The Havasu Flash Flood 1984

 

The clients are tired. They smile and drip, standing ankle deep at the edge of the water, caressed by the sun. A cocoon of towering red cliffs and shimmering green cottonwoods rim our iridescent acre of plunge-pool, domed with a sky of indigo. Is this Mars? Maybe Jupiter? They fumble in daypacks for sandwiches, squirrels scatter.

Wearing nothing but my customary desert costume of shorts, running shoes, floppy straw hat, full-wrap mirrored sunglasses, and daypack, I consider howling like a coyote. Instead I concentrate on my own rather crumpled salami sandwich.

My gaze ascends leisurely up the full height of the improbable turquoise waterfall to where it first arcs over the lip, nearly two hundred feet above. There are a few others here, non-rafting “civilians” who have climbed down from the campground above through a maze of dusty natural caves and steps carved into the vertical cliffs. The route involves clutching rusty old cables installed ages ago by the local tribesmen, moving through frozen waterfalls of sculpted orange travertine stalactites. Those who can manage to speak do so in hushed tones, as if in a cathedral, leaving only the sound of water.

Destiny is at hand.

“What the ….” The words, whispered to myself, desiccate into the dry air. My smile does the same.

Appearing at the very brink of the falls, an uncanny presence, as yet unidentifiable. Is it part of the sky? I try to sort things out, like a wolf sniffing the air. A pressing blackness. Obsidian. Unmistakably monstrous, though I glimpse only its margin. My sandwich, still in hand, unconsciously droops to my side. I stand like a statue in a corner nave, gaze aloft.

 A cloud? The question floats in my skull. Whatever it is, my skin tingles. My lungs suck in one long, deep draught of air. The body prepares itself. The mind has yet to follow.

This black behemoth is ponderously but surely moving down canyon. Towards us.

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In the Great American Southwestern Desert, July and August are monsoon season. The towering afternoon thunderheads tumble in, edged brilliant silver and white in the blinding sun, bellies gray and somber, cast against a sky so painfully blue, grumbling and striking with flashes of raw electricity between firmament and space. Their immense atmospheric landscape dwarfs the stony one below. If it rains within your immediate sphere, the cliffs are painted shiny black or crystalline burgundy or molten silver, unending ramparts on every side glinting like jewels in the slanting rays of the sun. After the drama of the rain pouring down, filling the potholes of your senses, a glorious quality of peace swells, penetrating all space. Pure, unadulterated magic. Moments of speechless awe for some…discomfort for others. The river turns to chocolate colored mud, splattering everyone and everything—a slippery mess. A safe path through rapids becomes difficult to read, obscured and colored all wrong. Bathing is for the intrepid or desperately stinky.

For me, being in a monsoon in the desert Canyon Country is to be transported back to primordial roots, everything washed clean. Catching an elusive flash flood is akin to discovering buried treasure. Red or black or green waterfalls coalesce and roar down side canyons that may have been silent for lifetimes. A gift from the Gods. Mud sweeps everything in its path downstream, that much closer to the sea, swirling and cascading into oblivion. One must take great care not to join the detritus. Secretly I smile when the once mighty Colorado, Spanish for red-colored, returns for a time back to its pre-dam personality. Once the spray settles, debris is left perched in unusual places—high in treetops, jammed in cracks fifty feet and more overhead. People point and wonder at how that tree got way the hell up there…

If hiking a slot canyon—the sky a thin, meandering indigo thread directly overhead—we boatmen covertly, nervously sniff the air for the telltale fecund smell of wet earth, for something…different. Perhaps a peculiar sound where only the flawless desert silence existed before. Something in your subconscious whispering like a messenger…

The sound of water.

It is, of course, better to sense the whisper well before it becomes a clarion call. Guides too often tempt fate as it is. Personality trait. Keep an eye out at every bend for a quick exit route. Watch for a climbable escape crack as you slither between the vertical walls.

Better yet—don’t go. Camp high. Keep your gear packed and ready for hasty gathering, especially your life jacket. Sleep on your boat, one eye open. Clear your senses with one neat shot of highland single-malt.

 

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            On the evening before we hit Havasu Creek on river trips, during the ritual pre-hike talk at “Last Chance” camp, the “peeps” are told to pack their lunches, watch for thieving ravens, choose their destination or no destination at all–in preparation for the much anticipated Havasu. This time of year, we also remind them of what to watch out for in a “flash”: pay attention to the color of the water, the quality of its sound, its scent. Maybe the crossings seem deeper, you can’t see your feet. Anything at all suspicious—head uphill, fast.

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Tie-up ropes of all ages and descriptions are stuffed in the cracks in the cliffs encircling Havasu eddy, tied around small chockstones, and stained with the brown mud of innumerable past floods. One or two pitons are hammered into the rock for backup, and some very old rusty steel rings with bent carabiners. All of these are high off the water, a story in itself for the observant. The eddy water is clear and blue-green, the Colorado River darker, colder, flowing swiftly by into a small rapid. At the eddyline where they mix, swirls of varied colors and temperatures whirlpool towards the river bottom deep below. Not a place to be unless you’re in a boat. Cliff upon tawny cliff ascend to touch the deepest blue senses can ken. Boats tied to anchors, to each other, spiderwebs of lines to achieve the common goals of keeping the rafts out of the way of incoming or outgoing traffic, and of giving people access to and from the rock shelf that serves for shore. A popular attraction­, sometimes the boat count exceeds forty. Boats of all shapes and sizes, a few big motor rigs, all so tightly packed at the height of the season that you could walk across without getting your feet wet. At the head of the cliff-bound eddy the creek enters through a narrow passage, just a bit too tight for an eighteen-foot raft. Occasionally cliff jumpers from upstream swim through the notch back to their boats and a nap in the shade.

