The idea of paddling Viamala schlucht also motivated him to come along with us and 2 hours later we are finding ourselfs following Toro down a steep gully to get down to the river. Toro It's a great experiece to be down in this gorge, looking up, surrounded by 50 meters steep walls. This run has a nice warm up section with small rapids and little boofs. After a 4 meter wier the more steep and technical part of the section starts. The gorge is getting more narrow and a five meter slide appairs. Toro explains all the lines and moves, therefore we kept on moving without getting to cold. It was a one of the best rivers I have done in this area so far. What a great day.
maandag 16 april 2012
Switzerland, Viamala Gorge to Thusis
The idea of paddling Viamala schlucht also motivated him to come along with us and 2 hours later we are finding ourselfs following Toro down a steep gully to get down to the river. Toro It's a great experiece to be down in this gorge, looking up, surrounded by 50 meters steep walls. This run has a nice warm up section with small rapids and little boofs. After a 4 meter wier the more steep and technical part of the section starts. The gorge is getting more narrow and a five meter slide appairs. Toro explains all the lines and moves, therefore we kept on moving without getting to cold. It was a one of the best rivers I have done in this area so far. What a great day.
Colombia, Rio Caqueta 2011

After a 15 hour busride from Quito in Equador we pass the south Colombian border. We obtain a tourist visa for three months and a nice stamp in our passport. We continue traveling to a place called Pasto. Here they celerbrate Carnaval. My first day in Colombia was one of party and dancing unfortunately I ended up in the back of a police van, due to a small incident (in)directly caused by a strong liquer called Aquardiente, which the friendly Colombians like to offer you (non-stop) and I drank to much of. Luckly my friend knew the Colombian ways and paid around 20 pound to the police and we were on free foot again followed by the biggest hangover in my personal history.
Welcome to Colombia!!!!
In Pasto I met up with two American kayakers and we paddled rivers in the south of Colombia also known as the wild west of Colombia, where still a big part of the land get ruled by the Fark and paramilitairen. But the friendly Colombians and the police are very well informed about the safety in the different areas, so its not very dificult to find out were to go, and were not!
David, Mark Hentze and me did a first kayak descent of the lower Rio Caqueta near a place called Macoa in the province of Putumayo. We gathered information about this river by looking at google earth maps and talking to locals, but had no idea what to expect. Since this was the main river for transportation of essential liquids for the cocaine laps further south, we expected a class III. Although we got informed by locals that in the past some of the smugglers didnt survive the trip and drowned.
The rivers drops 240 m drops in around 50 km, the locals advised us to run the river in one day and not to sleep in the gorge since the area is on the border of Fark teratory. So the next day we started at 7.00 at a place called the bridge of Caqueta. After a 30 minute paddle a local farmer insisted that we should go back because we all would drown. We continued paddling and the brown river floated in a beautifull big gorge with pretty waterfalls dropping in from the sides. The first big rapid surprised us: it was big!!! a long bouldergarden, followed by numerous big class IV plus rapids. This pool drop style river was amazing and we were enjoying beeing in the gorge and experiencing this great trip. Most rapids were runnable but we realized early on we wouldnt make the 50 km in one day.
After paddling for 6 hour a big tribotairy got in we encountered a class V rapid which in the end the whole river disapaired under 3 gigant boulders. During the portage we saw a green army tent and we decided to cross the river and portage on the other side just and tried not get seen, better safe than sorry. Eventually the portage took us around 3 hours and we continued for and hour more or so. It was getting dark in less than an hour so we found a beach, which was only reachable by kayak inbetween 2 big rapids and made a campfire, eat some food and got the emergency blankets out. It was a warm night and sleeping in this canyon was a great experience although sligtly uncomfortable sleeping on a drybag as matteress and a stone functioning as pillow.
The next day we did another 30 km and the rapids got easyer towards the end and the gorge started to open up. By now the river was extremely wide and we were floating towards our take out, a place called Puerto Limon. We got welcomed by friendly kids and locals and drank a few beers enjoying the streetlife of Puerto Limon and eventually found a little truck which brought us back to Mocoa.
What a stunning run, the best kayak trip in my life!!!
With just one more conclusion; those young Colombians who smoggled the liquids in 5 galls cans must have been totally crazy!!!
zondag 15 april 2012
Switzerland, Valserrhein 2011
Were in Switzerland, Graubunden, it's Oktober and we are lucky, the sun is shining and many rivers are running again, so Lieke and I decided to run the Valserrhein; my favorite run of the season.
From Ilanz you drive into the direction of a town called Vals. The Valserrhein is an amazing gorge; an amazing creek which has three portage's. We quickly realized we had a real nice water level and it was a delight to run nice clean lines down the little drops and rapids of the this steep river.
