Green River Cleanup
Printed From: ProfessorPaddle.com
Category: General
Forum Name: Whitewater Forum
Forum Discription: Open Discussion Forum. Whitewater related subjects only
URL: http://www.professorpaddle.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=11565
Printed Date: 12 May 2025 at 11:04am
Topic: Green River Cleanup
Posted By: JayC
Subject: Green River Cleanup
Date Posted: 15 Jan 2012 at 12:57pm
I would like to introduce a new page on facebook, http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - . This site along with http://www.greenrivercleanup.org/ -
are the only two official web sites for the Green River Cleanup.
Here is a place for all things, Green River Cleanup (GRCU)
related to gather. In 2012, the GRCU is
in its 27th year and has never had a central place to gather photos, tell stories
and to disburse accurate information about the GRCU. It is my hope that this page will remedy
that.
This is your page.
Please use it to upload your GRCU pictures and stories, check for latest
information, post any questions or comments you have about the GRCU. Arrange GRCU shuttles and rides. Get connected with other GRCU participants.
I am particularly interested in past GRCU photos and
stories. I know they are out there. Where is the picture of the catboat hauling
out that 300 gallon water tank a few years back? How about that story of the couple that where
high school sweethearts and met up again years later at the 10th
annual GRCU then got married. Was the
GRCU your first experience with the Green River Gorge? Please tell your story here.
Please visit and support this new facebook page by clicking
the like button, even if you have not or cannot attend the event, show your
support by liking the page. Share the
page with your friends, ask them to “like” it also. I am excited about this new facebook page and
am looking forward to seeing (like the GRCU itself) how it evolves.
Please take the time now to upload your favorite GRCU photo
or tell your GRCU story. Your support,
past and future is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
SYOTR
Jay
------------- Jay
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Replies:
Posted By: James
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 8:33am
Let this be our official GRCU Thread as well!!!!
I have a personal challenge to anyone that is going...
A bit above Shan gri La and a bit below Paradise on River Left is what looks to be some piece of Mining Equipment... I know it is not as cool as the Jet Ski that Joe pulled out or perhaps some of the other odd things but it is big, and would present a challenge indeed. So go scout it out while I think of a suitable reward.
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 7:34pm
Dude, you can't be talkin bout 'ol COAL bbucket?
Right below Paradise- R.Left. in that series of rapids before you get to Kay's Landing (that's what the lower Paradise t.o. is called). Yeah that's where Nelson got tangled up.
Dude, you can't remove that. That's an Historical Landmark.
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 7:36pm
Besides- it makes a good boof at about 750-900 cfs.
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 7:42pm
I originally got into this thread to express an interest in the Green River Cleanup. And to express a dislike and, vote of No Confidence in, Facebook. So I guess Y'nz who got your faces in the book (One Book to Rule Them All, One Book To Find Them,One Book to bring them all and... Ect.) Gonna have to keep me in the loop.
Whatever- I like The Green River Cleanup. Won't be hittn up the FB tho.
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 11:20pm
That coal bucket probably weighs over 1,000lbs. Good luck with that. There is a reason why the minors left that there, think about it.
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 11:51pm
Interesting bit of history regarding that coal car.
By the late 1960s Palmer was operating one underground coal mine on the east bank of the Green River and had recently closed another. The active mine was called the No. 10, named after one of the seventeen coal seams of the Franklin series. The No. 12 mine had closed several years earlier. A wooden bridge with narrow gauge rails for small coal cars crossed the river and provided access to the west side where flatter ground made coal removal by dump-trucks easier. In March 1971, Rocket Research using special explosives blasted the old bridge down. The ceremony was attended by many State and local dignitaries as well as television crews from NBC for the monthly documentary program called "First Tuesday" shown in May of that year.
I would like to find that NBC show.
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 16 Jan 2012 at 11:53pm
http://www.palmercc.com/Photoalbum.htm
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 17 Jan 2012 at 8:43am
"Whatever- I like The Green River Cleanup. Won't be hittn up the FB tho.
"
Ditto, without ranting, I will just agree.
Interesting about the Coal Car, and I also had no idea that the hot springs there is actually a non-natural spring caused by a 100 year coal fire that still burns today.... Cool history.
Check this out... Can anyone guess the first guy on the left in this photo?
