Archive for the ‘General News’ Category

ECHO Goes Over the Hill

by Janda on February 6th, 2011

We are so excited that 2011 will be ECHO’s 40th season of river running! What started as a wild and adventurous sport for only the “lunatic fringe” (as co-owner Dick Linford referred to our early guests) has blossomed into one of the best vacation choices families can make for a memorable trip together.

Back in 1972, Joe Daly and Dick Linford had a dream; a dream of ditching school (both were teachers at the time) and heading out to run the wild rivers of California. It took until 1979 for these two to plunge full-time into the boating business, but with summers off they had had plenty of time to slowly build their business into a successful rafting enterprise. By 1981, ECHO was running day-trips and multi-day trips on 19 stretches of river throughout 5 U.S. states. Dick and Joe weren’t the only adventurous duos to start a rafting business back in the ’70s, but their cooperation has proven to be successful as the longest running partnership of river outfitters in the country.

Dick Linford and Joe Daly

Dick Linford and Joe Daly

So what are the highlights of these 40 years? ECHO was the first outfitter to employ female river guides, who proved to the boatmen that it took more than brawn alone to get people through whitewater successfully. They also made for a more family-friendly experience in camping, which changed the industry from a sport for only wild adventurers, to a great option for family vacations. Multiple romances have sizzled between river guides and some guests even got in the game, resulting in 13 guide-guide marriages and 10 guide-guest marriages! ECHO has had at least 10 second-generation guides, some that work for today!

We’ve seen rivers gain and lose environmental protections throughout our 40 years. ECHO was a key player in the opposition to the New Melones Dam on the Stanislaus River. Its construction removed all rafting opportunities as it flooded the canyon creating a large reservoir, and the loss of the Stanislaus’ whitewater is remembered as a sad defeat. However, Joe Daly points to the silver lining: New Melones was the last dam built in California as the controversy over its construction brought so much attention to the environmental movement. Two river victories came later with the defeat of damming proposals for the Tuolumne River in 1984 and its tributary, the Clavey River in the early 1990s. ECHO remained a leading outfitter on the Tuolumne until 2007.

California's Tuolumne River

California's Tuolumne River

Dick and Joe were very involved with river conservation and developing industry standards throughout the years. Dick served on the Board of Directors of American Rivers for 10 years, which is the principal river conservation group in the U.S. He currently serves on an advisory board for the National Park Service. Joe was president of the Tuolumne Trust for 12 years and served on their board for 15. This organization was instrumental in securing Wild and Scenic protection for the Tuolumne in 1984. At present, he serves on the Tuolumne Trust Advisory Board. Both worked on several trade association boards including the Western River Guides Association, America Outdoors and the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association.

The gear that we use to run trips has vastly improved throughout the years. Before self-bailing boats became the norm in the 1980s, guests and guides alike were forced to bail out the “bucket boats” after each big splash. The handy throw bags that no respectable boater would be without these days, was simply a rope tied to the bow or stern of the raft. Camp gear has vastly improved as well making trips more comfortable with lighter and more portable options that can be easily transported in a raft. Paddle jackets have replaced trash bags on the cold and wet trips.

Things started changing for Dick and Joe when they found themselves running a rafting empire without much rafting for themselves. After considerable soul-searching they began downsizing in the hope of emphasizing quality over quantity. They developed a mantra of quality of river, quality of trip, and quality of lifestyle, as they methodically eliminated the rivers that didn’t hold their magic. Today they know that the gems they retained, the Rogue River and the Middle Fork of the Salmon River are the two finest rivers in the West. Both are designated Wild and Scenic rivers offering the strongest protection a river can have, but perhaps more importantly, they were among the eight original rivers granted that status in 1968.

In 2008, ECHO made its big move to Hood River, Oregon. Dick and Joe were both ready to take a step back from the day-to-day operations. They put their company in the capable hands of Zach Collier, a long-trusted river guide. Zach has been instrumental in keeping ECHO afloat as advertising became more Internet-driven. He continues to run the company for Dick and Joe with a trusted staff of outstanding river guides and a stellar office crew. Zach has also pushed the envelope for ECHO’s international adventures by expanding our trips abroad to include Bhutan, Nepal, Chile and Siberia in addition to sailing in Turkey. Zach looks forward to a bright future for ECHO as we expand to new rivers throughout the world while maintaining the amazing quality that our guests have come to expect on the Rogue and Middle Fork of the Salmon Rivers.

