This is the usual, long, boring, overwrought, inaccurate, unreliable
work of reality–based fiction, or vice versa: My Zion buddy Fred K.
was driving his R.V. from Alabamay (henceforth we will use the local
pronunciation of ‘Salome’ for place names with vowels on the end) all
the way to Lake Roosevelt for the ACA convocation and wondered if we
could meet up and do a canyon or two. Just the prod I needed to
leave the lawn unmowed and roof unfixed for another week, and it
never rains in Tucson in late April anyway. Why not bring the two
kids along? They’ve been there before, and they’re happy to do it
again. Tanner is 12, and there’re only so many more years when
he’ll even pretend to listen to me. Summer’s 9, just old enough
to take through Sally May creek when it’s running—I think. Did I
mention that I thought it would be a good idea to bring the two kids
along?
So I show up to the campground on Friday night, near midnight, to
find that Fred is still somewhere on the other side of Roosevelt
lake, looking for a car. Pitch the tent for the kids, find that
pair of sunglasses that had gone missing in Montana last summer
nestled in the side pocket; Fred returns—mild epic— and goes to bed.
Kids fall asleep. Yahoos in site 112 decide to have a heavy metal
fest at 1:00 AM, and they’re pissed off when I ask them to turn off
the stereo. At this point, I understand why some folks, namely me,
should never be issued concealed weapons permits, whatever the
implications of the Second Amendment may be toward a well–regulated
militia. I refrain from the urge to drain the oil out of the metal
kids’ parents’ diesel pickup (what, you think they could afford it
themselves?), which is parked temptingly close to the road, and try
to get some sleep.
After unsnarling the mound of gear from the truck, we have backpacks,
rope, throw bags, harnesses, wetsuits, camera, lunch, life vests for
the children, one–man inflatable raft. One of the things I like
about Fred is that he has this almost preternatural calm in the midst
of the frenzy. He’s raised his kids once already. Tanner wants to
jump off the waterfall. Summer wants to rappel. I’ll jump. We only
need one ATC, right? Summer has forgotten her shoes. There are
tears. Looks like the latest pair of clean ‘school shoes’ will be
going through the Jug. We finally break camp at 10 AM and drive through
the A Cross ford on Tonto Creek (memo to ADOT: It’s either the A+
Road or the A Cross Road, not the A+Cross Road). Little sketchy.
Does a soccer–mom Suburban good to get slammed into 4WD, and I always
wanted to rip off those running boards anyway. There’s a ‘Road
Closed’ sign on the other side of the creek.
“Uh, Fred, did you see a ‘road closed’ sign on the way in?”
“Nope.”
Ok. We arrive at put–in just as the 9:00 AM ACA group shows up. They mention something about not seeing Chris and Greg, the Euro canyoneers.
We four take off for the creek; on the way down, I can see the 9:00 AM
group is a few minutes behind us. We take a shortcut at the site of
the old cowboy pumping station and suit up at the creek; just as we
finish suiting up, the 9:00 AM group comes swimming by. They’ve picked
up Chris and Greg, and they provide some welcome assistance with
Tanner and Summe, and a not–so–welcome example of showing a 12–year old in a borrowed wetsuit how to slide into a hydraulic. About 10
minutes later, I realize that they are all guys (you know, it’s hard
to tell with all that gear on).
So I ask them, “Hey, where’s
Suzanne?’
Funny look.
I proceed to describe her, telling them, “She was at the road with you?’
Another funny look. “Nope, this is all of us.”
Embarrassed at my usual inability to put faces
with names—although I can usually figure out somone’s gender—I let
it drop. They move ahead and out of sight.
I guess I should probably mention conditions: Sunny, warm, about
85°. The previous day, the Parker Creek gauge was at .10 cfs, and
Tonto Creek was about 72. These indicators should lead you to
something close to the perfect water level for non–epic trip through
Sally Mae, provided you have at least a shorty wetsuit. All of the
pools were full, clear, clean, and cool. Water was just the right
level to splash around; not quite enough to sweep your helpless child
into a cauldron but enough current to let them enjoy a taste of what
it’s like in a hydraulic. Now for a geomorphological digression:
Sally Mae is cut through the 2 billion year old (take a few hundred
million) Ruin granite, at the base of the Proterozoic Apache Group.