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 17 Jan 2012 at 9:02am
Another fun read is in this document.
http://www.blackdiamondmuseum.org/Museum_site_folders/Newsletters/2010%20Jan.pdf - http://www.blackdiamondmuseum.org/Museum_site_folders/Newsletters/2010%20Jan.pdf
Pages 17-18
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 29 Apr 2012 at 3:55pm
Celebrate Cinco de
Mayo with us at the 27th Annual Green River Cleanup
Get Involved
Here’s how
Boaters: Register with
WRRR and FOG volunteers, 9:00 am till about noon. You will find them with clipboards and bags
at reach 1, 2 and 4’s put-in location.
Reach 1 “headworks” class III whitewater
Reach 2 “Upper Gorge” class IV experience required
Reach 3 “Lower Gorge” class III
Reach 4 “Yo-Yo” class II.
Navigate the river; pick up trash, transport it to Kanaskat-Palmer
or Flaming geyser State parks. Camp out
free at Kanaskat-Palmer group camp sight.
Free to all Green River Cleanup volunteers Friday and Saturday nights.
Celebrate, feel good about yourself for doing the right thing show your
pictures and tell your stories. Then post
your pictures and share your stories at http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - .
Ground crews and walk-ins; Register with Pat at Flaming Geyser
State Park. She will be at shelter 3
between 9:00 AM and 12:30 PM. She will
have bags and maps to hand out for those needing them. All volunteers are invited to camp at
Kanaskat-palmer group camp.
Why Go?
If you have to ask, here are some really good reasons:
Spend an awesome day on an awesome river.
7 day
forecast says sunny and warm for Saturday.
Free Parking at the Parks.
Tell
the ranger you are with the Green River cleanup. Clean-up volunteers park free.
Free camping at Kanaskat-Palmer State Park group camp.
Cleanup
volunteers camp free Fri. and Sat. nights (leave it cleaner than you found it).
Above average flows Predicted Saturday.
For the
2nd year in a row, predicted levels to be in the 1600 to 2400 cfs
range! Yee-ha.
http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup -
for the latest water level predictions.
Want better reasons: ask mailto:greenrivercleanup@hotmail.com - We
have a big list.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 01 May 2012 at 8:33am
Looks like record cleanup flows for this weekend. Low 2000 cfs,
a great flow, rocks start covering up, no pushy hydraulics or keeper holes.
Have fun be safe and watch your downstream oar.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 01 May 2012 at 12:41pm
I'll only have a downstream oar if Boater Barbie shows up and runs first.
That's a joke. Gotta keep these online aliases in line, ya know.
Thanks for the updates, Jay- its quite likely I'll see you out there. Flows do look nice for the weekend!
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 02 May 2012 at 1:31pm
Flow predictions for this Saturday’s Green River Cleanup
event.
Just talked to the man with his hands on the gate controls. Ken Brettman, P.E. Senior Water Manager,
Western Washington Water Management Section Seattle District Army Corps of Engineers. Paraphrased,--- Expect
releases from Howard Hanson Dam This weekend to be 1600cfs; based on the most sophisticated
crystal ball technology available.
Expect a range of 1400 to 1800 cfs. Chance of exceeding this range is
slim.---
For the quickest and most up to date info http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup Have fun out the there, be safe and d*m it, be decisive (#3).
------------- Jay
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Posted By: Mr.Grinch
Date Posted: 02 May 2012 at 5:15pm
Jay, I wanted to know about how the garbage is escorted from the Upper Gorge. I only have small kayaks, but I'm quite apt and willing to help with clean up. I can't personally transport much waste as my low volume boats don't have much extra room, but are we expecting numerous rafts that can carry what anyone finds that needs to be removed?
My guess is that this question should be a no brainer, but I haven't been here for a clean up before, so I wouldn't assume anything.
Thanks!
------------- nnln.
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 02 May 2012 at 6:06pm
Mr. Grinch, Thankyou so much for asking the question and welcome to the Green River Cleanup I have added your question to the FAQ on the Green River Cleanup facebook page. If there any other questions about the cleanup; please feel free to post them here or at http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup .
15 I have a
small Kayak and cant hall much; what can I do with the trash I find?
Kayakers can give their found
trash to any rafter on the cleanup.
Sweep boats will be leaving about 1:00 pm from the headworks and will be
picking up any bags or piles of trash that cannot be transported
otherwise. The goal is to haul as much
trash as possible to Flaming Geyser first and Kanaskat-Palmer second. Anything left behind will be grabbed by
Sunday boaters.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 02 May 2012 at 8:37pm
Where doeas all this garbage come from? It's ridicules! Damn fishermen!
