Trip Report
A rafting epic in the Owyhee canyonlands..
Wednesday January 26, 2011 8:33pm

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It really did seem like a good idea at the time. Heidi's about to turn 70 father, Ed, had been wanting to raft Idaho’s Bruneau River. We had rafted the 40 mile long Class IV stretch previously, and thought of it as a great trip. Ed had done various white-water day trips with us, and we decided to do the trip with him as a 70th birthday present.

No problem!

Since it is good to have more than one raft on remote trips: we invited our buddy Ben, who also had Bruneau experience. He wanted to bring his 70 year old outdoorsman father too. Heidi's sister Renae, didn't want to miss a party, and decided to take an inflatable kayak down the Bruneau.

Why not?

The Bruneau's tributaries rise inside Northern Nevada, and then join for a brief, but steep run to the Snake River in South Idaho. The Bruneau has a short Spring-time window of optimal runoff for raft trips. We wanted to be on it while it was running between about 1200 – 2000 C.F.S. (cubic feet per second) Below that level, we would be damaging rafts on unavoidable rocks, and above that level: was a wee bit more dicey. The BLM river guidebook strongly recommends not running the river above 2,500 C.F.S.

The best date for all of us was Memorial Day weekend 1995. The river would be crowded, but we planned on an afternoon launch and two nights on the river.

The Bruneau runs cold in May: since its major tributary, the Jarbidge, drains high snowfields. We supplied ourselves with Kokatat Gore-tex dry suits: to maximize cold-water survival time-----just in case something ugly happened.

The chief reason the Bruneau is not a popular boating river: is its class 5 access road. The road can be impassable during wet conditions. It is always a slow & tough journey on a four-wheel-drive 1940’s mining road, with a long scary hill down to the river.
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LAUNCH DAY! We drove into the river from our homes, got our four boats rigged and we were on the river by mid-afternoon. The Bruneau was running at about 1600 CFS, and looked as expected: muddy & damn cold. Ben and I were each rowing big double-pontoon Aire Cougar catarafts, Heidi had a small oar-rigged Aire Puma (the sports car), and Renae had a Aire Lynx inflatable kayak.

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The upper Bruneau canyon narrows to less than 100 feet wide at points, with basalt cliffs that go up for hundreds of feet. The scenery is spectacular. The river level was perfect for the big catarafts, and despite the slight mishap of Renae flipping her inflatable kayak in a small waterfall, then spending way too long exploring the bottom of the river-----we made camp in good time.

Our camp was typical of Bruneau River camps: a narrow side-canyon mouth, guarded by verdant poison ivy (oak), with a sagebrush flat above the river, to pitch tents and party on.

We celebrated “cheating death” in the usual river-runner fashion.

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Day two was a cruise through more tight canyons, interesting rapids, and spectacular scenery. Heidi was: “the queen of the river” with her highly-maneuverable raft. Renae spent more "down-time" exploring underwater, then gave up on her inflatable kayak, and rode in Heidi’s raft.

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Night two was spent on a large sagebrush bench, just above river level. We camped early and had two groups of boaters go by our camp in the late afternoon. An old friend: Steve Jones(Jonesy), was with one of the groups, that we knew would be camping just downstream from our location.

That night, we watched a huge lightning-storm to our south. It appeared to be centered on the Jarbidge Mountains, where most of the Bruneau’s water comes from.

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The next morning I rose early and upon walking down to the river, noticed our boats were floating freely, rather than resting on a small beach. The river had changed in texture, and now resembled a chocolate milkshake.

Hmmmm, I thought: the beach was now covered with water too. I made sure the boats were tied off solidly and wandered back to camp for coffee and breakfast.

After breakfast, we all went back down to the river and noted a lot of debris, including whole trees bobbing down the churning water. The water that had been chocolate, was now a rich dark red color.

Hmmmmm, I thought: that lightning storm must have put down major amounts of rain upstream.