This is old, tough rock. Didn’t expect it to change much. Tom W had
reported that one of the waterfalls had gone missing, which I laughed
off as a quirk—hey, it was missing only because you all had done it
at 1,500 cfs, or something, based on the video clip I had seen. So
I’m warning Tanner not to get in front of me because, when you go
around this corner, just above the Leaning Tower, you hit the
waterfall. Yes, no waterfall. The old waterfall was formed by
chockstones on creek right; at high water you could avoid it by
downclimbing the large boulder and chockstones on creek left. Either
way, we had always been careful with it. Now, it’s a simple walk–down,
you can even walk right down the middle of the boulder and hop
into the pool. Not so surprised about the chockstones’
disappearance, but that boulder’s had a few feet planed off of it in
the last 10 years. Even the mighty Ruin Granite succumbs to
erosion. Further down, there used to be a nice belly–shaped pour
over; and it’s no longer there either. I have before–and–after
negatives to illustrate. Point being, if conditions change quickly
in granite, you can expect them to change even more rapidly in Navajo
sandstone.
Back to the story: We passed under the Leaning Tower and on to the
Shark Tooth pool where the canyon narrows up and the water turns
around a 100–foot hallway. This is Tanner’s favorite spot. On the
way out of the pool, he hands me his shoe. “Shoelace came out.”
Most folks would worry about how they are going to walk out of the
canyon without a shoe. Not Tanner; he sits the shoe on the rock and
proceeds to climb up the sides of the pool and slide down them into
the water. Climb up the side of the pool and jump off into the
water, over and over again. One sock, one shoe. I find a piece of
string in my keg for a shoelace. His new nickname: Otter. Maybe
a wetsuit, helmet, and life jacket are not a good idea after all. We
eat lunch slowly figuring that the group ahead of us would clear
out of the rappel. Tanner trying to traverse around the pool
without splashing down. Fred looking on bemused.
About halfway between the Shark Tooth and the rappel there is a ten–foot
slide where the belly pool used to be. A few years ago, when
the stream was no more than a trickle, Tanner’s friend, Clay, had
gone too far, lost his footing there, gone barrelling over the edge,
and landed on the rocks. One of those lessons: another place to be
careful with the kids. Just above the pour–off, the 9:00 AM group
catches up to us. All is revealed. Chris and Greg were not with
the 9:00 AM group after all. They were in front of them, and, yes, there are
women in the group. We say “Hello” to Suzanne, and meet Paul and a few others. They have one member of their party shivering in a long
john wetsuit; so far, I’ve been okay in a tank–top shorty (and I’m
built to expel body heat), and Summer’s been warm in her shorty. Just
another ‘Your mileage may vary’ warning about wetsuit use. Right in
front of my impressionable son’s two good eyes, they proceed to slide
and splash down into the Claypool. I downclimb my usual route on
the right side and start hauling packs and kids over the edge.
“Dad, I want to do the slide.”
“Nope.”
“But they did it.”
“No. That’s where Clay landed on his butt.”
“Dad, all six of them went down, and no one got hurt.”
Hard to explain sample size and variable
conditions—and the fact that I know there are rocks under there—to
a 12–year old. Around the corner is the waterfall and rappel
station.
There’s a back–up at the rappel. Didn’t expect that one. Thought
we’d be comfortably last in line. Tanner starts on his otter
routine. Summer sits in the water. I tell her to get out of the
water or she’s going to get cold. Going to be a long wait. Summer
starts to shiver, and I start into full–on father protective mode
and start to make a series of could–have–been–worse mistakes. Here’s
what I did incorrectly:
First, I asked the 9:00 AM party if they would
set the ropes and then let us use them. They looked sympathetically
at Summer and agreed. Should have climbed back upcanyon less than
100 yards to the sun, warmed Summer up, and let them go first.