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 02 May 2012 at 9:12pm
dave, your question is already on the FAQ list, it's # 11. However I did expand on it because of your question, thanks. please keep those questions comming. here is the FAQ you asked. You can see the entire list by going to http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup and clicking on "about" in the header.
11 After so
many years of cleaning the Green River, isn’t it clean already?
Cleaner, yes. Unfortunately, there are those out there that
don’t get it and we won’t be cancelling the cleanup anytime in the predictable
future due to lack of garbage. The Green
river cleanup is more than just cleaning a river every year; in fact, each year
less random garbage is collected and hauled out, speaking for the success of
the cleanup. The Green River Cleanup is
also about getting the word out that trashing our precious waterways is behaviors
society can no longer afford to tolerate. Let those know, the ones that don’t
get it, how you feel about it.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 12:33am
Jay, I want to personally thank you for being present on these forums. Yeah, I don't like Facebook, and won't traffic there myself.
But I appreciate your presence here for a variety of reasons:
Obviously, for actively promoting the Green River Clean up, but also because you are one of our local veteran boaters. Professor Paddle may be seen as a fairly recent edition to Washington's whitewater boating community, but ya gotta admit it is a pretty powerful tool with a lot of potential. Sure, internet forums are always a mixed bag. There may be some sh*t slinging that occurs, but there are also a lot of good exchanges of ideas. Not to mention the database of river beta, a wiki-guidebook that, while not perfect, is dynamic and fairly up to date in general. People use this resource, even if the local veteran boatmen like yourself don't need it (having practicly written the book yourselves).
Anyway, the reason I say all this is because this online community is very local and homespun. But it is largely full of relative new comers to the sport, and to Washington's rivers. This online community needs guys like you who've been, for example, boating the Green since the early 80's.
You guys know stuff these new school kids don't. And Washington's whitewater community can benefit from your experiences and knowledge, whether they realize it or not. So thanks again for being around and being involved.
So, while you are monitoring this thread, if nothing else, let me ask you: now that Let's Make A Deal is clean again, which door would YOU choose if you were guiding a six pack in a paddle raft? I mean, I know you are primarily an oarsman, I'm just curious. Is that what your "(#3)" was in reference to?
Below 1600 I might be inclined to choose door #1, because at some point I know that slide over on R. Left starts getting scrapey at lower flows. Door #2 seems like it would be fine in the hands of a competent oarsman, being able to back away from the boulder and all, but it also looks like a good place to flip a paddle raft. Certainly at 1900 a janky line in #2 could be flirting w/ a flip.
C'mon, man, drop some Green River Gorge wisdom on me...
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 9:14am
This is no Hi-Jacking, and please Jay do respond to JP's Qs because I would like to hear too. I have never guided a raft down the green either but I have rowed it a few times so I would like to hear also.
On to my usage of this fine thread!!!
I am going to 100% be out on the Clean Up this weekend. However unlike many a year before rather than in a kayak, I will be in a raft, a much better craft for the purpose if I might add. I think most years I end up packing out maybe 2-3 cans I find besides my own ... not much help, I know. This year I am going to get that coal bucket out!!! j/k but I am going to get er done.
On to my point, I am going to take at least a couple O folks down to enjoy this event. It would be fun to link up with other paddlers for a quasi PP extension of our effort to help. Remember everyone is going to figure were slackin since we ain't packin so lets prove them wrong.
My plan is to launch at Kanaskat at around 9-10am. Gonna set shuttle down at the shangri la zone and will need a ride back up. I can pack some treats for anyone that wants to join in... HOWever the goal is not to pack goodies in as much as nasties out. So who is interested?
Oh and btw, I might have room for one more paddler in my raft, I should know this afternoon what my head count looks like. We of course are trying to plan a group PP paddle as the sweep boat for our group!
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 9:46am
Thank you jP and james, I am working on your response now
and a dozen or so other last day chores before the cleanup. Response to come,
thanks for your patience.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 9:50am
Two days, are you ready? Some last minute info you might not
know about this year’s cleanup.
A few important things come to mind:
1. Report of a log on
the “Yo-Yo” just below its put-in: Does anybody have firsthand knowledge of
this reported log? I have sketchy
reports the log is no longer a hazard, anybody?
2. As all things
evolve, so does the Green River Cleanup.