We broke camp down, loaded our gear in the rafts, and discussed what to do. The river was obviously higher, but we couldn’t really tell how much it had gone up. Finally, we decided to wait around for someone to float by, and see what they thought of the water level.

We were about one mile above the main set of rapids on the Bruneau. Five-Mile Rapid is a near continuous Class IV technical and tight run for 3.5 miles. I think of Five-Mile Rapid as an interactive carnival ride, with ugly penalties for mistakes.

It seemed like Five-Mile Rapid might be scarier at much-higher water levels, but we figured we could run it with our big Aire Catarafts. However, Heidi’s smaller boat might be overmatched by huge waves and big holes: caused by high water.

After standing around in our dry-suits for an hour or so: we got impatient. Ben offered a toast to the river gods, spilled a little liquor into the water to calm it, and we launched boats.

Immediately after launching, I realized the water had come way up and was undoubtedly approaching the 2,500 CFS level that the BLM warned about. Just around the corner, we shot by one group of rafters who waved frantically at us, but we were unable to stop.

A bit farther on, we could see the rafts and kayaks belonging to Jonesy’s group. As we got closer: I realized everyone was lined up on shore, waiting for someone to float by. I was a little shocked. Jonesy has a wealth of big-water experience, used to own an Idaho rafting company, and was the River Unit Supervisor for filming the whitewater movie, The River Wild. I really had figured his group would be working their way down the river.

Seized with the “bravado of the damned,” I jumped to my feet and waved at Jonesy as we floated by.

I yelled: “SEE YOU IN HELL JONESY,” and waited for a witty retort.

None came.

I thought: “we’re truly damned if the professionals are standing on the bank waiting for inspiration.”


OK! Things get more exciting when I post the rest of this. Stay Tuned!





PART 2----Big Water Day!

Just above Five-Mile Rapid was a small lake, where the river had backed up. We pulled the rafts together and had a brief discussion, spiced by Ben passing around a flask of “nerve-tonic.” It was decided to put Heidi and Renae with their small boat in the middle, with Ben leading, and me following.

As we lined up and started into the rapid; Heidi told Renae: "We probably aren't going to make it through this upright, but if we do: all glory will be ours!"

They flipped in the first big waves. Heidi was keeping the boat pointed downstream and each huge standing wave would nearly flip them over backwards. When she attempted to avoid a large rock in the wave train, the slight change in angle was disastrous.

Heidi never even got to take a deep breath: she was suddenly upside down, seated, holding the oars, gasping for air. Her worst boating fear was real and happening: she was trapped under a raft. She pushed down and out, and rocketed to the surface (the air trapped inside her drysuit added considerably to the buoyancy of her life-jacket).

Her raft was out of view, but the nearby shoreline looked good. She did her best Michael Phelps swimming imitation, and suddenly was in a small eddy at the edge of the river. Adrenaline propelled her up onto a basalt boulder.

From that perch, she peered into a watery hell, and saw her upside-down raft accelerating downriver towards house-sized holes. With some relief, she noted Renae was clinging to the raft.

I had been about 150 feet behind Heidi, noticed the raft flip, then long seconds later: saw a dry-suited figure suddenly appear on the boulder. Since there is no trail down the Bruneau, and occasional sheer rock walls: being stranded on that hostile shore was not good. It was imperative for me to get out of the raging main current, and try to pick her up.

I caught an eddy (barely), slammed the back of my rafts right pontoon into the rock she was perched on, and screamed: “jump on if you can.”

Heidi jumped, strongly, and landed in a cat clawing belly-flop on a fairly-soft dry bag.


OK! I thought: now just get back out into the main current without hitting any rocks.

As I started pulling my way back into the raging red-torrent, our raft took off like a Porpoise. Suddenly, it hit a rock I couldn’t avoid. Both Heidi and I were launched off the raft by the impact of the collision. My hands were ripped off the oars and I flew out of the boat like Superman. By sheer luck, my right hand happened to grab an oarlock, as I flew by, and only my head went in the river.

