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By
Mike Roselle
The water
here at the
takeout is unnaturally clear and lifeless. The reservoir is only about
half
full, leaving a bathtub ring on the surrounding cliffs and exposing
several
square miles of mudflats strewn with driftwood and (unfortunately)
empty beer
cans. In the distance, you can see the petrochemical haze hovering over
I try to
make sense of what
just happened, to understand the feeling I have in my gut, but it’s no
use.
There are no words to describe my emotions. After what seems like a
lifetime in
the glorious canyons of the Colorado Plateau, I will have to go back to
work.
And even more disturbing, I don’t have a job to go back to. But I am
getting ahead of
myself. My goal here is to recount the last leg of our trip, the
portion that
takes us through the If you
have been reading my
previous posts, you will recall that we arrived at the Glen Canyon Dam
just 40
minutes behind schedule, a feat accomplished only by Josh working me
like a
galley slave. Note to self; never try to keep up with two highly
athletic
people half your age. After two nights in a real bed and a full day
off, we re-launched
our rafts at the foot of To get
there, we must be
towed up river by the pontoon boats that regularly ferry tourists down
this
stretch to the takeout at Lee’s Ferry. The large commercial rafts have
to make
the return trip empty, and the operators are happy to tow us up river
for a
small fee. We float down casually, our coolers restocked with beer and
ice, and
I can see for the first time what Since we
launched in This all
changes
dramatically when we enter When we
reach Lee’s Ferry
late in the late afternoon, we find the camp of the 13 people who will
run the Most of
our new team members
are from At the
moment, I am more
concerned about our team. Spending 21 days in close quarters on a river
trip
can strain even the closest of relationships. I have had very good luck
on my
previous canyon floats, but have heard plenty of stories about trips
that were
plagued by personality disputes, so try to size them up a little. They
are a
pleasant group, mostly in their forties, a few older, one younger and
most have
a good deal of whitewater experience. None of
them are activists,
so I’m thinking that if they don’t like loud, self-important, obnoxious
environmentalists, they won’t like me either. Not to worry, though,
there is
than enough ego around to float a large battleship, and before long we
have
bonded into a happy, if somewhat dysfunctional family. I don’t want to
bore you
with yet another account of running the I will say
that no matter
how many times you have run the But like
most of the
expeditions that run these rapids every day, we somehow get through the
rapids
unscathed, which is a cause for celebration. Every moment, every move
is then
endlessly recounted in song and story, as if we had just battled an
invading
Mongol horde and chased them out of Most
boaters get out at
Diamond Creek even though the canyon extends for another 60 miles.
Usually this
is because the next opportunity for taking out is on Diamond
Creek is on the
Hualapai Reservation, and the gravel road out is maintained by them,
and they meet
every party and count every head, charging a $75 fee per boater to
drive out.
As we pushed off, an elderly Hualapai man, his long white braids
hanging
beneath his cowboy hat, raised his hands and gave a loud holler as we
entered
Diamond Creek rapid just downriver from the take-out. Coming up
soon was Mile 232
rapid, considered by many to be one of the most difficult rapids in the
Well, this
was certainly my
plan. I had heard enough stories about Mile 232, and even though those
waves
looked tantalizingly fun and pulling off didn’t look that difficult, I
decided
to heed the warnings and stay left. I got into trouble right off the
bat. When
I entered the rapid, instead of pulling left, I decided to face my boat
left and
push on the oars. This made it easier for me to enter the rapid, and I
was initially
successful in getting left of the waves, but halfway down the wave
train the
current sucked my raft back in. Now I was pushing on the oars
frantically, and going
sideways over 14-foot haystack shaped waves, and heading directly
towards the
fins that some rafters call the Fangs of Death. Realizing that I would
not be
able to push the oars hard enough to avoid the rocks, I attempted to
spin my
boat around to face them, so I could pull back on my oars, which would
give me
considerable more power. It was too
late. The water
moves much faster in the lower part of the canyon. Instead of facing
the fins while
pulling away as planned, I was now moving sideways up the big pillow of
water
directly in front of them. I was so close to the rocks that my oar hit
one of
the fingers and I had to quickly ship it so it wouldn’t be knocked out
of my
grip. The other oar was useless, pulling or pushing it would only
change the
angle in which I would collide with the rocks, so I shipped it too,
bracing for
a collision and hoping for the best. As I rose
up the wall of
water towards what was surely my stony death, the front of my boat hit
the
rocks which spun the raft around helplessly, spinning me backwards and
dropping
me about four feet below in the turbulent hole on their downriver side
of the
fins. The boat landed hard, almost knocking me out of my seat and into
the swirling
vortex, and it immediately filled with water. This was good; as it
meant that I
had spun off the rocks rather than be pushed up against them. Soon, I
was
flushed out of the hole and back into the current. A close call, and my
heart
was beating wildly. Just when you think you are almost through with
danger, it
hits you like a freight train. We
continued downriver and
on the last night we camped beneath what is now being billed as either
one of
the eight wonders of the world, or the most hideous abomination ever
constructed on a wild river. I am of course talking about the
controversial Hualapai
Skywalk. We had heard a lot about it, and from all the stories you’d
think that
it was going to be a development so hideous that it would spoil our
entire
experience in the lower Instead,
what I saw looked
like a tiny basketball hoop way up on the canyon rim. There was no
hotel, no
casino, no roller coaster, only a gift shop, and the dang thing was
even closed
at night. Given what the National Park Service has allowed to happen on
the
South Rim in the so-called While I do
not approve of
the skywalk, I cannot figure out why is it O.K. for the white people to
build
Las Vegas, which impacts the air quality of the National Park and
consumes
large quantities of water and fossil fuels, while it is sacrilegious
for the
Hualapai to build what is basically a pier on the rim high above the
river to
generate a little badly needed income on what has been their land for
centuries?