So is ECHO going over the hill for our 40th season? Nah…we are just heading around the river bend and hope to have you along for the ride!

Holiday Gift Certificates

by ECHO Staff on December 3rd, 2010

Make the dream of next year’s amazing adventure for your friends and family official by purchasing an ECHO gift certificate just in time for the Holiday Season!

Here at ECHO, we believe in the power of quality time spent with family and friends. ECHO gift certificates are a great way to open the door to good times on the river for someone you love.

ECHO Gift Certificates

ECHO Gift Certificates

Gift certificates can be purchased in any dollar amount. Give a gift to cover the entire cost of that special someone’s (or the whole family’s) trip on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River, Rogue River, or an ECHO international expedition. Or, give a smaller gift and encourage your friends and family to take that trip they deserve.

Here’s the best part: Purchase your gift certificates by December 23 and ECHO will give you 10% off the value of the gift certificate. Spend $90 and get $100 towards an ECHO trip. That’s free money.

Send someone you love on an ECHO trip next year. We’ll assist them in choosing a date and trip that’s meets all of their needs. Give the gift of adventure and help them make memories they will celebrate for a lifetime.

Happy Gift Giving!

Cheers,

Your Friends at ECHO River Trips.

Annual Contest Winners

by ECHO Staff on November 18th, 2010

Thanks to all that participated in our Annual Trivia Quiz! We had a number of responses, some right, some wrong and some quite humorous. Our 3 winners are:

1. Mark V. of South Orange, New Jersey
2. April L. of St. Louis, Missouri
3. Becky W. of Long Creek, South Carolina

We’ll be sending each of them some cool ECHO gear and we hereby grant them the right to brag about their vast knowledge of ECHO!

1. Which ECHO guide is known for his/her interactive geology talks? Answer: Audrey Gelhausen or Alex Steely

2. Other than rafting, name 3 activities you might engage in on a trip to Chile’s Futaleufu River? Answer: Horse back riding, rappelling, zip lines, canyoneering, hiking, lake kayaking or chilling out in a river side hot tub!

3. What is the name of the yoga instructor that will accompany the yoga trips on the Rogue River in 2011? Answer: Susan Fox

4. In 1981, ECHO was rafting 19 stretches of rivers in 5 states in the U.S. and which foreign country? Answer: Yugoslavia

5. On a trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River with ECHO, what is the name of the one rapid that you’ll encounter on the Main Salmon River? Answer: Cramer Rapid

Congratulations and Thanks, Dewi!!

by Dick Linford on November 15th, 2010

At this time we want congratulate Dewi Butler, and thank him for the incredible thirty years he has been working for ECHO. In this business most guide careers are about as long as NFL football careers. Not that river guides get hurt like football players, but guiding is a young person’s game. Sleeping on the ground for months, working 16-hour days, spending too much time in the sun and scrambling for winter work – it all takes its toll. No matter how much they love it, guides wear out. After a few great years they tend to get married, become teachers, go to graduate school, buy a house and otherwise enter what we call “the other world.” (not the real world. The other world). Not Dewi. He is a true outdoorsman, and made of oak.

Dewi Butler in 1981 and 2010

Dewi Butler in 1981 and 2010

Dewi was born in the small town of Llanberis (pronounced “shamberis”) in Wales. He went through college there, and taught mathematics and physical education for a while. He also started mountain climbing, a sport that brought him to the US in 1975. He fell in love with Yosemite and California weather, and returned to the US with a green card in 1978. He settled in Santa Cruz, California, but spent as much time as possible climbing in Yosemite. He also learned how to row a raft.

In 1980 ECHO we grossly underestimated how busy we were going to be, and found ourselves desperately short of guides. We sent the word out to the outdoor community, and an old guide recommended someone he knew to be good. We hired him sight-unseen. That someone then said he had a friend. We said “bring him!” That was Dewi, which makes him the least vetted person we ever hired. Boy, were we lucky!

In the thirty years that Dewi has been with us he has guided on 17 of the 19 rivers we have run trips on. He has worked as a guide and lead guide, and has managed our operations in Oregon and Idaho. He first balanced his river guiding with working on ski patrol at Park City, where he rose to the position of Director of Snow Safety, and was supervising 135 ski patrollers. These two jobs still gave him two months every spring and two months every fall to climb. And climb he did, in North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. He eventually phased out of ski patrol, and works as a property manager (his own and other people’s), bar tender and caterer. He still guides for ECHO on the Middle Fork, and he still climbs four months a year. Last spring he climbed on the Greek island of Kalymnos.