Seeing the chaos ahead: Heidi had buried a hand under webbing, and held on with a death-grip. On impact, she somersaulted into the water, while still clinging to the webbing. Our wonderful raft had not flipped, and instead wallowed tail-first into the large eddy behind the rock we had collided with. That allowed me critical seconds to extract my right foot from a sandal, that had somehow become stuck between the rowing frame and the raft. It also allowed Ed time to help haul Heidi back out of the water.

Meanwhile Renae and the upside down Puma continued their, now terrifying, way down the Bruneau. Renae knew she had to stay on the upstream side of the raft, to avoid being pinned between it and a rock. However, every time she got on the upstream side, and tried to deploy the flip lines: the raft would pivot and put her on the downstream side. Meanwhile the raft was crashing into rocks, and they both were plunging through huge holes and giant waves.

Ben had also seen the accident and started maneuvering to effect a rescue. Every time he got close to Renae: he had to instead concentrate on surviving the next raft-eating hole or rock, on the river-obstacle course (the BLM guide to the Bruneau rates this section Class IV+ at normal water levels).

After about 1 & 1/2 miles of constant hellacious water, the river slowed into another small lake, and Ben was finally able to save Renae. I caught up soon thereafter, and we managed to tow the upside-down Puma raft to the river bank.

Renae was very tired, but was not suffering Hypothermia from her too-long immersion in snow-melt water. She said she could not have held on much longer. I don’t believe she could have lasted through the ordeal without a Dry Suit. Heidi’s raft was in worse shape from its upside-down float trip. The heavy steel-tubing frame and one oar were broken, from impacting rocks.

We took a break, while deflating the Puma. It got lashed onto Ben’s raft, and the frame got lashed onto mine. Renae rode the rest of the way with Ben and his dad, and Heidi stayed with Ed and me. I think the extra weight helped us get down the rest of Five-Mile Rapid without further disaster.

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Despite taking about an hour off the river, we still hadn’t had any other boaters catch us.

Ben led the rest of Five-Mile, while I prudently maneuvered out of the wave-train, whenever I saw his raft stand up vertical, or skirt around a huge hole or rock. After spending the first half of Five-Mile Rapid both trying to save Renae, and not kill ourselves: the second half of the brown-water hell seemed merely--------- extremely out of control.

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After Five-Mile, the river was calmer for a while, until Wild Burro rapid. Wild Burro is below a small lake in the Bruneau, made by a long-ago landslide that dammed the river. It is a “very interesting” Class IV rapid at normal levels, since a narrow exit at the right side of the landslide/dam, leads to a steep descent down the landslide/dam face, with huge standing waves at the bottom, then shortly thereafter, a cliff-side to avoid on the left.

Wild Burro was the most exciting single rapid on “flood-day.” I had ended up in the lead, and suffered a panic-attack when we realized the right-side exit was blocked by a log-jam. However, there was enough water to exit straight over the top of the dam. I’ve rarely been so scared, as when I saw the churning maelstrom of huge waves at the bottom. When we got through that rapid, we broke for lunch. I was still so hyper from my "adrenaline rush" that I was shaking.

Seized with a sudden premonition that other boaters behind us would soon need rescue, I grabbed a "throw-rope bag" and waited by the side of the Bruneau for a while. After no boats or swimmers showed up, I had something to eat and we floated a few miles of easy water to the takeout. We were all very subdued, very tired, and almost in a state of shock. Heidi found some cold beers to sip on, to calm our nerves, as we broke the rafts down and loaded our vehicles.

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After bidding farewell to our friends, Heidi & I drove down-canyon to the small town of Bruneau, then stopped by a restaurant to make sure the load was tied down properly, before highway driving. At this point a deputy sheriff came trotting out of the restaurant and bustled up to us. In some astonishment, he asked: “did you folks just get off the Bruneau?”