The traditional Friends of the Green fund raiser and picnic that greeted
you at shelter 3 with hot hamburgers, hot dogs and cold pizza and drinks; sadly,
will not be part of the 27th’s cleanup history. However, shelter 3 @ Flaming Geyser Park is reserved
for cleanup volunteers. There will
probably be hot charcoal going in the barbie so bring your own food. Pat, president of Friends of the Green will
still be there organizing ground crews from 9:00 till early afternoon, so stop
in and say hi, I’m sure she will take your donation to FOG; still dedicated to
protecting the Green.
3. For many years, the state of Washington department of
transportation provided the Green River Cleanup with a generous supply of bags,
thank you DOT. Times change, budgets
crunch; we are looking for new resources in the garbage container/transporter
department. Our bag supply this year may
be limited. So if you can, bring your
own and 1 for someone else.
Remember, parking is free to cleanup volunteers. Tell the ranger you are with the
cleanup. Camping is free to cleanup
volunteers. Fri. and Sat. nights,
Kanaskat-Palmer State Park group camp area.
Pass the word
Leave a place cleaner than what you found it.
------------- Jay
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 4:42pm
Originally posted by JayCdave, your question is already on the FAQ list, it's # 11. However I did expand on it because of your question, thanks. please keep those questions comming. here is the FAQ you asked. You can see the entire list by going to http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup and clicking on "about" in the header.
11 After so many years of cleaning the Green River, isn’t it clean already?
Cleaner, yes. Unfortunately, there are those out there that don’t get it and we won’t be cancelling the cleanup anytime in the predictable future due to lack of garbage. The Green river cleanup is more than just cleaning a river every year; in fact, each year less random garbage is collected and hauled out, speaking for the success of the cleanup. The Green River Cleanup is also about getting the word out that trashing our precious waterways is behaviors society can no longer afford to tolerate. Let those know, the ones that don’t get it, how you feel about it.
I have been doing the cleanup since the begining....it is also a great venue for all types of boaters to join, meet each other and share a common goal. It's a great local social event and I hope it continues forever!
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 4:45pm
Originally posted by jPJay, I want to personally thank you for being present on
these forums. Yeah, I don't like Facebook, and won't traffic there mysellf. But I appreciate your presence here for a variety of
reasons:
Obviously, for actively promoting the Green River Clean up,
but also because you are one of our local veteran boaters. Professor Paddle may
be seen as a fairly recent edition to Washington's whitewater boating
community, but ya gotta admit it is a pretty powerful tool with a lot of
potential. Sure, internet forums are always a mixed bag. There may be some sh*t
slinging that occurs, but there are also a lot of good exchanges of ideas. Not
to mention the database of river beta, a wiki-guidebook that, while not
perfect, is dynamic and fairly up to date in general. People use this resource,
even if the local veteran boatmen like yourself don't need it (having practicly
written the book yourselves).
Anyway, the reason I say all this is because this online
community is very local and homespun. But it is largely full of relative new
comers to the sport, and to Washington's rivers. This online community needs
guys like you who've been, for example, boating the Green since the early 80's.
You guys know stuff these new school kids don't. And
Washington's whitewater community can benefit from your experiences and
knowledge, whether they realize it or not. So thanks again for being around and
being involved.
So, while you are monitoring this thread, if nothing else,
let me ask you: now that Let's Make A Deal is clean again, which door would YOU
choose if you were guiding a six pack in a paddle raft? I mean, I know you are
primarily an oarsman, I'm just curious. Is that what your "(#3)" was
in reference to?
Below 1600 I might be inclined to choose door #1, because at
some point I know that slide over on R. Left starts getting scrapey at lower
flows. Door #2 seems like it would be fine in the hands of a competent oarsman,
being able to back away from the boulder and all, but it also looks like a good
place to flip a paddle raft. Certainly at 1900 a janky line in #2 could be
flirting w/ a flip.
C'mon, man, drop some Green River Gorge wisdom on me...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jp,
thanks so much for the acknowledgements, It’s always nice to be recognized even
if it does remind me of my age ;-)> I will take the opportunity you have
given me.