            I aim for Mooney Falls, roughly a two-and-a-half hour hike, as often as I can. Less people to watch out for. Usually the bolder, more adventurous ones. More appreciative, which is, after all, why I do this. They gotta want it.

            Plus I get to see Mooney again. I get to swim across its Caribbean-blue pool to behind the falls, clamber along the rock ledge hidden just under the wave-tossed surface, the clients following, not quite comprehending why. A hurricane of spray blasting us back so we’re barely able to catch our breath. Then we’re diving through the falls, turning over on our backs and gazing up at the cascade stretching high above. A rainbow halo surrounds the brink of the falls, only visible from that exact spot in all the universe. We then drift, laughing our way back towards the island in the seventy-two degree water. A religious experience. You have to be ready for magic.

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Rowing into Havasu eddy early on the morning of day ten, the ritual begins. Get the “Moonies,” the long-hikers, off the boats and on the trail. They’re psyched, focused, and a pain in the ass. A guide leads them to negotiate the numerous and confusing ankle-deep creek crossings. Once they’ve left, the others can take their time, relax. The guides taking the day off are the harbormasters; after everyone finally leaves them alone, they will dally about, tie the rigs up well. It’s a sort of meditation. On this particular early July morning, there is only one other trip in the eddy, also from AzRA, the same company as ours. They’re on a trip one day ahead of us, but we’ve caught up. They must be planning on booking out the next couple of days on the high water.

I’m rowing my “snout” boat on this trip, so I enter the eddy first, tie up at the mouth, near to where the eddy line marks the boundary between Havasu Creek and the Colorado River. The others slide into the eddy, tie up to my stern, and string themselves end to end as my folks slide off the snout. The rigs wrap themselves tight into the eddy, leaving room for other latecomers to jam in. Lorna, who is taking the day off, is the last boat to tie up, jamming her raft tight into the hourglass-shaped vertical cliff at the far end of the eddy, where the creek enters. Nice and quiet there, nobody stepping over her, good shade all day. I strap up my oars, exchange my flip-flops for tennies, grab my daypack. Everyone is boat hopping, smiling, preparing for a wonderful day.

Glancing at Dave Edwards, my great big Georgian-Welsh friend, I wave farewell. He smiles his broad smile and turns his face upwards to the overhanging cliffs over twenty feet above our heads.

“Ever see anyone jump across?” he says playfully.

“Nope.”

“I saw Briggs do it once.” He shakes his head.

“Yeah, right. Six-foot-four and legs like Aspens. Not me. No way! Insane. See ya later, boyo. Enjoy your day off.”

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            It’s a good start. We leave the others fiddling with their packs and beating off the ravens. I’d prepared the troops the night before, keeping them focused on getting out of the hubbub so we could find our pace, not worry about stragglers. To sweat ourselves into the rhythm of moving through the desert. Destination oriented. We can meander back afterwards, catch what we missed. In oases like Havasu, well scattered and well hidden within the seemingly desolate landscape, you understood where the Navajo got their ancient chant “Walk In Beauty.”

            The hike up takes the usual two and a half hours. The clients grow silent as the place sinks in. Halfway, more or less, we eat a snack, have a drink, and take some photos at graceful, stair-stepped Beaver Falls. They always want to stop there. But Mooney beckons. After Beaver, the magic gets wilder, the pace picks up. Everyone else stops at Beaver. From here on in, its all ours.

            Even after seeing it scores of times, Mooney still rocks me. As usual, I make them stop at a little spring just before we get there, partly to fill up their bottles, partly to increase the tension one last notch.

            Finally able to glimpse our objective, all stop several times at each little viewpoint, look at each other, back to the falls and cliffs, trying to comprehend. Impossible. Silence reigns, except for the sound of water. The pace slows, as if not to disturb something sacred.

            As usual, at the pool they drop their daypacks, prepare to eat lunch, fumbling in their packs as their gazes are drawn upwards.

            “Hold on, you guys.” My little ritual.

            They’re a little confused. After all, we’re here, aren't we?

            “Would you like to have a religious experience?”

 

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            “Um, you guys?” Softly, calmly.

            All faces instantly alert, concerned. Perhaps they are too used to my exuberance, noting the abrupt change.

            “I think maybe we ought to eat as quick as possible, and then get moving back downstream.” I shrug my shoulders, deliberately not looking at the sky.

            Pat, one of two women on the hike, wants more information.

            “What?” Seemingly simple, but I know that tone of voice. She’s not going to let it go. Nor, on reflection, should she.

            I point with my lips, Navajo style, up towards what I’ve now decided is either the blackest, thickest cloud ever imagined, or the apocalypse. All eyes look towards the menacing black beast peeking over the lip of the falls. All faces, save two, pale. They get it. Most of ’em anyway.

            “Um…” Pat hesitates. “Is that a cloud, or what?”

            I don’t answer directly. All watch the deliberations. I have my “professional” mask on. There’s that damn pause thing that always seems to precede something extraordinary in the offing. Like a chopper in the Canyon, it’s rarely good news.

“Okay. Here’s the deal. That’s the darkest damn cloud I think I’ve ever seen in my whole life. Probably raining like Noah’s flood somewhere upstream.”