Then I could have rigged it the way I’d planned and taken the time to
talk it over with Fred and the kids. It’s funny how, once you’ve
lost some elevation in a canyon, you can be so reluctant to gain it
back again, even when it’s just a simple scramble.
Second, because they were waiting, I started to hurry. So I started
managing hardware: Fred scrambled over the traverse to the rappel
station and disappeared. I chucked the raft, then the packs, and finally
our rope bag, over the edge, through the waterfall, and into the
pool where Fred retrieved them. Where are the slings. Oops,
can’t find them (they are still in the truck). I cheated up a
cowstail from Tanner’s kayaking lifejacket to use to protect the
traverse for Summer. Sequenced the kids over to the edge where who
I’m pretty sure was Mike was waiting, got my pack on a Munter, and got
ready to lower it to Fred. Oops, did I tie that right? Those
Munters always look funny upside–down.
I didn’t manage the software. I look up to see Summer shaking and
crying on the traverse; who I think is Jaime is comforting her. In a
few minutes, she’s gone from courageous to frightened, and I haven’t
noticed. Too busy playing ‘Canyoneer’ on TV to take a few minutes to
bolster her confidence and tell her what’s going to happen. The rope
used to protect the traverse is jumping up and down as Tanner is
moving around. And I don’t have a sling to clip in at the station,
and Summer is scared. By this time, Tanner and Summer have heard
the water pounding in their ears for about 10 minutes—new sound.
Not nearly so loud when there’s no current. Tanner decides not to
jump. Summer does not want to rappel, she wants to be lowered. Now I
need two belay devices, and I only have one, not sure I want Tanner
to rappel on a Munter, especially if I’m tying it. I send Tanner down
on rappel with instruction to tie the harness and ATC on the end of
the rope when he’s done, pull it up, use the harness as a sling and
start to belay Summer, who’s shaking and crying. Wait a minute, this
is set up as a single strand anchor to the water level. Will I have
enough rope or will she just dangle down at the bottom? I untie the
anchor and lower Summer over the edge on Mike and Jaime’s rope (good
thing it’s smooth granite). Mike comes over and reties the rope. I
jump. On the way down, I notice that the water has a silvery, mirror
finish on top of the waves.
How long did it take? Too long. Fred says, “I thought something was
going on up there.”
Where’d I goof up? In addition to the above, I
later realized that I had left my backup figure eight sitting in my
pack, instead of clipping it to Tanner’s harness, and I hadn’t kept a
sling tied to my harness. I know, I know. I still have lessons to
learn. Summer jumped on the raft and we all swam the long, black,
gorgeous, bottomless pool, as perfect as anything ever excavated by
God. We got to the sun and Summer warmed herself on the hot
olivine rocks and was soon smiling and laughing. As quickly as it
came, the moment passed.
I set the camera up downstream and started exposing film. The 9:00 AM
group swam through and out, and I thanked them, but not nearly
enough, for letting us play through. If anyone reading this knows how
to contact Suzanne T., Paul C., Mike and Jaime C., and Chris, please
let me know. I’d like to thank them again for their patience and
understanding.
When we got to the end of the canyon, the late sun was shining under
dark clouds—smell of rain. Tanner let the current push him 200 feet
downstream through the boulders, then he’d turn around and crawl
upstream, never letting more than his head out of the water. Took a
long time to coax him out of the water—shoe untied again.
On the way out, Summer counted the anthills (45?) and Tanner spotted
a Gila monster; the beads on its back were coral. Seven hours truck–to–truck.
They slept through the thunder and lightning, all the way
home, even when we stopped in Globay, Arizonay for KFC. Weatherman
says it only rains once every 20 years in April in the desert, but
you don’t need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.
Chris Avery
April 26, 2005
© 2005 Chris Avery