Kayakers on the Genesee River |
Saturday, Aug. 24, 2013
We started today early, and made it up to the Stone Tool
Show at about 10:30. The show was kind of interesting, but somehow neither Joe
nor I really “got it”. It was, first of all, a gathering of flint-knappers. I
understand the idea of the craft, but when all is said and done, there is not a
lot you can make with flint. As craftspeople, these folks tow around trucks
full of rocks—this has GOT to be seriously un-fun to load, unload, and set up!
They did demos of flint-knapping, and they were all, every one of them, selling
stone arrowhead pendants. I assume some people are more skilled than others,
but when you come down to it, every arrowhead looks pretty much like every
other arrowhead. I can’t really imagine doing the same thing over and over and
coming out with pretty much an identical result. And yet they are quite
passionate about it—this particular gathering was of the Genesee Valley Flint
Knappers. Are there other chapters? And what in the world happens to all these
arrowheads? I mean, hardly anyone hunts with them anymore. Like I said, we just
didn’t “get it.” I was amused, however, by one booth, with a banner proclaiming "www.FlintKnappingTools.com." The most ancient of technologies married to the most recent.
There were other craftspeople there, and we saw items carved
from bone, tools to do flint-knapping, a guy throwing a hatchet (into a target, not anyone’s neck, thank
goodness), jewelry, more arrows and arrowheads, some weaving, some leatherwork,
and the atl-atl demonstration. What else…. Honey, some pottery, and one booth full of
books on geology of all over the country. This was the place for rock
enthusiasts. Finally, there was a “mountain
man encampment” of lean-to tents, wrought iron tools, and fire pits. Some folks
were in period costume to go along with their mountain man camp. But all in
all, we were a little puzzled by it all—somehow, none of this spoke to us. We marveled at how one person's passion can just leave another person completely disinterested. I am sure for the folks who were there with their booths and demonstrations, they were looking forward to this gathering all year.
We headed down the mountain to the rafting building so we’d
have some time for lunch before our kayak excursion down the Genesee River
Gorge in the park. We had lunch at the small restaurant nearby—we almost never
do this, but I had a sudden craving for a well-done snack bar style hamburger,
LOL! And then we just relaxed until it
was time to meet the other kayakers. There were about 30 of us, plus 3-4
guides. We got flotation vests (hard to imagine needing one, since the river
was VERY low) and a little safety lecture, before heading down the road to the
put-in point.
We each had our own kayak—inflatables like ours, but smaller
than the one Joe and I own, and we were sitting higher up on it. As soon as we
started downstream, we immediately hit a small rapids area. At least half the
group promptly got stuck on the rocks. I discovered that the real difficulty with the
exercise was not about paddling through the rapids—it was having so many people
in a group doing it at the same time. More than once I would be getting up
speed to shoot through, only to have the person in front of me get stuck. I
would bang into him/her, and end up either just log-jammed there, or stuck on
my own rock as a result. The other danger was the reverse—I would hang up on a
rock, and while I was spinning myself off it, someone would slam into me and
drive me back up on it. Most of the time when I got stuck, it was because of a
collision with another kayak.
The river had numerous rapids, separated by quiet areas
where those who were through would wait for the folks who were stuck. It was
both a lot of fun and very funny at the same time. Although one time I was not
amused a bit—I was just getting off a rock (I wasn’t really stuck there, just spinning
free) when someone came up behind me, yelled “Oh no, I’m going to tip you over!”
and then proceeded to do pretty much just that. She shoved me onto my side and
shot past me. I hung there for almost a minute, maybe longer, with the river
(which was actually quite fast at that point, because another stream had joined
the main river) flowing OVER me, through my kayak, and me hanging there trying
to right the kayak and NOT to fall out of it. I did see one guy flip over—the river
was too fast for him to stand up safely, even though it is not very deep. I whooshed past him and didn’t see how he got
back in. As a result of the number of
rocky spots and the relative shallowness of the water, Joey suggested that what
we were doing was essentially “horizontal bouldering” rather than actual
kayaking. It did seem that we spent an
inordinate amount of time on top of rocks rather than on the water!
We stopped at a halfway point for some juice and cookies.
Joe was already really tired—he’d gotten stuck at one point and instead of
rocking himself free, he’d been trying to paddle with the water to get going
again. Doing it that way is great, if you don’t exhaust yourself trying. We had
a nice rest, and then went on. About 20
minutes later we stopped again to look at a beautiful waterfall coming into the
river from Wolf Creek. The fall was quite large and high, and is only visible
from the river gorge, not from any overlooks. (Unfortunately I didn’t have a
waterproof camera, so I took no photos during the trip. But fortunately the day
before, we’d seen a kayak group go past us while we were up on an overlook. I
took a lot of photos, thinking that it would show us what we looked like and
illustrate this blog!) There is a pool
at the bottom, as well as a deep hole which several people jumped into. Definitely a big bonus for the kayaking, to
see something that beautiful.
When we left the waterfall, we immediately hit a
large rapids area (fed by Wolf Creek added to the Genesee) and that was pretty
intense. At the bottom though, I turned around (I did a lot of that, not always
on purpose!) and looked back, as per the guide’s recommendation. The view of
the gorge walls with the late afternoon light on them just at the bend in the
river there was simply gorgeous.
After that we floated pretty quietly beneath the walls for
another 10-15 minutes, just resting and looking at the scenery. It was simply
wonderful. We finally reached the
take-out point and a bus took us back to the office, where we shed our vests
and stumbled, soaking wet and totally exhausted, into the RV. We had paddled
for 5 miles down the river, pretty much non-stop for 3 hours and having to
paddle almost the entire time (the current was not fast enough to just let us
float, except of course at the rapids, where “just floating” was not an
option.) We were chilled from the wet clothes (although the river itself was
not very cold at all) and Joe and I were too tired to move…. We just crashed
(although we did make some tea to heat ourselves up, too.) The RV was quite
warm when we got in, which was much appreciated. It was at least an hour before we felt able
to drag ourselves up and drive to the RV campground where we were planning to
spend the night. We stayed at a very pretty family campground, quite full of
children on bikes, karaoke near the office, and lots of people and RVs
everywhere, but we did not care. We knew we would have NO TROUBLE sleeping!
Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013
Guess who is still tired from kayaking? We spent the first
half of the day at the campground, just relaxing and letting our wet clothes
from the kayak trip dry in the sunshine. Around 2pm or so we finally packed up
and drove 32 miles to Darien Lake State Park, which is where we are now. The
campground is about half full and pretty nice, although not as wooded as
Letchworth was. It is on much flatter ground—in fact the scenery getting here
was rolling farmland. But the good news is, we have 4G cellular again, so I can
catch up with my blogging. Tomorrow our plans are to go up toward the Niagara
Falls area, although we are not planning to go to see the falls (not a good
area for an RV—too much congestion!) We have a couple of other things planned
instead, which we are looking forward to.
1 comment:
You describe this so well. I was panting during the kayak trip.
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