            As one they stand up, full attention now. In life, some are paralyzed by fear, some energized. We’ll soon see.

            Closing my eyes, I visualize. Upstream a few miles it is bucketing. Hard. All that water, volumes and volumes of water, is hitting the hardpan and bedrock, sheeting off fast. It tumbles downhill, collecting mud and pebbles, then rocks and chunks of earth, into the natural creek bed which had minutes before been bone dry. It is an irresistible force–the very force that, over the eons, created this entire landscape. It cannot penetrate the hard earth and rock, and so rushes headlong downhill to hit the springs that form this perennial creek and mingle with the turquoise water and turn it into gooey, thick red mud. With endless supply from the heavens, it keeps growing and picking up speed and relentlessly sweeping everything in its path. At the moment, the “in its path” part includes us. I’ve been through a number of flash floods before. You learn the signs. This one is singular. I feel it in my spine.

             I glance at some of their faces. “Don’t panic. Just be focused. Okay?” In my way, I pull my sunglasses down over my nose so they can see my eyes. My voice is dead calm. They find that somehow scarier.

            “Don’t stop. Listen for a, uh, well, a “different” sound. Keep looking upstream, especially at crossings. Watch for a wave. Kinda like a beach surf only red. Sniff the air, see if it seems muddy. Don’t worry if you don’t understand what that means. You’ll know it when you smell it. You notice any of those things, run to the highest point you can. Fast. This is life and death, kids, I shit you not.”

            Nobody moves. Eyes shift back and forth from my face to the growing cloud, trying to process the totality of instantaneous and absolute consequence. They’ve seen me scouting big rapids. The warrior’s calm, welcoming the contest to come. I mean business.

            “And you?” says Pat.

            Replacing my sunglasses, I look down, cross my arms, then raise my face back to meet hers. “I have to think. I’m supposed to be sweep. There are some other people here. I can catch you pretty quick. I need a minute or two to gather my thoughts.”

            The “sweep” is the last, the one who has the repair and first aid, the one who’s responsible, on river or trail, for making sure nobody is left behind, all are safe, everything’s copasetic so the trip leader can concentrate on leading. I absolutely love being sweep, reliable backup, having time to smell the rocks. Legally, guides are only responsible for the people in their own group. Morally is a different question.

            As one, they rise in silence, pack and leave. I notice some of the sandwiches have been discreetly put away, untouched.

            I remain, pondering. Climb the cables up to the campground and warn them? Mostly these folks, freshly hiked in from their cars and unfamiliar with the sure consequences of Nature in the Grand Canyon, won’t believe me anyway. Run past my small group and warn everybody on the rafts downstream? Nope. I’m sweep. Anything happens to one of my guys if I’m ahead, they’re screwed. Surely everyone downstream has noticed that cloud? It’ll hit me first, however big it is.

            My right eyebrow rises.

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            This is going to happen, period. If I could be in two places at once, herding them along and keeping well back to gauge and keep watch, I would. I love running this trail. I usually give my folks about twenty minutes lead and don’t catch up to them until just before the waiting rafts. I’m in no rush to catch up just yet.

            While caught up in these thoughts, I stroll up to each little group of swimmers and point to the cloud, explaining there’s going to be a flood and they should probably get back to their camps and warn their friends, move their gear. They look at me like I’m some nut on the freeway, which is no more than I expect. I’ve done my best, and I leave them to their fates.

            An inner clock has struck, compelling me to take off running downstream, free and clear of doubt. Glancing briefly over my shoulder from time to time whilst maneuvering amongst the grape vines and tangled trees, rocks, and crossings, I perceive The Cloud stalking slowly, inexorably down canyon, consuming the sky as if starving. There is unexpected color and movement just ahead. A bit stunned, I catch up with Bill and Ted, two of my six. I’ve only been going five minutes.

These two came together. Their impatience with the rest of us sheep is palpable. They don’t need no one telling them what to do.

            They’ve left the track and are standing waist deep in the creek. Lovely spot, nice little pool. Slowing to a trot, coming to an unsure halt poolside, I consider­. They’re hot and tired, stopped for a dip. No harm—in another world. I glance up. The brute is closing in. Just upstream, all is obscured by a slanting grayish blur.

            Be polite now.

            “What are you guys doing?”

            “It’s hot,” Bill says, wiping his brow with a wet bandana.

            “We’re tired,” says Ted.

            “And the others?”

            “They went on ahead.”

            That part’s good news. I point upstream. “See that? That’s rain. Lots and lots of rain.” I emphasize every word, failing to keep sarcasm at bay. “Very soon a really, really big flash flood is gonna come down on us. You get that?” My arms are crossed in front of my chest; my sunglasses remain in place. “Did you hear me when I said you had to keep moving downstream?”

            They nod, ruffled.

            “Kinda like now.”

I watch them disappear around a bend. A glance upstream, gauging the advance, a glance around at the tranquility, soon to be rent. I again sort out all the alternatives, possibilities. Part of this is just procrastination. I don’t like them much. I’d rather catch them than hang with them. Besides, the imminent danger is so sublime.

I give them another fifteen minutes, for fun making a bet with myself the exact point that we all four, they and I and the cloud, will meet. I find myself running once again, my mind a welcome blank. Nothing left to do but follow this chosen path.

            The trail whirs by, taking my focus. The buzz of a cicada, the flurry of two birds chasing each other into a tangle of leaves, the warm odor of riotous vegetation. Everything. My feet rhythmically pad the earth, joining my heart and breath, providing a beat to the rising symphony. Everything is in readiness.

