quickly. Great! Glad to see that lesson is covered. People watching of course were laughing hysterically. I was nervous Liu Jian would be too embaressed to continue but he emptied the boat and tried again.

This time he did much better, a little wobble but he balanced quickly. I paddled over to him and reminded him about putting the drain plug back in (wish I had Jackson boats some times). Then I said, “Liu Jian, in the future I will show you how to roll your boat.” I tipped slowly over (and heard the crowd starting to cry out as I flipped) and I came up really fast. “See it is very quick.” Liu Jiang nodded his head, “Very Quick. Okay.” and proceeded to tip himself over and try to roll. A loud “Oh Shit!” escaped my lips and the people on the dock were laughing again.

Okay, the language barrier is serious here… I had to be very careful about everything I said from here on out. Liu Jian’s English is far more advanced than my Chinese for sure but he isn’t in the “very good” category yet so I watched what I said and confirmed he clearly understood each thing. If not I’d demonstrate time and again until he was confidently nodding. :)

In the end I taught him the beginnings of how to brace and roll. His brace needs a lot more work but without better language skills I just couldn’t get it across to him. One time at the far end of the lake he flipped and the dock there was a good three feet up out of the water. The first drop-in here was an immediate flip and do-over. The second drop-in was great and he did fine.

He had a few more swims but the last time he accidentally flipped over that evening he managed to grab my bow and I T-Rescued him! I was so proud that this time he patiently waited for me to hit his boat and then he managed to roll up with my help! It was a great way to end the evening!

We had only been gone about 2 hours. Dad was waiting at the drive way when we arrived home. He wasn’t mad actually and Ceci says he wants to try kayaking too! I think I need to find a couple of rec boats here in China. I’m sure I can find those over here.

By the way… the lake was green… kind of nasty with a little bit of trash here and there, Liu Jiang swam into a dead fish one time on his way back to the dock. I’ve decided I’m pretty good at using two paddles and pushing the other boat back to shore and Liu Jiang now understands why the life vest is important even at the lake. He took enough swims to be very tired.

Hello and Nihao!

I began paddling in June 2006. This was during the drought that is extending well into 2007 in the Southeastern US. Initially all of these ELF runs were still rather exciting to me, for the first 10 months or so. Now I’ve had a few good level runs and realizing why everyone is complaining about no rain! At least the Ocoee was still fresh and exciting for me, though avoiding the rafts sucks.

Today I live in my wife’s home town of Wenzhou, China. It is on the Eastern Coast, a five hour drive South of Shanghai. All I have is memories of the Chattooga, Tellico Ledges (totally kick-arse), LRC (beautiful!), Nanty, Ocoee, and oh so many more rivers from my home in the South Eastern USA. Also gone from all of my weekends is so many of you kayakers that are my friends and paddling buddies! The campfires, roll practice, late night dinners, I’m going to miss you all a ton!

Both my Hoss and Huck made the trip with me! I’m still hunting rivers to paddle. I know there are some European guys and gals living in Shanghai that want to paddle as well, just nothing to paddle that they know of yet. Lots of flat water but “flat” is a four letter word.

For now on this page, I’ll toss in some notes about what I’ve learned & done (sometimes foolishly) back home in the Southeast.

Nantahala River

Portrait Middle Ledge on the Tellico

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