We replied in the affirmative.

He then proceeded to tell us that the Bruneau was flowing at 3500 CFS, and there were all sorts of rafting disasters upstream. The lightning storm the night before had caused massive snowmelt in the high peaks at the head of the Jarbidge River, and the ensuing flood had ripped out the road to the little town of Jarbidge, then rolled down to the Bruneau River with masses of debris included. The sheriff had spotted upside down rafts from the canyon rim.

To say the least: we were stunned that we had rafted the Bruneau at 3500 CFS--------- 1000 CFS over the recommended maximum river level. No wonder that it had been so out of control. We drove home feeling very much like hippies the day after a drug-trip.

The Bruneau flood made the regional news. It was reported some people abandoned their gear and hiked out of the Bruneau canyon. One of my friends from Ketchum had a moment of wisdom, and hiked out 5 miles with his kayak over his shoulder. Some smart & patient people waited days until the water went down, then boated out.

A few months after the Bruneau epic, I ran into Jonesy in Boise. After exchanging pleasantries, I asked him how his party had fared on the Bruneau. He said, after they decided to commit to the flood: they had descended the river cautiously with their kayakers as safety boats.

I complemented him on engineering a safe descent for his party, through a boater's hell, and leaned in closer.

“Jonesy, was it Class V water?” I inquired.

Steve had to think about it for a little while.

He replied: “Ray, it was real big Class IV.”



Regional newspaper article on the Bruneau:
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  Trip Report Views: 5,175
Fritz
About the Author
Fritz is a trad climber from Choss Creek, ID.

Comments
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Jan 26, 2011 - 11:37pm PT
Awesome Fritz, Can't wait to hear how this ends!
Sounds like something I'd watch on Outdoor Idaho!
Best
-e
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
  Jan 26, 2011 - 11:42pm PT
Fritz,
You forgot to post your PayPal acct number! Don't hold us hostage!
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Jan 26, 2011 - 11:57pm PT
Ezra & Reilly: Thank you for your affirmations! ;)

If you like the thread, email me and get on our small and elite group registering for Idaho river lotteries. We need help on the Middle Fork and Main Salmon lotteries. They end Jan 31.
Gal

Trad climber
going big air to fakie
  Jan 26, 2011 - 11:58pm PT
I'm hooked-can't wait for the rest!!!!!!!!!
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
  Jan 27, 2011 - 12:39am PT
Geeeez Fritz, I for once have a good connection and now I have to wait? Nothing like the noise of rapids you can't see and that time lag before enter the Maytag machine.
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Jan 27, 2011 - 12:49am PT
Guido: You've lived a long time: hang on until tomorrow.

Jonesy worked with your pal: legendary kayaker John Wasson, on the River Wild filming project.
philo

climber
  Jan 27, 2011 - 01:30am PT
This is great fritz. You left us hanging like an old TV serial adventure drama. I am eagerly awaiting part 2.
John Moosie

climber
Beautiful California
  Jan 27, 2011 - 01:07pm PT
Sweaty palms... Sweaty palms. I'm sitting here waiting to drop in. Whats around that next corner.

p.s.. any pics of the 4 wheel drive road? What vehicles did you use?
TrundleBum

Trad climber
Las Vegas
  Jan 27, 2011 - 04:45am PT
Two thumbs up !
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
  Jan 27, 2011 - 12:45pm PT
Really cool Fritz, keep it up!!

Hey, we have plenty of politics around here, why not a little rafting?
At least it's fun, outdoors, sporty and makes better pictures than arguing about the state of the union address.....

Keep 'em coming!
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Jan 27, 2011 - 01:38pm PT
Thanks everyone. I will try to post the exciting part of this story around 5:00 PM ST time today.