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            Bill and Ted stand at the edge of the cliff, cameras pointed at Beaver Falls. They are oblivious, ignoring my arrival. On cue, as if a curtain were falling, the first heavy raindrops pelt the dust at our feet. Then hail the size of marbles—cat’s eye marbles, the big ones, like we used to play with back in Chicago—bombard us, sounding like applause.

 “Ouch. Ooooch. Ow!”

Bill is bald. No hat. The hail is hitting him on the head and it hurts. He squints at me through the instantaneous maelstrom, looking miserable. Smiling, I reach for my straw hat and offer it to him. He grabs it and jams it down, scowling. He and Ted try, in vain, to thwart the hail and rain with canted arms and elbows, scrambling in circles and crying out, looking like monkeys dancing. Then, form and color just under the big cottonwood tree down there at the base of the falls catches my eye. Squinting against the hail and rain, tying a bandana around my head, I can just make out the outsized form of the baggage boatman from the other trip. He’s curled up on his side in the luxuriant grass, under the thick leaves, by all appearances asleep. Shouting in this racket is useless. I’ll have to downclimb the cliffs and get closer.

“Hey! What are we supposed to do now?!”

I turn towards my guys. Deep breath.

“Well. Looks like I’m gonna have to get Steve out of bed.” pointing to the shape down below, just visible through the torrent. How on earth is he sleeping through this? Damn big tree.

“I was planning on stickin’ with you guys from here on, but plans have changed.” I like this option even less than they do. “Just head down the switchbacks and cross the creek. And could you do me a favor, please? Could you just keep moving?” Sullenly, they move off. I call to their backs, “Remember what I told you about flash floods!” Then I turn to get Steve.

Climbing fast, I arrive under the shelter of the tree in minutes. Already soaked, I shake his arm, and in an instant he’s bolt upright, looking around, trying to place himself. Steve is a big guy, like a walrus. He was a paying client for several years running, until finally the owner gave him an unpaid baggage boat to row.

“STEVE,” I yell, “IT’S gonna flash big time…come ON! We gotta get the hell out of herE!” The falls adds to the cacophony.

He responds, “Moley’s GONE hiking. He told me to wait up.”

Moley, another AzRA boatman, is working the other trip. He’s sweep for their group.

I say, “I’ll wait for Moley. You go on ahead!”

“No, I promised I’d wait. So I’m waiting.”

“Where’d he go?”

“I dunno. Something about a scary puppet. “Beaver Man” or something.”

“How long ago?

A shrug. “Musta fell asleep.” We’re both looking upwards, scanning the cliffs, hoping.

Moley’s head is screwed on good. He’ll figure it out. Think fast. This guy’s gonna be stubborn.

Okay. Okay. climb a bit up the cliffs with me. You can STAY under an overhang and wait for him there. Okay?”

He consents. I plunk him down in a safe spot and take off, on a mission.

Two minutes down the track I nearly run right over the top of Frick and Frack, sheltering under a tiny overhang on the trail. Time is running out. So is my patience.

“What the hell is wrong with you two?!”

They are peeved, soggy, and now, at long last, apparently scared.

“It hurts!”

“What are you talking about?”

“The hail!”

“Okay. Fine.” I take a deep breath. My sunglasses are off, my arms fold themselves across my chest.

“Listen to me.”

Yep. Listening.

“I’m supposed to be sweep and now I’ve left someone behind.”

The hail stops, the rain pours on. A garnet red waterfall bursts over the cliff a thousand feet above, cascades from ledge to ledge like a toy Slinky, and finally plunges into our creek not thirty feet away. Another, then another, all along the scarp. The creek turns pink, as if the water were mixed with blood. Yet it remains steady. Here, anyway. This will change presently.

“Oh! Oh my God!”

“Look you two. I’m gonna stay here for a few minutes. I gotta think. Then I’m gonna come after you. We’ve got three more crossings to make.”

“I thought there was four!”

“All we need to make is three. We can get back to the boats from the wrong side if we need to.”

They stand there. The creek alters color, chameleon-like, pink to red. The rowdy rain, the rising creek, a hundred waterfalls, the wind, all combine into a deafening crescendo.

“If I catch you two again, you won’t have to worry about no flash flood. Cuz I’m gonna fucking kill you myself.”

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            Moley—ace river guide, trustworthy, capable, savvy, bald. We shared the high water last year, him playing his fiddle at the Crystal concert. No worries there. I stand protected by the tiny overhang, re-assessing, sorting, scoping. Really just an excuse to observe the dazzling show. Red-graphite waterfalls pour over thousand foot cliffs far and wide. Pour from every little notch in the Redwall, pour upstream and downstream, both sides. There is so much energy it’s hard to breathe. The river is starting to rise. A few inches, just a teaser. Not thick red mud yet, but….

            Time congeals. I am running. One knee-deep crossing tells me what I need to know: the water is higher, maybe only by a foot or so. And it’s still coming. Steady. Another crossing. One more and home free. Half mile, more or less. Waterfalls and rain. The sound of water, of feet splashing, of breath, blend into a rhythm. My mind wanders, idiotically, to that Superman movie a few years back, the part where he outruns the train to cross the tracks.

            Top speed and cackling madly, now. The excitement is like a drug. I wonder how fast a flash flood wave moves?

            Faster than, say, a man can run?

            I howl. The sound is not as much drowned by the racket as absorbed by it, melded with it. I shake my head, demanding sanity, but it does not oblige. The conductor turns the page, moves his baton. I suck in my breath at the climax of the holy symphony.

