[Paddlewise] Wild women of the Colorado

From: Mary Zuschlag <mzuschlag_at_attbi.com>
Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 18:55:19 -0800
Interesting way of doing the canyon!  Those watershed bags are the best, I
flipped twice in the canyon and those bags were submerged for 20 minutes
without a drop of water inside.  Hard to put in a kayak though.  Interesting
trip report. -- MZ

THREE WOMEN RIVER-BOARD GRAND CANYON
December 18, 2001
Grand Canyon, AZ

On Dec 15, 2001, three women walked out of the Colorado River at Pierce
Ferry Bay at the headwaters of Lake Mead, each carrying over 80 pounds of
personal gear. The three had just completed the first ever 300 mile traverse
of the Colorado River from the base of Glen Canyon Dam to Pierce Ferry using
river boards.

Thirty nine year old Julie Munger, the trip leader, was ecstatic.
"The journey took us 19 days, and we really really had a good time." Ms.
Munger is a swiftwater rescue instructor from Colombia, CA. She was joined
by 20 year veteran river guide Kelly Kalafatich, 40, of Coloma CA. Ms.
Kalafatich was Meryl Streep's stunt double in the popular film "The River
Wild". Rebecca Rusch, 33, of Truckee, CA, rounded out the team. Ms. Rusch
has participated in 20 Eco Challenge endurance competitions. All three are
members of the U.S. Women's Rafting Team.

The group had no raft support, but used two Carlson River Boards each. "A
river board is 3 foot wide, 5 foot long and 4 inches thick. It's a stiff
foam board with hand grips. River boards are United States Coast Guard
approved watercraft. We used one board for our Watershed river bags
containing all our gear, while the second board provided each of us with
165 pounds of flotation. We followed all the Park's non-commercial river
runner
permit requirements, including using a canister system to remove all our
solid human waste. We even brought along a fire pan and an extra life
jacket, as required in the regulations" noted Munger, who went on to note
"We received no special consideration from the Park, but found the rangers
to be very helpful and friendly."

The women wore polypropylene lined wet suits under an outer dry suit
along with a life jacket to stay warm in the 48 degree water. Munger said
there was a learning curve to their journey. "It took us a little
experimenting to sort out how to rig our gear on the river boards without
having them turn over when we swam out of eddies. We would let our gear
float free in the big rapids, swim through, then catch up with our gear."
Munger noted that at the canyon's three biggest rapids, Hance, Granite and
Lava, the trio lined their gear down the shore of the rapid, then the women
walked back up and floated through the rapids.

"I applied for a non-commercial river running permit 10 years ago, and
finally received a launch permit from officials at Grand Canyon National
Park for the November 28, 2001 launch" Munger added. "We wanted to go in the
winter when the trip would be more of an adventure. It was really fun seeing
the river from the eyes of a duck."

visit my website: http://www.mzuschlag.com


***************************************************************************
PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List - Any opinions or suggestions expressed
here are solely those of the writer(s). You must assume the entire
responsibility for reliance upon them. All postings copyright the author.
Submissions:     PaddleWise_at_PaddleWise.net
Subscriptions:   PaddleWise-request_at_PaddleWise.net
Website:         http://www.paddlewise.net/
***************************************************************************
Received on Wed Dec 19 2001 - 18:57:58 PST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Thu Aug 21 2025 - 16:30:46 PDT