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From: Geo. Bergeron <heritage_at_europa.com>
subject: [Paddlewise] Whitewater River & Railroad Wars
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 1998 20:52:45 -0800 (PST)
        The Deschutes River Canyon is so popular for whitewater rafting and
kayaking in the summer that the State of Oregon finds it necessary to issue
permits and limit access. The Deschutes offers mostly class I rapids with a
couple serious Class IV runs in a high desert environment with sage brush,
geological splendor, and blazing 100 degree plus sunshine. To top it all,
Teddy Roosevelt thought that the Deschutes may be the finest trout fishing
river in the world. The history is really colorful too. . .

        In 1855, U.S. Army Topographic Engineers declared that building a
railroad along the narrow, basaltic cliffs of the Deschutes River gorge
would be impossible. The economic incentive for such a railroad would be the
billions of board-feet of Ponderosa pine in Bend. 

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From: Geo. Bergeron <heritage_at_europa.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Whitewater River & Railroad Wars
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 1998 21:35:20 -0800 (PST)
Ah hell!!! This is a draft, and I sure didn't mean to post it! Sorry!!!


At 08:52 PM 3/20/98 -0800, you wrote:
>        The Deschutes River Canyon is so popular for whitewater rafting and
>kayaking in the summer that the State of Oregon finds it necessary to issue
>permits and limit access. The Deschutes offers mostly class I rapids with a
>couple serious Class IV runs in a high desert environment with sage brush,
>geological splendor, and blazing 100 degree plus sunshine. To top it all,
>Teddy Roosevelt thought that the Deschutes may be the finest trout fishing
>river in the world. The history is really colorful too. . .
>
>        In 1855, U.S. Army Topographic Engineers declared that building a
>railroad along the narrow, basaltic cliffs of the Deschutes River gorge
>would be impossible. The economic incentive for such a railroad would be the
>billions of board-feet of Ponderosa pine in Bend. 
>
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>
>

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From: Roger Korn <rkorn_at_europa.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Whitewater River & Railroad Wars
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 1998 22:08:55 -0800
And then there is Shearar's Falls. We have never run it. In the summer, it's a
50' drop. We saw it last month, inundated so that it was about a 15' drop with
humongous waves at the bottom of each possible route. Serious 5, way beyond me.
but doable.

Roger

Geo. Bergeron wrote:

>         The Deschutes River Canyon is so popular for whitewater rafting and
> kayaking in the summer that the State of Oregon finds it necessary to issue
> permits and limit access. The Deschutes offers mostly class I rapids with a
> couple serious Class IV runs in a high desert environment with sage brush,
> geological splendor, and blazing 100 degree plus sunshine. To top it all,
> Teddy Roosevelt thought that the Deschutes may be the finest trout fishing
> river in the world. The history is really colorful too. . .
>
>         In 1855, U.S. Army Topographic Engineers declared that building a
> railroad along the narrow, basaltic cliffs of the Deschutes River gorge
> would be impossible. The economic incentive for such a railroad would be the
> billions of board-feet of Ponderosa pine in Bend.
>
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> PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List
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> Website:         http://www.gasp-seakayak.net/paddlewise/
> ***************************************************************************



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