First
let me say that I agree with you about facebook, but I will expand that to
include the www in general. It has taken me a long time to warm up to the idea
of the usefulness of the “Evil Web”. I found signs that I was missing out on
things because I was not “connected”. I found that people quit calling me;
which is my generation’s main communication method. I found they expected me to
find the information they published, on the www even If you tell them you are
not on line. The last straw was when I missed out on a Grand Canyon trip I had
been expecting for over 10 years. Blablablabla. To end this paragraph and get
on to more fun stuff, just let me say that the Green River Cleanup has joined
the 21st century and it
found the need for and find a central place for Official Green River Cleanup
information to disseminate and to collect. Facebook I found friendly enough for
a technophobe like myself and I look past its shortfalls and concentrate on the
benefits, real and potential, to the Green River and its annual cleanup.
In that
lite, I appreciate professor paddle as well as several other lists for the
opportunities they provide for information exchange. I have become reliant on
PP and other lists to get the word out about the Green River Cleanup. The Green
River Cleanup would not exist without the support of the paddling community and
I believe both the paddling community and the Green River Cleanup has benefited
immeasurably by your existence. Thanks for being here and if you don’t mind; I
will continue to use you. ;-)>
Thank
you again for your question jP, and the opportunity to give my opinion. Do
understand that it is my opinion and I am sure there will be those out there
that might disagree. I can only tell you what decision I might make if I were a
paddle captain on the Green at “Let’s Make A Deal”. First, I personally would
not paddle captain the Green. I have stern framed the Green commercially during
my short career as a guide and guide instructor. I limit my paddle captaining
to the Skagit, the Wenatchee and only sometimes the Tieton. You are right when
you say I’m an oarsman. With oars I feel in control. With a guide stick, I
would be terrified on the Green, but that’s me, I have no confidence in myself
to paddle captain anything but class III. Now if you still want my opinion:……
short answer Door 1 Longer answer:
As some
of you know, and share, I love the Green River. I have about 250-300 runs
through the gorge exclusively in row boats mostly, 99%, catboats. That
translates to over 3,000 Green River miles. Flows ranging from a low of around
400 cfs rowing a “ducky class” rowboat (never again); Door 3 is a Zzzonk at
levels below 1000cfs. To a high of 5700 cfs (Maybe again), kinda scary though
especially “The miracle mile” (“Mercury” through “let’s make A Deal”). So the
decision I would make on which door to choose would be dependent on flow.
1600 is
the predicted flow for Saturday. For that flow, "plan a" would be
door #1 "plan b" door #3. I think door 1 is the easiest maneuver for
any craft and there is a nice boof at the bottom for your prize. Start your
approach to "let's Make A Deal" left enough to avoid the guard holes
and rocks on the right, get some left to right momentum at the right time to
make the move and nothing but good times. Door 3 is doable at that level but
the current at all medium levels tends to push you up on that rock so a draw to
the left or a rock spin might be the cleanest way to run door 3. Door 2 would
be tough, I think at any level for all but the most experienced paddle teams.
You might end up in door 2 if door 3’s choice puts you further on that rock
than you expected. Sideways on that rock could easily result in a flip. “Be
decisive comes into play here in reference to the #3 above, not the door # for
“Let’s make a deal’ but the rule # that I try to live by when it comes to row
boats. Spoken but unpublished I have 10 rules to live by when it comes to
whitewater and longevity to the sport. Mostly tailored to the oarsman but most
translate to all paddle sports. The first three I find to be most important.
Briefly, if your interested here are my top three rules to live by as a river
boater.
1.
“Always look downstream”. Ignored, this one can kill you. I have seen many
close calls of people putsen around and not paying attention to their
downstream progress. (Most deadly accidents occur in class II whitewater.
2. “Watch
your downstream Oar” I have witnessed a lot of injuries and heard of countless
more that were caused by the downstream oar.
3. “Be
decisive” I have observed that it is usually okay to change your mind once
after you have committed to a particular line in a particular rapid, but if you
are changing your mind for a second time "Plan C"; it usually means
you’re in deep sh*t. So I say be decisive; pick a line and stick with it. Plan
c is usually a bad choice.
Any way
I would pick door #1 as plan a. that’s at this weekend’s level. At 5,700 cfs
those rocks are serious pour overs, all 3 doors are scary looking on the
approach and I, at levels above 4,000cfs, usually choose the “curtain” which is
all the way against the right wall and to the right of the panicle rock called
“Monty Hall” or I choose “The boxes” all the way on river left if there not
zonked by the often present wood.
jP, I
hope this helps. Feel free to ask my opinion any time you like and thanks again
for yours, PP and the boating communities support of the Cleanup I really do
appreciate it.
Let’s
make it another greatest river cleanup ever.
