Posts Tagged ‘Idaho’

Spring Into Summer

by Janda on March 22nd, 2012

Welcome to the first days of spring, which means summer is just around the corner! To help you focus on your summer vacation plans, we are offering a special incentive to join our June 16-21 or June 21-26 trip on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in central Idaho. Sign up by April 15th and receive a $200/person discount off the trip price of $1995. Put the savings toward off-river transportation, new camping gear, or some fancy outdoor clothing for a fresh start on the season.

Daylight Breaks on the Middle Fork of the Salmon

Daylight Breaks on the Middle Fork of the Salmon

This is the time to spring into action. On these trips, the rapids will be exciting and the air clear, with a pleasant morning nip in the air. You’ll travel the full 100 miles of this famous Wild and Scenic River, flowing through the largest protected wilderness in the contiguous United States. In June, the canyon is alive with wildflowers, the waterfalls tumble forth, and you may be treated to sightings of fawns or baby bighorns. Join us for these most exciting trips of the year!

June is the best time to see wildflowers on the Middle Fork

June is the best time to see wildflowers on the Middle Fork

New Middle Fork of the Salmon Video

by Zachary on March 10th, 2012

Last summer our friend Nate Herbeck of Sheer Madness Productions joined one of our Middle Fork of the Salmon trips to capture the magic of our trips on video. He came back with so much amazing footage that we decided to make a short film from his footage. Enjoy!

[Trailer] Middle Fork of the Salmon Short Film

by ECHO Staff on September 23rd, 2011

This summer our friend Nate Herbeck joined a Middle Fork of the Salmon trip to make a short film about the Middle Fork and our trips. Here’s a short trailer he put together as a sneak peek.

We’ll be premiering the film this November in Portland. Stay tuned!

Thank You – A Remarkable 2011 River Season

by Janda on September 10th, 2011

Thank you to everyone who joined us this summer on the Rogue and Middle Fork of the Salmon Rivers. You are the reason we get to do what we love.

And, of course, thank you to all our hard working and dedicated river guides. You are the reason our trips are so special.

Having Fun on the Last Day of the 2011 Season

Having Fun on the Last Day of the 2011 Season

A few highlights from this summer:

- Lexey, J.R., and Billy running amazing trips on the Rogue in May. Even when it rained everyone had fun!
- Our guide school with Lexey, Billy, and Alex was special for everyone involved.
- Uniquely high water on the Middle Fork in June. Our first few trips were “full on” adventures and we all saw something special.
- Vlad and Zach’s trip to Siberia. They ran the first ever commercial trip on the Kaa-Khem River in a remote part of Russia. (read their trip report)
- Our Yoga Trips on the Rogue River were amazing beyond belief. Everyone on both trips left with a glow.

2011 was our 40th season and a summer that will not be forgotten. Thank you to everyone involved.

Idaho Natural Resource Foundation

by ECHO Staff on December 27th, 2010

Idaho National Resource FoundationThe Idaho Natural Resource Foundation (INRF or Idaho NRF) is a grassroots champion of Idaho’s wild landscapes, scenic rivers, and wild animals. Their primary purpose is to gain support through educating residents, tourists, and State and Federal policy makers on the need to keep our open spaces wild, our rivers vibrant, our wildlife populations in balance, and the use of all Idaho’s natural resources sustainable.

If you’ve been one of the lucky few to enjoy Idaho’s wonderful wilderness please consider donating a few bucks. Your donation will help protect Idaho’s backcountry AND keep it accessible for future generations.

Even a small donation of $5 would help. Thanks.

PayPal

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!

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.

Great News for the Middle Fork Snowpack

by ECHO Staff on May 27th, 2010

The early reports for the Idaho snowpack this season have indicated that it will not be another huge water year like we saw in 2008 and 2009, but the cool spring has us hopeful for a nice, long season on the Middle Fork of the Salmon. The past few weeks and today’s weather forecast are great news for those of you rafting the Middle Fork this summer.

Despite beginning the winter with 170% of the average precipitation in October, November-March were atypically dry throughout the Northwest. El Nino created warmer than average temperatures and less precipitation in the region, as witnessed at the Vancouver Olympics. However, spring storms have been raging with over 100% of the average precipitation for April. Last weekend, Stanley was blanketed in fresh snow and Salmon had snow on Monday, with more in the forecast. Although the spring rain and snow can’t completely make up for the low snowpack, the cooler temperatures will help to delay the melt and thus, the peak flow.

