Jan. 18th, 2012

shapeofthings: (Wellington)
[Day 1 is here]

Day 2: I woke early to a beautiful morning and enjoyed a half-hour or so of quietness to myself before the rest of the camp began to stir. We packed, breakfasted and got back in the rafts, or in my case, the kayak, and set off for our first full day on the Franklin. The morning was uneventful; largely gentle paddling with decreasingly-frequent stops to drag the rafts through shallow sections. I had the hang of my kayak and the trust of the guides so was largely left to my own devices all morning, and derived far too much amusement from watching Sam, the boy in the other kayak, repeatedly capsize. Yes, I can be a little cruel sometimes.

At lunch time I swapped with Jeddah (and Espen swapped with the water-logged Sam) and took my place in a raft with Nikki, Wayne and guide Jim. It was quite different to need to work as a team and respond quickly to Jim's instructions, and frustrating to be stuck with the consequences when someone in the team wasn't pulling their weight.

Day2-03


By afternoon tea time we're dragging the rafts a lot less and Brett makes the call to deflate the "ducks", so we're all in the rafts now. Just in time, too, as we soon encounter our first serious obstacle of the trip: a jammed-tight log in a narrow slot that Jim nick-names the Tipper. It's every-body out and a lot of hard work to lift the loaded rafts up and see-saw them over the top of the log. All the men are heaving (except Wayne - a recurring theme), lifting and pulling the heavy raft with nothing for footing but the same wet log the raft's on top of and some rather slippery rocks and I start to realise how serious this rafting business really is.
Day2-01 Clearing the Tipper
Clearing the Tipper


Day2-02 Nasty Notch
Navigating Nasty Notch


Eventually we get both rafts clear of the Tipper, but it's only a short stretch of smooth paddling before we hit the first of the dangerous rapids, known to have claimed a few lives: Nasty Notch. We all pile out onto the rocks and the rafts are dragged through and dropped into the downstream side and we glide our way through a glorious afternoon down to the night's camp: Irenabyss. Rumour has it this was to be the site of the 3rd dam proposed under the Franklin scheme, though I've never seen anything official. It's a pretty little gorge in steep country, nestled under the impressive white-quartz peak of Frenchman's Cap. A beautiful spot, I'm very glad the river's still wild and free.

Day2-05 Irenabyss Day2-04 Irenabyss
Beautiful Irenabyss


Camp is made under the trees (I claim an isolated spot up on top of the rocks) with hours of daylight to spare, so the more energetic of us cross the river with Jim to try a walk up a ridge that Brett recommends (notably, Brett stays put at camp). The trail to the ridge is steep and very over-grown in places. We're all in shorts as the afternoon is warm, and pretty soon our shins are scratched up from the unforgiving vegetation. We follow Jim up until the trail peters out and two of our party get bitten by inchman ants (luckily not jack-jumpers, which were also about). A group decision is made to turn back, and somehow Jim loses the trail a couple of times on the way back down, so we go cross-country and follow wombat trails until the track appears again and we finally make our way back down to the river, legs scraped and bloody. When we get back to camp Brett just laughs and we all learn a lesson about his sense of humour.

Jeddah1
Niall and I on our hiking adventure; photo by Jeddah

Frenchmans Jedd
View from the ridge to Frenchmans Cap; photo by Jeddah


The night is overcast and warm, and after a tasty dinner I flake out quickly, falling into a deep sleep in my mossy grotto (with repaired air mattress) only to wake in confusion several hours later to find Brett shining a torch in my face. It had started raining and tarps had been set up down below. Begrudgingly I woke up enough to gather my things and move down to the tarped area, claiming a small patch of dirt between Espen and Sam and spending the rest of the night dozing off then waking up to the snoring. Boo.

Day2-07 Irenabyss Day2-06 Irenabyss
Camp at Irenabyss


Day 3: The morning crept in grey and damp to find me grumpy and underslept. This was the morning we were supposed to climb up to Frenchman's Cap: an arduous ascent but one I'd been looking forward to. But with the peak lost to low clouds and a disrupted night's sleep, no-one could summon the motivation necessary to get up and get going. So the walk was called off, we slept in and a lazy morning was had. We didn't hit the river until 11 am, but consequently didn't make camp that evening until it was nearly dark: some time after 8 pm. The rafts were re-shuffled before we left and I was pleased to find myself swapped out of Jim's raft and into Brett's, with the rest of the science-nerd introverts on the trip: Kevin, Niall and Jeddah. I'd spend the rest of the trip with them and appreciated the quiet company, intelligent conversation and shared physical effort.

Day3-01
Photo by Espen


Lead raft: Guided by Brett, owner and operator of Water By Nature, a quiet man with a slightly vicious sense of humour who knows the river backwards. Crewed by me, Jedda (lovely & competent 22 year-old graduate Environmental Engineer from Melbourne) and the Scottish half-brothers (Kevin, 40, an electrical engineer who designs next-generation tanks and APCs for the British military, currently living in Cardiff, and Niall, 37, qualified marine biologist now making furniture and large metal sculptures, living in Bondi with his wife and baby daughters).

Second raft: Guided by Jim, who's not worked for Brett for long and runs his own rafting business in Scotland during our winters. Jim is more sociable than Brett and bestows nick-names on us all, except Wayne (a 50 year-old accountant from Brisbane who doesn't pull his weight in the raft and spends the portages surreptitiously filming us all with his camera strapped to his life-jacket), who becomes Creepy Wayne by popular consensus. Then there's Nikki (an amazingly fit 50-something animal behaviouralist from Sydney's Taronga Zoo, born and raised in South Africa, whom Jim spends the rest of the trip on the pull, possibly successfully), Sam (a 22-going-on-16 year old nouveau-bogan chippy from Melbourne with a good heart, a short attention span and a talent for annoyingness. He's spoilt rotten by his parents, with whom he still lives and who sent him on this $2k trip as a birthday present: in short he's your friend from high-school's annoying little brother, magnified) and my friend Es (a 35 year old chef and logistics manager on a mine site in the middle of nowhere, Queensland, whom I love as a brother but wish would learn to value and look after himself).

Day3-02
Photo by Espen


The rafting itself was fairly straight-forward, with no major obstacles to negotiate. The most dramatic event of the day occurred when our raft spun backwards unexpectedly while traversing a rapid, slamming into a very large log downstream. Except the log was higher than the raft edge, so the surface that collected and absorbed the impact was my arse. Yeah, that made me wince a little (and left a spectacular haematoma right across the left cheek).

Camp was made on a sandy beach, with conversation over cask wine extending late into the evening before we drifted off for another chilly night under a sky full of brilliant stars.
shapeofthings: (Hug?)
Too much of my life right now is tied up in "wait and see".

I've never been good with uncertainty.

Time to learn.

Coiled Potential

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