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Jack playing by an old jet boat |
Last weekend, we traveled to the tiny town of Pipiriki for canoeing on the Whanganui river. Canoeing the Whanganui is one of the so-called Great Walks of New Zealand and nothing I read mentioned above average canoeing skill, so I was anxious to give it a go (insert foreboding music here). The great walk (paddle?) is a three or four day canoe trip through the Whanganui National park, which sounds fun, but I don't think our kids are quite up to something that long yet. I picked an outfitter that runs one day canoe trips from the
Bridge to Nowhere. We didn't make it out to the bridge, but the trip was interesting nonetheless.
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Here we go! |
The hour long jet boat trip up the river was pretty, but fairly cold. The area had had a decent rain the night before and some spots in the river looked somewhat challenging (more music). We actually jet-boated to the drop off point for the hike to the bridge, but the canoes were a few minutes downstream and we had to ride back down the river to put in. The company set us up with two Old Town canoes and we were off with instructions to avoid obstacles, "stay right" of both rapids, and to abandon the canoe if we tipped. The two company boats run up and down the river most of the day shuttling hikers and mountain bikers to the bridge. Our boat driver told me he would check in on us as the day wore on, increasing my comfort level. The first set of rapids was two hours downstream.
We started down the river with Steven and I in one canoe, Jack and Laura in the other. The scenery was beautiful as the river cuts through an ancient volcanic landscape and drains a large portion of the countryside. There were many small waterfalls along the way and the canoeing was easy and pleasant. We stopped about 30 minutes downstream for a quick lunch. The nagging feeling I was having about the rapids prompted an early stop to eat. The company loaned us a waterproof barrel, but I had visions of our lunch floating down the river.
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A waterfall from the jet boat |
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Putting in |
After lunch we had another 90 minutes of pleasant canoeing. We took lots of photos and had fun nosing into cuts in the rock walls. When we reached the first spot of fast water Steven and I pushed ahead of Laura and Jack. I was thinking it would be easier if we were in the lead to fish Laura and Jack out if they spilled. We made it through the first bad spot fairly easy and were about to round a bend when I heard Laura yell. I looked back to see them in the water near their capsized canoe. Steven and I pulled up and turned around to get back upstream to help. We pulled hard into the downstream end of the fast water, but we couldn't make any headway further upstream. I could tell their canoe was pinned on an obstruction and I had the sinking feeling Laura was somehow trapped. Jack was standing holding his paddle and seemed okay, but Laura was really low in the water. We had no options. The sides of the river were shear rock walls and no other boats were in sight. Laura and Jack were on their own. I was yelling for them to abandon their boat and float down, but they didn't seem able to do so. Steven and I took another run trying to get upstream with the same result. During my yelling, I asked if they were okay, which seemed to get through and Laura held up an "Ok" sign. I breathed a big sigh of relief as they moved downstream of their canoe and began to float down to us.
Minutes later, we pulled Laura and Jack, shivering, into our boat. We found a place to pull out, strip wet clothes and wait for help. It took about 30 minutes for the first boat from another company to pass. We waved and signal, but frustratingly, they didn't stop.
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Lunch break |
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Steven in my boat |
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Jack in Laura's boat |
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Moments before swimming |
The next boat was also from the other company and the driver had folks to meet up river, but promised to contact our boats. The first boat from our company arrived about 20 minutes later and only had room for two, so I put Jack and Laura in it while Steven and I waited another few minutes for our ride down river.
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All's well, but chilly |
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Whanganui from River Road |
Except for the unplanned swim, we had fun. Jack claims to be done with canoeing. I'll have to get him on the Sipsey with the Yingsts to improve his outlook.