At the putt in the riverbanks were still covered in snow. Wearing a double set of thermals under our dry suits and the presence of the warm autumn sun made us feel and warm and comfortable. Fairly easy we arrived at the first 'cave' portage, here you have to climb through a tight hole in a rock, followed by a Himalaya start back in the river. Running the class V-VI rapid instead didn’t appeal to us, we leave this drop to the brave boys.....
After the first ‘cave’ portage the nicest rapids of the Valserrhein are following, clean lines, little drops, boofs, auto-boofs. We are enjoying every minute of our trip in this stunning gorge in autum. The second portage is a long rapid that ends in an undercut with a log jam. Portaging here is hard work; struggling on the rocky banks, pulling our kayak over the big rocks and fallen trees. It was time for the girls to make a chocolate break.
The third part of the run is a bit easier, still nice moves to make and more time to enjoy the scenery. I always look forwards to the little drop towards the end of this section. Then a big horizon line apears. This15 meter waterfall lands on rocks, and is the third portage. With a 20 meter long rope we lower the kayaks down the cliff of the drop and run the last part of the Valserrhein. A set of real friendly and enjoyable drops. Around 15.00 (3pm) we arrive at the take -out, a great day, good fun, nice water level, good lines, stunning.
What a great autumn paddle.
Colombia, Mocoa, 2012
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Hiking to the putt in of Rio Mocoa |
Ater 2 months in Ecuador its time to go to Colombia. After the New Years Party and a day of recovering the mission is to travel to a town called Mocoa in the province of Putumayo, just north of the Ecuadorian border. This town lays in the Amazon of the Andes mountains. Putumayo is still considered “El Corazón” or the heart of the guerrilla territory, but in recent years security has improved around Mocoa.
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First descent of the upper part of Rio Mocoa |
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First kayak descent of Rio Pepino |
Ater 2 months in Ecuador its time to go to Colombia. After the New Years Party and a day of recovering the mission is to travel to a town called Mocoa in the province of Putumayo, just north of the Ecuadorian border. This town lays in the Amazon of the Andes mountains. Putumayo is still considered “El Corazón” or the heart of the guerrilla territory, but in recent years security has improved around Mocoa.
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Rio Mocoa to Puente metallico |
Rio Mocoa, lower part |
The first river we paddled is the Rio Pepino, this river drops around 40 meter per kilometer. What a great run, clean water, technical, awesome scenery, fastflowing, enjoyable boofs and a bar at the take out where we enjoyed a fresh beer with the local police. The next 5 days we ran different stretches and rivers in the area. And were getting more and more excited. Transport to and from the rivers is pretty easy to organise.
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Rio Rumiyaco |
They camped on the river bed. The second day they started again with few bonny class III rapids, but after the canyon walls tightened the river got steeper and offered great class IV+ whitewater in stunning rainforest scenery.
Last year in January, Mark Hentze, David Kashinski and myself paddled the Rio Caquetá. The only beta we had was a quick look at Google Earth and information from the locals. We paddled from the bridge on the main highway from Bogotá to Mocoa just 30 minutes from Mocoa and got out at a village called Puerto Límon. The canyon has stunning whitewater and nature to offer, plus a big volume pool-drop. The steep canyon drops 300 meters in 50 kilometers, many big class IV-V+ rapids.
This year we didn't paddle this gorge due to high water and maybe due to security issues it just did not feel right. Some of the locals say it is safe but others say the guerrillas still are active in this area. Besides the classic whitewater that this region has to offer, Rio Caquetá gives me one more reason to come back to Mocoa, pronto.
Ecuador 2011
Rio Jondachi- Hollin |
Tom is a kayaker from France, and within a few hours his French mates are arriving as well. Let the French invastion start.....
So the trip started funny, we loaded the kayaks on top and in the taxi, squeezed in between our gear and went straight to a cheap hostel to dump the stuff and go for a Pilsener beer. There is only one way to start a good kayak trip in South America, this is beer in the Karaoke bar.
Rio Upper Jondachi |
After a horrible night in a cheap backpacker hostel I went straight to Baeza, a small village in one of the best kayaking areas in Equador: Quichos Valley. That same night I met some kayakers and the next day we paddle a section called Bridge1 to Borga. Awesome to be back on the Equadorian rivers again. Waterlevels have been great this year, its almost raining every night, which realy tops up the rivers. We have been doing some awesome trips on the Quichos and its side creeks. The quichos valley has it all, steep creeks like the Papayacta to big water paddling near San Rafael falls.
Watefall on Rio Hollin |
Life is pretty good, the next 10 days I will be working for a German company who runs guided kayaking trips in Equador. Ama la vida.
Overnighter on rio Piatua |
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Rio Quichos, Cheesehouse |
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