SYOTR
Jay (Be
familiar with your equipment #5)
------------- Jay
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 6:16pm
Thanks, Jay! I appreciate the depth of your response. Just for clarification:
I should mention that my understanding of the Door numbering is that Door #1 is furthest River Right, and Door #3 is on River Left. This is correct, right? I've even heard of the high water channel that opens up along the River Left bank referred to as Door #4.
Whatever, I'll be out there- probably get to hang out with you at the group camp friday and saturday night...
I gotta say that I'll be happy with whatever flows we have, but I do hope it rains just a wee bit harder than we might think so that the Green will be at least 1900. Guess we'll find out!
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 6:44pm
Yes jP, your understanding is correct, doors 1,
2 and 3 in the order you approach them, (Door 1 river right) (Door 3 river
left).
At high water yes, routes open up far river
right "the Curtain" and "The boxes" far river left named after the
square shaped rocks that are exposed at lower water. Most people are too busy in there to look
over and notice them.
Check tomorrow morning. I will post as soon as the weekend gate
choice is made. However, I will post it
first on http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - :-)> Be safe, have fun and take shallow
strokes (#4)
------------- Jay
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 6:46pm
Originally posted by JayC
I personally would not paddle captain the Green. I have stern framed the Green commercially during my short career as a guide and guide instructor. I limit my paddle captaining to the Skagit, the Wenatchee and only sometimes the Tieton. You are right when you say I’m an oarsman. With oars I feel in control. With a guide stick, I would be terrified on the Green, but that’s me, I have no confidence in myself to paddle captain anything but class III.
Hah! That's funny, because I am the exact opposite
I try to only row on stuff like the Skagit and the Wenatchee. On the Green, I would simply get OWNED behind the oars. Probably puncture a lung or something. With oars I feel like I have the short end of a very long stick, and that the river just man handles my puny ass! With a guide stick (I use the smallest one I can find- usually a "custy" stick) I feel I have control, and its more compact when I go launching Canonball style into the front of the raft!
Just kidding! That actually only happened once- at Hussum Falls. Don't miss your grab like I did!
http://www.professorpaddle.com/uploads/bin/2/useruploads/208/5648.jpg
Anyway, its all about what kind of craft a boater spends the most time in.
Just figured I'd add some stoke to the forum for the rafters out there, since they are the best craft of choice for this mission, as James pointed out. Still, the Kayaks can orbit the rafts and get into those hard to reach places, and of course, the more the merrier.
Lets just keep that Nozzle open and clean, huh? Man, rubber sure can plug that thing up now, can't it?
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 03 May 2012 at 8:11pm
A report about the log on the "YO-YO" reach Green River Quote From:
Shanna Hoge Gachen
(Originally posted on http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - )
"I ran it on 4/20.. and there were no logs in the
current, there looked to be one on the first main bend where the channel splits
around a gravel bar (when the waterfall first comes into view way down river)
the log has been turned parallel to the current and isn't in the way. We ran it
at 3000 cfs."
------------- Jay
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Posted By: dave
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 8:17am
Pretty funny what you guys say about FB...it is what you make it, meaning if you are afraid and dont feel safe then it will seem that way to you. I like it because I can keep in contact with my family scattered across the US. We have become more of a family participating unit and FB has helped that. But, I guess people will alway find things to complain and be fearfull about...remember what our forfathers said about modern medicine? They though it was witchcraft...and burned people that had new ideas and inventions...
------------- Nomad
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 9:29am
You know why I hate Facebook.... I know you don't care, so I will can it.
But really Jay as much as you suggest your Anti-web you are owning the little ;-)>
SYOTR!
Stoked to lead my first trip paddle rafting down this weekend!
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Posted By: JoesKayak
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 9:49am
Yahoo!!!! Green River Cleanup, just a day away!
I hope to see tons and tons of PPer's out there. Now, that said, a word of warning...
APPROACH MERCURY/NOZZLE WITH CAUTION!!!
The Green River cleanup is a great event in that due to the abundance of experienced boaters on the river to set safety, it is an excellent chance for class 3 boaters who have been wanting to step up to the Green to get their first runs in. And many do, just this. The flip side of this is inexperienced boaters often have "issues" at the Nozzle. At past cleanups there have been rafts wrapped at the Nozzle. Some requiring rescue and extraction taking a considerable amount of time. So just keep your eyes open and don't blast through Mercury like like its just another winter day on the Green when there's only you and a small handful of other boaters out there. And the Nozzle isn't the only possible trouble spot, but it is probably the most likely candidate for a boat-related river blocking incident.