Dewi is also the only guide we have heard of who has flipped a raft without getting wet. It was at Clavey Falls on the Tuolumne. Dewi’s raft went into the hole and got spun around several times, throwing everyone out but him. The raft then surfed over near the left wall, and began to flip. Dewi calmly stepped onto a small shelf on the wall, waited for the raft to land upside down, than stepped back onto the boat’s floor. The raft slipped out of the hole and he grabbed the people who had been thrown out and pulled them onto the floor with him. People watching from the other side of the river thought he had either levitated or walked on water but what he did was almost as fantastic. When asked how he had the presence of mind to do what he did, he said “Well, I just didn’t want to get me bum wet.”

ECHO co-owner Dick Linford says “We have had many outstanding guides over the years, but of all of them, Dewi would be my first choice when choosing an all-time, all star ECHO crew. He is great on the water and great in camp. He can fix anything on the river, and he makes good decisions. If I have questions about anything in ECHO, I ask Dewi.” Co-owner Joe Daly says “I have climbed Mount Shasta with Dewi, and rafted with him on high water and low water and in hot sun and pounding rain. He is always fun, and you can count on him when it matters most.”

Dewi is also the only guide we know who can recite poetry in Welsh. It takes a lot of gin to get him to do it, but Welsh is a lovely language when Dewi speaks it.

Congratulations, Dewi! Here’s to keeping your bum dry, to Welsh poetry, and to another thirty years!

Join us for Wild Rivers Night in Portland, Tuesday, November 16!

by Janda on November 4th, 2010

Did you hike up East Creek, marvel at the crystal clear water of Whiskey Creek or try out the natural stone water slide at Tate Creek on your Rogue River trip? These cold-water creeks are vital to the Rogue’s health and salmon runs that are under threats from logging, mining, off-road vehicles and the warming climate. We invite you to join ECHO and American Rivers at Wild Rivers Night in Portland, OR for a reception and brief presentation to discuss efforts to protect the Rogue’s cold creeks and other rivers in the Northwest.

East Creek, one of our favorite hikes on the Rogue River

East Creek, one of our favorite hikes on the Rogue River

The Rogue was one of the original eight rivers in the nation to receive federal protection under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968, and yet a river is only as healthy as its feeder streams and surrounding forests. Learn about the efforts of American Rivers to protect the pristine tributaries that the Rogue depends on and other rivers in our region that need your help!

American Rivers is the leading conservation organization fighting for healthy rivers so communities can thrive. American Rivers protects and restores America’s rivers for the benefit of people, wildlife and nature. Founded in 1973, American Rivers has more than 65,000 members and supporters, with offices in Washington, DC and nationwide.

When: Tuesday, November 16 from 5:30-7:30 PM
Where: The Great Room at Keen Footwear / 926 NW 13th Ave. / Portland, OR
What: Beverages and light snacks followed by a brief presentation
Who: RSVP to Jessica: jmuhm@americanrivers.org
Special Thanks: Keen Footwear and Sierra Nevada Brewing Co.

Can’t make the event? Learn more about what you can do to protect our Wild Rivers »

Submit Comments to Protect America’s Rivers!

by Janda on September 24th, 2010

President Obama created America’s Great Outdoors Initiative last April and it’s time for your voice to be heard! The goal of this initiative is “to develop a 21st Century conservation and recreation agenda to reconnect Americans, especially children, to nature.” Our president requested a collaborative effort to hear from people involved in regional conservation and recreation efforts nationwide in the hope of investing in America’s great outdoors by creating a plan to conserve our nation’s wild legacy for future generations. The collaboration is already underway with tribal leaders, community park groups, business people, educators, local governments and conservation groups coming together to determine what’s best for our lands, water and trails.

Hugging a tree on the Rogue River

Hugging a tree on the Rogue River

The report and recommendations are scheduled to be released in mid-November, and public comments are due by September 30. Let the administration know today that you’d like to see river protection as a key focus of the initiative. Our nations rivers provide recreation, which supports local small businesses and also play an integral part in the lives of the many wild plants, animals and fish that call these rivers home. Your feedback will be used to develop a strategy for smart conservation and recreation plans to protect land, water and wildlife. Let them know of your support for river protection including designating more rivers for federal protection under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.