            Then—The Sound. Exultant roar of a lioness, triumphant crowd after a goal. More attitude than simply vibrations in air, it compels me to turn, still running. A massive, surreal wave, foaming and single-minded and animate, appears a hundred yards upstream. The smell of earth and rich fecundity. It is freakishly slow, frothing and filling the space behind huge boulders, tumbling over drops, eddying, then rushing off again. Deliberate. Purposeful. The water just behind the crest improbably rushes at twenty miles an hour—an optical illusion. The laws of physics seem to require it to catch up and overtake the wave, but it behaves itself and does not. My head jerks from trail to wave and back again, gauging speeds.

            Yup. No doubt about it. I’m beating it.

            “No fuckin’ way don’t even think about it…Woohooooooooo…!”

            I will play with it just so much, then head uphill and watch it go by. I swear.

            The crossing comes into view a hundred yards downstream.

            Bill and Ted stand midstream, backs to the wave, rinsing their fucking bandanas.

            “SHIT!” Puff…puff. “GET UP THE BANK…!”

            My legs cannot move any faster. I glance at the approaching wave, thundering like a freight train. The path is set.

            “Get up the bank get up the bank get up the bank…!” Glance back. “Flash Flood…!” Seventy-five yards, fifty, glance back.

            “Flash Floooooood…!”

            Startled, they turn and stare—at me, not at their approaching doom. They start towards the far bank. Too slow. I hyperventilate, oxygenating my blood. Twenty yards. My eyes take in every rock, where my last steps must fall, where my surface dive will land. Last glance upstream. It’ll be close.

            In mid-flight, just before entering the muddy blackness, I inhale and flick my head rightwards for one last glimpse. Then I’m underwater–oh, the silence!–and plowing hard before the image gels, and it is this: An explosion of red mud like a supernova overwhelms the ten foot high virgin white limestone boulder thirty feet upstream.

            I have five seconds.

            My feet hit the river bottom running, like in the molasses of a silent dream, my arms drag mud wildly, propelling me forward. Unexpectedly, air once again touches my face, enters my lungs, the roar greets my ears. My guys stand facing me at what is just now the bank, but in two seconds will be ten feet deep and ruthless. Their faces are contorted, confused and angry. I grab their collars, feet scrambling to gain purchase, leaning hard into them, and shove. The moment stretches far into my future, my past. Into my story. Puppets and puppeteer. Not me and them; Life and not life.

            They are flung backwards into a thicket of ash trees. I wrap my arms around the nearest, high as I can reach, no time to choose for stoutness. The wave takes my legs out from under me.

            My tree holds.

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            “Oh….wow! So that’s what you meant by a flash flood!…”

            A huge cottonwood tree, still alive and whole, leaves and branches rolling over and over, ponderously tumbles by. I gain my footing, glancing over my shoulder. The log footbridge from Supai Village floats by. Supai Village is ten miles upstream.

 

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            Far downstream, Jane, a middle-aged client with ample breasts, sits on a rock midstream, a few hundred yards upstream of the boats in the eddy. She has stopped at the first creek crossing, just at the brink of a set of three stepped waterfalls, dropping about fifteen feet. Very pretty spot. She faces downstream, concentrating on removing pebbles from her sneakers. She stops, knots her brow, turns to see what it is that has tapped her on the shoulder…and is slapped off her perch like an insect, into muddy blackness.

Swept over the falls, violently tumbling over rocks and river bottom, she prays.

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            Back at the eddy, Lorna is napping on her raft, chocked into the hourglass. The wave will hit her, first. Sharon, “Shay,” is on her raft, nearest the Colorado River at the far end of the string. Unfortunately, she’s also on the upstream side of the eddy, farthest from an escape ledge.

            Barry Lopez writes about the Native Eye, how an Eskimo paddling a skin kayak across miles of  featureless Arctic ocean—no land in sight, family members tucked inside and utterly dependant—must focus on moving his kayak towards his landing. Not tunnel vision. Crystal clear, absolute attention. Yet, the merest change in the familiar salty breeze, a wisp of cloud on the horizon, a flock of birds wheeling, and muscles and mind become taut, alert, calculating. Ready.

            The canyon narrows as it enters the last few hundred yards above the boats; the wave responds by getting bigger. Much bigger. Shay’s glance is drawn upstream. Something is speaking to her. There is a presence over Lorna’s head. Towering, dark, alive. The wave of mud approaches.

            “Flash Floooooood!!!”

            Edwards will later swear he saw Lorna leap from a dead sleep and in an instant fly over the boats to safety at the far end of a dozen rafts, feet never touching rubber or frame. Fortunate, since The Wave engulfs her boat, straining, then snapping its lines and wrapping it sideways into the next, then both into the next, and so on. The lines thrum and stretch and snap, anchors pop out of cracks. Metal D-rings on the rubber rafts disintegrate, ripping a hole in one, causing it to deflate and fold in half underneath itself.

            The rafts are now wildly bucking in the raging tsunami. Shay screams over the roar, “what do I do what do I do?”

            “Cut ’em!” echoes from the cliffs.

            For us guides, an unconscious hand-slap to the chest—just checking—is second nature in times of need  Yep, her life jacket is on. (Why? Who can say. Nobody ever wears a life jacket when hanging out in the eddy.) She draws the knife from its scabbard and starts cutting lines. The whole flotilla is being ripped and contorted, held in the brunt of the torrent, but as lines are cut, it swings out, pendulums from my snout still tied to the far ledge. There guides gawk and scramble, grabbing life jackets and throw lines. Shay slithers and leaps across the lurching mass and gladly joins them. The boats now strain in the raging current of the Colorado at the head of a rapid running at forty-five thousand cubic feet per second. Off my single bowline.