After
loading up the rental
truck we head into In Las Vegas, where we have rooms waiting at the
Gold
Nugget, an old downtown Casino. Jen and Josh have decided to stay on
the river
and keep rowing to One thing
I did look forward
to was drinking coffee and reading a newspaper in a café. At the
café in the
Gold Nugget I picked up a fresh copy of The November New York Times and
tried
to find out what, if anything had changed since we launched in
mid-August.
Perhaps the world had woken up to the threat of global warming. Perhaps
all
sides had decided to end hostilities in the My
attention was drawn to an
op-ed in the Times by Eduardo Porter. In it, he bemoaned the fact that
while Americans
are richer today, in a material sense, we are less happy than we have
been in
earlier times, and this got me to thinking. Now happiness would seem to
be of
paramount importance. It was important enough for the framers of our
constitution to include in the Declaration of Independence. And yet,
with all
of our wealth and technology, we seem to have forgotten how to be
happy. I do not
believe that what
Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and their friends had meant by
happiness and
what Porter means by it is exactly the same thing. Happiness meant more
to the
participants of the Enlightenment than just feeling good. They were
careful to
say that it was not happiness that we had an unalienable right to, but
the
pursuit of happiness. Now I am not generally a happy person. I might
say that I
am mostly content and I consider myself fortunate that my situation is
no worse
than it is. Like most
of us, I
experience fleeting moments of happiness, but usually I am depressed.
It is
hard to be happy when you see the planet going to Hell in a hand
basket, and
there are so many millions of people who don’t have diddly-squat. Aldo
Leopold
once said that the price of an ecological education is to forever
observe a
landscape of scars. Climate change is depressing, and so is the
prospect of mass
extinction. It seems wrong to me to be too happy under these
circumstances. One of my
reasons for rowing
1,000 miles down the river was to ponder all of this. I was not trying
to
pursue, much less catch happiness. No, actually achieving happiness
would
engender so much guilt and self hatred that it would probable have the
opposite
effect and make me even more depressed. Generally, people who are happy
all the
time tend to annoy me, even more than people who are depressed all the
time. As
a rule, I wouldn’t wish happiness on anyone, even my worst enemy. Over
the last
80 days I did have fleeting moments of pure happiness. Thankfully, they
were
not permanent. For the
founders of our
great nation, happiness was more often defined by what it is not,
rather than
what it is. In the eighteenth century, if you were not royalty, clergy,
landed,
or wealthy, you were supposed to work. The lower classes were to expect
nothing
more from life, just hard work, a short miserable life and if you had
sufficient piety, a reward awaited you in Heaven. You were not even
supposed to
enjoy sex! You worked all of your waking hours and got a little rest on
Sundays
so you could worship the Christian God. No one was willing to see a
poor serf
sit around in idleness, because that meant a loss of income for the
higher ups.
Unless you were one of the elite, leisure time was not something in
great
supply. It has
been said that at
either end of the economic spectrum there lies a leisure class. Once
you give
up the desire to be one of rich, you may then begin to live like them.
I have
seen the look of pure envy in the eyes of my wealthy friends when
describing my
plans to row from In the
modern era we have
simply become too busy pursuing wealth and security to be happy. Yet
studies
show that people who do volunteer work in their communities, work such
as
helping out the disadvantaged and caring for the environment are among
the
happiest people. They are also healthier and tend to live longer. And I
think
most of us know this, we are simply too depressed to do anything about
it. So am I
happier now? I am in better physical condition. I’ve
lost some weight and have a nice suntan. I am more rested then I have
been in
years. I have had some time to reflect on the reason for my own
existence on
this planet, and to think about the road that lies ahead. But I am glad
to
report to you that I am no happier for all of effort. And that is how
it should
be. We have a lot of work to do and very little time to do it. If we
want to ensure
that our children can have a decent planet on which to pursue their own
happiness, then we will have to think less about our own wealth and
comfort,
and more about happiness itself. Mike
Roselle writes turgid prose for Lowbagger.org
and other fine publications. |
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