You can submit your comments online at www.greatoutdoorsamerica.org/campaign.

At ECHO, We Have Fun!

by ECHO Staff on August 30th, 2010

A quick note from ECHO Guide Audrey Gehlhausen

We love what we do, we love to have fun, and we love to share this passion with everyone we can…. We play music, we dress up in dare wear, we have talent shows and fashion shows and stupid human tricks, we make water slides out of paddle boats and have ducky wars, we play horseshoes, botchee ball, koob, mulke, look up look down, big booty… We put energy and enthusiasm in every part of the day, and not because it’s our job, but because that’s who we are and that’s what we love to do.

ECHO Guide Audrey Gehlhausen

ECHO Guide Audrey Gehlhausen

I want guests to walk away saying this was one of the most amazing trips I’ve ever been on. I want that for them, for their character and their sense of adventure, for their families to actually get to hang out together as a family in this rat race world, for them to truly feel the joy of living life to its fullest. And that’s why guests should go with ECHO. We have passion. We love what we do, and we love to have fun. Well, that’s my two cents on the matter, as I sit and reflect on an amazing season.

Time on the River is Good for your Brain!

by Janda on August 16th, 2010

This morning, the New York Times ran a wonderful article about five neuroscientists who spent a week on the San Juan River in Utah to study how technology affects how we think and behave. We noticed many parallels to our own clients that these gentlemen experienced on their river trip.

Here at ECHO, we find that many of our guests book their trips specifically to give themselves a break from the never-ending stream of emails they receive. This trend has only increased with smart phones as people receive possibly life-altering news to their pocket. And as some of our guests are more than thrilled to dam up the stream of email and texts, others aren’t so sure. Every season guests ask what the cell phone coverage is like along the way. We usually reply gleefully that there is no coverage, as the rivers ECHO rafts have been protected from development (including cell towers) through the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. Some guests remain unamused and can’t imagine a day, much less 4-6 days without contact with the outside world. But we remain undaunted in our quest to encourage people to leave the iPods at home, not wear their watches and worry about emails upon their return.

Our reasons for this are to provide an uninterrupted experience between families and fellow rafters. Not only are parents able to connect completely with their children without the distractions of TVs, video games and music players, but you can actually share experiences together as a family. If kids are listening to their iPod in camp, it not only impedes the social aspect we try to create, but they might also miss the splash of a fish vaulting out of the water or the scream of a bald eagle calling to its mate.

Outside interruptions can really impede the group dynamic of a river trip, as well. If someone were to receive bad news on the trip, it can not only ruin their vacation but the news can cast a cloud over the group as a whole and leave them wondering what awful or wonderful news they’re missing out on. Lastly, the researchers in the article hypothesize that the brain may be using valuable storage space anticipating communication. The article points out that, “There’s a real mental freedom in knowing no one or nothing can interrupt you.” We couldn’t agree more.

Click Here to Read the Full article at NYTimes.com >>

Happy Holidays!

by ECHO Staff on December 18th, 2009

Merry ChristmasLooks like snow is in the clouds blanketing Hood River today, which means we may get our wish for a white Christmas! We hope you are preparing for a great holiday season with your family and we want to wish you and your families good tidings for the New Year.

Our office will be closed from Christmas Eve through January 4, but we have exciting news. If the holiday gatherings around the fire inspire you to take the family on a rafting trip this summer, you can now book your trip online! Simply choose to Make a Reservation from our website and you can click through to reserve space on the date you want. We’ll be in touch via email or voicemail if you have any questions, but until then have a great holiday and we’ll see you in 2010 for another great rafting season!

Give a River Trip for the Holidays!

by ECHO Staff on November 25th, 2009

gift-certificateThe holidays are upon us and why not treat your friends and family to the gift of a river trip this year! We offer gift certificates for use on any of our trips. They are available in any dollar amount up to the entire cost of the trip of your choice and can be mailed to you or your loved one. Purchase before December 22 and receive 10% off the face value!

Gift certificates provide an excellent opportunity to gather your friends and family for a river adventure. ECHO trips are fabulous for special occasions, such as family reunions, bachelor parties, anniversaries or birthdays. Let them know of the adventures that await them this summer with an ECHO gift certificate!

Happy Holidays from the entire ECHO staff!