            Which is taut, worried to the point of rupture. The guides stand, absorbing the outrageous scene, trying to wrap their heads around it. As always, some react swiftly, with poise and sureness; others follow.

            The rope will only hold for a second or two. Lowry, strong, reliable, taking it all in like a cat, leaps onto the closest boat, followed by two young acolytes. The boys had been practicing the whole trip, clients observing their mentor—how he rowed, his stature amongst his peers. They crab crawl and clamber over the surging tubes and flailing oars to reach the three farthest outlying boats. Dave cuts the lines, yelling at the boys to grab rowing seats and hold on tight. The impatient current snaps the lines, releasing the rafts, all that pent up energy jerking them fiercely. They grab the oars and madly row their craft into the only existing eddy, against the cliffs below.

            Suzanne also leaps. She’s wearing her own familiar costume of flops, Navajo style print skirt and lacey blouse, her signature southwestern turquoise necklaces, rings, and bracelets, all highlighted by her flaming jumble of red hair. As Lowry cuts his boats free, she severs the straining line closest to her. A jumble of four boats, all fully loaded and one half-deflated, disappears around the corner, containing one determined woman.

            This leaves just my snout and two other rafts, plus a clutch of guides feeling like cowboys on foot.

            Dave Edwards stares downstream, worried about Suzy. His back is to the eddy. There is a shout.

            “Bod-eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!”

            Joel points. Time stretches, as it will. In one fluid motion, Dave turns. A shadow below the water’s surface resolves into an image: swirling hair. It is sensuous, a siren calling  him, hair framing the silhouette of a face with haunting eyes. He dives, two hundred and fifty muscular pounds of resolve.

            On shore, eyes scan the water for an anxious second. Two seconds. Three. Four.

            Two spluttering faces appear, noses just above the surface. Dave has Jane in the classic life-saving hold—turned away from him so she cannot pin his arms, his right arm underneath her armpit and across her chest, clasping his left hand with his right, locked in solid. He’s wearing his worn, old, lightweight, comfortable (and useless) lifejacket. They get air infrequently, heads submerging through each wave. Seconds count.

            Joel is lithe—a runner. His track is an uneven rock ledge. He wears flip-flops; he is encumbered by a life jacket and has a throw bag in his hands. Nonetheless, he hurtles over the terrain, pacing the swimmers, staring into Dave’s eyes. Waiting. They careen two feet away, but they might as well be on the moon.

            In an instant it’ll be too late.

            In between repeated submersions, Dave spits. Then, with absolute clarity, says, “Hit me in the face, boyo…”

            Whap! The rope appears, right between their heads. Dave, briefly releasing his left hand, stuffs the rope deep between his molars, clamps down, then locks Jane back in. They are traveling at ten miles an hour.

            Others reach Joel and hold onto him, ready for the pull. One chance, one eddy. All comprehend the need for slack, a pendulum to take some of the force. Once they hit that eddy the rope will rip out Dave’s teeth and they’re goners.

            Graceful as penguins, they swing in, are gathered ashore, and collapse into welcoming arms.

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            Later, in her soft southern accent, Jane will tell the tale. “I knew I was going to drown in that wave. Then, God answered my prayers. He grabbed me by my breasts, and tugged me to the surface so I could breathe. Then I was on the crest of this huge red wave, and I was headed into a narrow notch just choked with boats. Then, this tiny figure—I just know it was an angel—flew over the boats. It gave me hope. I hit the first boat and went back underwater. It was just black. I bumped and banged underneath those boats, and I just knew that was gonna be it. Then I felt myself swirling around and the water got really cold and I could almost see light. Well, I knew what that was. The Colorado. I was prepared to meet my maker, but this huge shadow appeared above me—another angel—and tackled me so hard it hurt. But that pain was a blessing, and I wasn’t gonna let go, no sir!”

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            Downstream, Suzy gets to work. There is no urgency. She unties, then reties her rafts end to end, freeing her to row the tail end one. She hauls one raft’s deflated half up and over itself and ties it to the frame so it doesn’t drag in the water. She then loops all the spare lines into one nice, long coil on the back deck and aims for shore.

            She attempts eddy after eddy. Each time her rear boat hits the undisciplined and powerful eddy line, the seventy-foot rig uncontrollably spirals back out into the current. Suzanne is strong and sure. She reads current better than anyone. As a woman used to working in a man’s world—and used to using finesse and skill, having a certain bond with rivers—she reprocesses. Considers. Drinks some water. Decides. She knows the river well and can visualize a place downstream on the left where a slow current will bring her near some low cliffs without an eddy. She hopes the cliffs are mostly underwater, presenting a sloping shore.

            Her destination appears downstream. Committing utterly on a singular day of utter commitment, she ships her oars as she nears shore, gathers the coils of line, leaps off the boats moving at eight miles an hour, and starts running in her flops and skirt amidst the desert scrub. Red hair flies. Desperately she seeks something solid to tie to. Nada. Not a thing. Fragile cacti and small, loose rocks. Coils whip out of her arms, whoop, whoop, whoop, rapidly diminishing her options. The flotilla keeps moving relentlessly downstream.