So what does this mean for you rafters and kayakers? Our fears of starting all of our trips at the lower put-in location have subsided, and we expect that the trips through June and the beginning of July will be able to raft the full 100 miles from Boundary Creek to Cache Bar. Our first trip launches next week and will most likely encounter high flows and cold temperatures. The two kayaking trips with Phil and Mary DeRiemer should still have good water for all of you paddlers, as long as the temperatures don’t suddenly spike. We may have to start trips at the lower put-in by mid-July, but it is all dependent on the next couple of weeks’ temperatures and precipitation.

Although the Middle Fork of the Salmon River can be hard to predict, it definitely puts the “wild” in wilderness river trips!

Luxury Rafting Trips With Children

by ECHO Staff on January 12th, 2007

"What a pleasure to see our children so happily entertained by skipping rocks, and playing tag and cards with other children. Nintendo, Gameboys, and TV were forgotten."

-S. Hendler, San Francisco, CA (Rogue)

Many of ECHO’s rafting guests are families with kids. Because rafting offers something for people of all ages and interests to enjoy, a river trip is the perfect family vacation. ECHO even offers luxury rafting vacations for children and adults on the Rogue and Middle Fork that specifically cater to families.

Girl paddling on the Middle ForkSometimes parents get nervous when they think about taking kids whitewater rafting for the first time. An article was written by Cindy Hirschfeld in the Rocky Mountain News in October that has useful information for parents who are at all apprehensive about going on a river trip with their kids. The article explores the challenges and rewards of being with children in the wilderness. A mother who recently took her 10-year-old son on the Middle Fork of the Salmon said he “found his inner river rat” on the trip.

At ECHO, we see kids (and adults) delight in more than just the whitewater excitement. Often children’s favorite part of the trip is in camp, competing in a Koob match, discovering Native American artifacts, and swimming in the river. Our guides love leading kids to new experiences such as watching otters play in the river, soaking in a “natural jacuzzi” (aka hotspring), or baking a Dutch oven birthday cake in the “middle of nowhere.” Ear-to-ear smiles are common on both children and parents faces when kids make it through a big rapid in a ducky or discover the art of skipping rocks.

Kids on the beachOn a Middle Fork trip last summer, a group of teenagers decided to ditch their luxury tent packages on the last night and sleep out on a sandy beach under the stars. Although they were only a few feet from their parents’ deluxe tents, they were thrilled about the freedom they found from sleeping outside.

The article points out that adults do not have to give up an adventurous, active lifestyle simply because they have kids. Although it takes more patience and spontaneity to do adventurous activities with kids, there are many rewards as well. Hirschfeld writes, “There are distinct advantages to slowing down and viewing your surroundings from a child’s perspective. The kids are the ones taking it all in and noticing the details.” So, join ECHO for a luxury river rafting vacation on the Rogue River or the Middle Fork of the Salmon in 2007. And make sure to bring the kids!

Recommended reading: Extreme Kids: How to Connect with Your Children Through Today’s Extreme (and Not So Extreme) Outdoor Sports, Scott Graham, Wilderness Press

Middle Fork Guide Book Wins Award

by ECHO Staff on November 10th, 2006

Middle Fork of the Salmon River BookLast summer, to the delight of many of ECHO’s Idaho guides and guests, a new guide book became available for the Middle Fork of the Salmon River. The Middle Fok of the Salmon River: A Comprehensive Guide, by Matt Leidecker, is not just a mile-by-mile guide to the rapids on the Middle Fork, but also an excellent resource for history, geology, campsites, hiking trails, and wildlife in the canyon. It also contains outstanding photographs and stories about the Middle Fork . Rafting guests enjoyed following along in the book as they floated down the river, pointing out waterfalls, plants, and marvelling at photos of the rapids at high water levels. The book also provides descriptions for running eight of the biggest rapids on the Middle Fork including Pistol Creek, the Tappan Rapids, Devil’s Tooth, Redside, and Webber. These descriptions are very useful visuals for adventurous folks who choose to go in an inflatable kayak, or “ducky.”

Because of the vast information it provides about the Middle Fork canyon, the high-quality guide recently won for the outdoor advenutre guide book category at the National Outdoor Book Awards. The book awards are part of the larger National Conference on Outdoor Recreation and Education. Matt Leidecker a photographer and river guide on the Middle Fork of the Salmon, is also the author of Impassable Canyon – A Journey Down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River. Both of these books would make excellent gifts for anyone who has ever been, or is planning to go on a rafting trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon. You can purchase them online at Matt Leidecker’s Web Site.