Sorry to leave you hanging. Although I suppose, that is appropriate on a climbing blog site ;)

Ezra: I confess to having been interviewed on an Outdoor Idaho segment. We were trapped with a bunch of their folks, by a logjam, on a 2006 Middle Fork Salmon trip.

Survival; I thought about looking for a river running blog-site to post this on, but ST folks are "my people."

Also, since I don't have a good photo on this thread, of our wonderful cataraft: here's one from that 2006 logjam trip.

Gal

Trad climber
going big air to fakie
  Jan 27, 2011 - 01:42pm PT
You are toying with me.

Can't wait.

Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Jan 27, 2011 - 02:57pm PT
Fritz, I rember that out door idaho segment....LOL!
nutjob

Sport climber
Almost to Hollywood, Baby!
  Jan 27, 2011 - 03:12pm PT
Bring on the story tellin' and pics! I consider this very on-topic.
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Jan 27, 2011 - 08:13pm PT
Updated by adding Part 2 into the original story!
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Jan 27, 2011 - 09:18pm PT
What a Wild ride, thanks for taking us along!

Glad none of Y'all were hurt!

Thanks again Fritz!
Nohea

Trad climber
Living Outside the Statist Quo
  Jan 27, 2011 - 10:12pm PT
That was an awesome read!
Thanks at least in surfing the waves are not 5 miles long.

Aloha.
will
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
  Jan 27, 2011 - 10:26pm PT
Thanks Fritz-awesome tale. Happy that all made it out safely and I can concur with Dingus and the fear of a bad water experience with his daughters. Adventure is one thing but you don't want to create a terrifying experience that will deter future aspirations.
Lynne Leichtfuss

Trad climber
Will know soon
  Jan 28, 2011 - 12:27am PT
Super Fantastic Story/Adventure. Thanks for sharing it. Felt like I was with yo the whole way. Cheers, lynne
Gal

Trad climber
going big air to fakie
  Jan 28, 2011 - 12:50am PT
Ahhh-great TR, thank you... very exciting!
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Feb 2, 2011 - 12:41am PT
Thanks all! I have been telling the story for years and needed to write it down for a possible future book.

Dingus: RE:
think I remember the Jarbridge rd getting washed out. Is this the road that the BLM refused to rebuild and set off a terrible controversy and talk of Nevada succession?

The best of two very bad roads into Jarbidge: comes from the Idaho side. Both roads were destroyed by the flood we experienced. As I recall, there was some talk of not re-building the road that went out to the south to Elko.

However, the big fuss was about the Forest Service trying to close another washed out road from Jarbidge that went up to the Jarbidge Wilderness.
http://www.pirate4x4.com/forum/showthread.php?t=168977

Guido: All the younger folks on the trip kept rafting. I think that was it for Ed and Ben's father. We ran the Bruneau again with Ben two years later, at about 1500 CFS, and he flipped his raft in Five Mile Rapid.
That flip, was however, not epic.
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Feb 1, 2011 - 11:30pm PT
Fritz, I'm interested to hear more about your book!
Will it be climbing themed, rafting or just all Idaho adventures?
Let us all know when it gets published!
Thanks
-ezra
Captain...or Skully

climber
Boise, ID
  Feb 2, 2011 - 02:28pm PT
Anti-Tard Bump. Cool pics & such too.
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
Author's Reply  Feb 2, 2011 - 09:15pm PT
Elias: I am in the advanced fantasy/planning stage of doing a book: on misadventures in Idaho's Mountains & Rivers. I have two friends with great stories, but no desire to write them down. It appears I will have to write their stories for them, and then have them edit and appove: for a promised % of glory and money.

Any would be contributors? I am trying to avoid "dead people" epics (except for fun "dead-people" stories. OMG! I just thought of one!

Skully! Thanks! I recall that you are not a "river-rat"----but this must beat "politard" reading?



mike m

Trad climber
black hills
  Oct 17, 2011 - 09:49pm PT
Rafting bump
Go