There is a solitary large boulder at the terminus of the bench. She has tied a “monkeys fist”–a large, round final knot at the end of the rope. The last coil lurches out of her arms. She grabs the monkey’s fist and jams it into the lone crack in that lone rock as the boats pull it taut. The force wedges her hand into the sharply eroded limestone. The boats settle, freeing her now torn hand.

There is now time to tend to her wound, cover the exposed raw meat, rummage for food. She tethers the boats to shore in a spider’s web of rope, makes a sandwich. It’ll be a while before others arrive.

 

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            Back upstream, the rain has stopped. I’m shaking with cold—that, and the shock of having death sit on my shoulder once again, only to leave me behind, once again. Sodden with mud, I stand amidst the trees, leaning against one. Steady now. It is good to feel the rough bark. Something solid.

            Responsibilities. Moley and Steve are upstream. The Colorado is only a short hike away, maybe a mile and a half or so. Where are the others? For sure someone’s been swept away and drowned. Bill is shivering. I give him my rain jacket. He now has that and my hat, with never a thank you. I must keep moving or I’ll get hypothermic. My gut aches for the others, but we have to get moving. I cannot, however, leave Bill and Ted (much as I’d like to).

            The trail is now in the river, underneath all that liquefied mud. Downstream there will be parts of it exposed higher up on the bank, but for now we must crawl through Catclaw Acacia and Mesquite, small trees lovely to the eye–from a distance. After all, desert plants must defend themselves—not much to eat in these parts. Catclaw is rather self-explanatory. The thorns on the mesquite are different, long and straight, kinda like IV needles. Our only route is choked with these. Waist height and below, prickly pear and fishhook cacti litter the ground. Blood leaks from countless scratches and holes, like we’ve been flailing ourselves in some religious swoon. I ignore Bill and Ted’s loud and constant complaints until they finally shut up.

            Finally, we reach a section of trail above the flood. It has abated a couple of feet in the past half-hour. We’re getting strangely used to the clamor and feverish motion of red-brown water. Fish flop in puddles along the recently exposed trail. I mindlessly scoop them sideways back into the river with a flick of my foot as I hike; they bounce and disappear in a splash.

            We round a corner and stumble into a small knot of clients. Huddled and cold, some sit on rocks, some stand. The men cradle their heads in their palms, staring at their feet. The women softly whimper, arms crossed for warmth or around their companion’s shoulders, comforting each other.

            “Oh! It’s a guide! Jeffe! Thank God!” All faces look to me.

            “Is everyone okay? Has anyone been washed away?”

            “No. Everyone’s fine. But we we’re stuck! We’re cold and wet! And we can’t get back to the boats!”

            “Nope. We’re all right” I say, relief apparent in my voice. I nod, as much for myself as for them. “We don’t need that last crossing through the tunnel. It’s probably underwater, but there’s a secret way back to the boats on this side, higher up. Used to be used by the miners back in the thirties. It’s gonna be okay.”

            Acquitted. Off we tramp, the group chatting, newly lighthearted, me picking the way on the still partly submerged trail. Silently I ponder my friends–my comrades, in the eddy.

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            We come upon little pods of clients scattered along the trail. Their manner, and our greeting, is repeated. Each time I question, they answer—nobody swept away—until there are nearly thirty of us gaily tramping towards the river.

            Moley and Steve appear, having escaped by climbing a cliff. He gives me thumbs up, eases into the sweep position. A few trees still float downstream, but the power is ebbing, still high and muddy but less troubled. We bypass the tunnel where the trail usually goes. Water is sucking through it like a giant toilet. We ascend the old mining track on the scree above, slowing in the steeper terrain. Weary faces concentrate on the loose footing.

            Not over yet.

            Clambering over a slight rise, I gain sight of the cliffs above the first crossing, supporting a rather colorful clutch of boatmen. All geared up, lifejackets on, throwbags in hand. Even from this distance, I see their worried faces staring at the water rushing by, expecting the worst. Rob, AzRA’s owner, glances up, sees me. Only me so far…and then, in an instant, I see the whiteness of a dozen faces staring at me. They stiffen, weirdly dressed and posed like mannequins—half bent, limbs akimbo, mouths half open, a river fashion display.

            Decades later, Dave, hand clutching my arm as if he were there once more, would describe the mood thusly: “Boyo…it was…Chilling.”

            Voices cannot overcome the bellow of rapids. Sometimes communication between one boat and another, or a boat and a swimmer, is critical, so river guides use hand signals. A pat on the head means “OK.” It’s a question-response sort of thing. One pat deserving another.

            Clearly, they’re expecting bad news. Unable to help myself, I smile, pat my head, and point with my other thumb over my shoulder behind me. They glance at each other, then back to me. One pats his head back, face puzzled, slowly rising from his crouch. Faces turn towards each other, mouths stir.

            One by one, my herd tops the rise. The guides begin counting on their fingers. Someone produces a roster. Rob, pen in hand, checks off names. Smiles appear, backs are slapped.

            Presently, Moley materializes, bringing up the rear.            All accounted for.

            Soon, we are yelling across the abyss. We cannot make ourselves understood over the roar of the floodwaters in the final narrows. Joel points downstream towards the boat eddy. Oh. Right. We move off in that direction.

            Where a dozen boats were, there are three—my snout and two eighteen footers, swaying in the current.

            “Wait’ll you hear,” someone shouts.

            “Wait’ll YOU hear,” I respond.

