Saturday, August 24, 2013

Race to Rim Fire



Life has just been one big messy blessing lately. Currently, I'm writing you from the northbound train from San Diego after spending a couple days in Baja, watching the sun set over the ocean. No complaints here; just a few good stories. 


Earlier in the month, my family officially welcomed Sean to the family after 12 years of these two knuckleheads realizing what's good for them. The wedding was perfect; great weather, I didn't botch my speech, and our family escaped some potentially hazardous blowouts. Great success. 



After the wedding, I bolted up to Groveland to spend the rest of the summer on the Tuolumne River. I think I'm officially done living in the city. Mountain living is pretty simple. It's nice to be completely disconnected with no cell service or internet unless seeking it out. 



Scott and Vanessa came up for a pretty exciting weekend. Scott is a long time friend of both Andrew and I - also the reason we met. They wanted to raft, so we made it happen. Cooper took us out on a private trip down Cherry Creek, which is said to be the hardest river in the United States, boasting over 12 class V rapids. With only three hours of sleep, Scott and Vanessa were fired up and we only had one swim, when Scott decided to jump OUT of the boat on a high side down the class V rapid, "Blind Faith." 



The next day was the annual Cherry Creek Race, which starts at the confluence of Cherry Creek and the Tuolumne and ends 6.5 miles down at Lewis's Leap. Andrew set the new record for the short boat race and then was pushed back to 2nd place when Sam, the Tuolumne photo kayaker, passed with a 20 second lead. After the race, we all went to Lumsden Bridge Campground and noticed a fire on the other side of the hill. No one thought much of it, until Ranger Bob Stanley came to tell us midway through the awards ceremony that we needed to evacuate. "It's not gonna burn," came from the pouting mouths of many. Little did we all know. 



By the next afternoon, the fire spread impressively up the north side of the canyon. Once or twice a day, we'd drive up and watch in awe from a safe lookout on the other side. By day three, it crossed to our side of the canyon and we were evacuating the guide house in Groveland, packing up all rafts, vans, trucks, gear, and household items. The number of acreage was up to 10,000 and we thought it was incredible to have grown that big. Everyone left town that morning so the crew was slim. The 10 of us got in the company van once it got dark, drove to our lookout that was once safe, but burning by the time we got to it. Everyone but a few people left town with fingers crossed. It's now up to 165,000 acres and only 1.5 miles from the guide house. Pretty amazing to watch nature take its course. No more second-guessing the ranger.

I’ll be in San Diego for a weekend of Britney's bachelorette shenanigans, then back to paradise in the beloved Mexico. The rest of the summer will be spent in Baja with a hopeful swell coming in next week. Andrew leaves for Africa on September 9th and I'm not sure my plan yet but that seems to be the way I like it these days. Nos vemos. 

Here are some more photos from the weekend compliments of Scott Leduc:



Celebrating Andrew breaking a record

Award ceremony

Rim Fire in its infancy stage 


This road eventually burnt down 

Vanessa, Andrew, me, Cooper, Scott