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            Reserves are waning. People are wet and tired and hungry. It is getting late. Time for stories later; this one is still taking shape. Following a brief discussion, Moley and I set up our end of a Tyrolean Traverse. Joel, like myself an ex-Outward Bound instructor, sets up the far side. We swap stories as we work, omitting certain delicate details, watched by curious and anxious clients. There are three more rafts in the eddy downstream, plus a motor rig that happened by. They’d like to get going, get their own passengers to camp and fed. Tuckup camp is ten miles downstream.

            The Tyrolean Traverse: A taut rope, fixed across some terrible abyss (naturally), to which climbers affix themselves in a sit-harness and slide themselves with pulleys from one side to the other. Exhilarating fun…for climbers.

            I look at the thirty-plus people; they look back, suddenly startled. Darkness is descending, and the helpful motor rigger is getting understandably impatient. Usually, when training student climbers, I spend quite a bit of time on the particulars of knots, safety, technique. No time for that, now.

            I scan the huddled crowd, seeking the most squeamish. I gently lead her by her elbow to the taut line. Nobody speaks. I have her step into the improvised harness, clip her into the line.

            Innocently, she asks “So, uh, what are we doing?

            “Darlin’, you just hold onto this rope here. Yep. That’s it.”

            Then I shove her off the cliff.

            It is a short distance to the other side, and before her terrified scream gets past her lips, she’s already in the arms of Lorna and Joel.

            No savior appears for the others. Just us scraggly half-clad hippy boatmen. Gradually, efficiently, reluctantly, the rest follow.

            The motor rig leaves. It’s a half hour by motor, an hour by oar, maybe less with the high water. There, at Tuckup, dry clothes, hot food, tea, sleeping bags, toilets–and normality–await. Once all are across, Moley and I frenetically disassemble the gear in the last of the light. We toss the mess across to the others waiting on the ledge. They gather it up and turn to clamber over the ledges into the shadows.

            Almost over. Then it hits me.

            I look over the edge, stand bolt upright and turn to Moley. He points a finger at me, scowling, and says, “Don’t you say a word. I ain’t sticking around to think about it,” and leaps.

            He is lithe, but he barely makes it, all scrambling feet and arms, pebbles knocking loose and splashing into the dark water below. Silent and now alone, I shake my head, mouth twisting into a crooked grin.

Deep breath, jump.

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            We pile wordlessly into our boats and cast off. Floating along on the moonlit Colorado, cliffs drift by like sentinels. Small rapids are rowed by heart. The Black Cloud, having only barely reached the main gouge of the Canyon, has now entirely vanished, leaving an impeccable corridor of brilliant stars, like sea foam punctuated by the crescent moon, a pendant hanging on a necklace. There is soft conversation; we share trail mix. Each of us considers crag and sky and the essence of things. I listen to the sounds of oarlocks squeaking gently, oars dipping, caressing the water. Sweet music.

            My ears hear Tuckup rapid. Not much of a rapid really—but in the dark with nine passengers on a snout?

            Catching eddies is a special skill, second nature usually. But sometimes they’re a bitch. Sometimes you miss one. In a snout, they’re pretty much always a struggle. Add fast current, weight, darkness… I really don’t need any more epics today. Downstream and to our right, dozens of flashlights and dancing fires light up the cliffs like a Revival Meeting. It looks like a small city, all gaily lit up like that.

            I want it.

            I set the boat angle to catch the eddy, glance over my shoulder.

            What on earth?...are those fireflies in the water there?

            In any case, that’s about where I need to be. I await my timing, pull hard.

            The eddy, like a magnet, magically draws us in, much to my surprise. But there is more. I now see that my strong and capable fellows, who were chest deep in the eddy, have reached out, grabbed my boat, and pulled us in. A silhouette with a glowing Cyclops eye ties us up; others leap aboard, embrace me. One offers a welcome bottle.

            Relax, friend. You’re home now.

            Not fireflies…

            Headlamps. Reflected in the night eddy.

            This. Oh, this. Worth every struggle, every fear. My pards.

            Boats and people—five river trips worth, spread out like refugees. Delicious cooking smells drift across the dunes. Suzy runs up and gives me a bear hug. Her laugh is all the welcome I’ll ever need. I notice her bandaged hand. She shakes her head, smiling, points to the paddle raft dry-docked in the sand, on its edge and being patched by firelight. A crowd of boatmen, beers in hand, surround it, passing a bottle. Tired as we are, boatmen’s sleeping bags will remain lonely for a while yet.

            “Everyone okay?”

            She tells me of Jane and Dave and Joel.

            “No way!” is all I can say. (This is what everyone will say as I retell the tale in the years to come.)

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            Next morning, after sleeping in and re-rigging and breakfast, we separate, smiling and waving and hooting, and slide back into the current on our separate ways towards Lava Falls.

            Lava is the largest whitewater maelstrom on one of the world’s most renowned rivers. It drops over fifteen feet in seventy-five yards. It is filled with boat-flipping holes, colossal waves, and bone-crushing volcanic rocks. It is now running high and furious at forty-five thousand cubic feet per second. Enough to make any river runner queasy.

            We pass Vulcan’s Anvil: a shiny, black basalt obelisk sitting placidly, deceptively, a mile above Lava, dead smack in the center of the river. The core of an ancient volcano, once violent, the Anvil is now an altar, the serene recipient of wayward boater’s prayers and offerings. We float that final mile of quiet water, hushed and anticipatory, then round the ultimate bend.

            Once again, we are met by the sound of water.    

Publisher and agent queries welcome at jeffe.aronson@yahoo.com