So just keep your eyes open! Get out there and show the Green some love and have a great time!
And especially watch for yellow/red sotar paddle rafts wrapped and blocking channels. 
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 9:54am
Gates at Howard Hanson dam are set
for this weekend’s event; think this might be a new high flow for the Cleanup.
1850cfs
Have fun be safe, be sure to come
here http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup -
after the event and share your pictures and stories.
We’re outta here
SYOTR
------------- Jay
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 10:15am
Cool! That's probably an ideal flow:
High enough to lubricate the Schlitterbaun, but low enough to be forgiving without the Power of the Push.
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 10:44am
Joe: Don't be dick dude... I'm already getting scared and that ain't no good comin from the captain...
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Posted By: JoesKayak
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 11:14am
Don't be scared, Jimmy. The flows this weekend are absolutely optimal for paddle rafting. I'm sure even you can manage it.
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 11:21am
RE: Dick comments
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Posted By: jP
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 12:58pm
As long as there aren't 10 rafts already Traffic Jammed there when the 5 boat float I'll be with comes onto the scene...
The place has the potential this weekend to resemble a clausterphobic version of the Upper Gauley!
You were right to remind us that it won't be the normal secluded Green Gorge experience, Joe- but rather more akin to a busy day on the Wenatchee in a much more constricted spot.
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Posted By: JoesKayak
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 1:19pm
JP, at the cleanup I have seen some circus acts at the Nozzle unlike anything I've ever seen there any other time of year. I think the best was a paddle raft slamming into a cat boat that was stuck on the rock right of the nozzle. The paddle raft actually pushed the cat free and the two boats squeezed through the nozzle side by side. And that was at fairly low water like maybe 1300. Never would have thought they would fit, but they did.
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Posted By: James
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 1:34pm
I have witnessed a bit of mayhem there on other years too...
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Posted By: Mark47n
Date Posted: 04 May 2012 at 11:06pm
I had a change o f plans and I'll also be along...though I've not chosen which section I'll be on.
------------- You mean I'm supposed to wear something UNDER my spray skirt? Where's the fun in that?
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Posted By: JayC
Date Posted: 17 May 2012 at 7:06pm
Thank you 2012, 27th annual Green River Clean-Up
Participants. (final report)
The 27th annual Green River Clean-Up (GRCU),
again was a huge success. Hundreds of
people, for the 27th time, converged on the 14 mile reach of
Washington’s Green River known locally as “The Gorge”. They brought boats, bags, boots, shovels and
gloves to pick up, pack out, clean up, restore and improve the general health
of the Green river Gorge.
The paddling community once again turned out in record
numbers in support of the cleanup. You risked popped inflatables and torn dry
suits to remove anything that doesn’t belong, from Automobile parts to Zinc
coated corrugated sharp chunks of steel, you guys rock. The Green River Cleanup thanks you for your
continued support of this Northwest Washington tradition. Special thanks go to WRRR (Washington
Recreational River Runners http://www.wrrr.org/ - ), FOG
(Friends of the Green, ( http://www.friendsofthegreen.org/ - ),
MGRC (Middle Green River Coalition, http://www.mgrc.org/ - ).
Ground crews and support, Washington State Parks, King County Parks, Boy Scouts
of America, Black diamond historical society
Participating
paddling clubs: WRRR ( http://www.wrrr.org/ - ), WKC ( http://www.washingtonkayakclub.org/ - ), PTCC ( http://www.paddletrails.org/ - ),
BEWET ( http://bewet.org/ - ), OWA ( http://www.oregonwhitewater.org/ - ),
UKC ( http://students.washington.edu/ukc/wordpress/ - ). The list that pulls us together, Professor
paddle, http://www.professorpaddle.com/ - . Please let me know if I missed your group.
Many sponsors and supporters, too long to list here.
Each year, with only four exceptions, the GRCU grows in
scope and participation. This year
again, you made it the biggest and best cleanup ever. Well done, next year, let’s plan now to do it
again.
Announcing the 2013, 28th annual, Green River
Cleanup, Saturday May 4th. (Mark your Calendars).
Look what’s in store for next year’s bigger and better
cleanup: E-registration, going plastic bag-less, bigger and more ground crews,
improved information distribution. And
more, visit often to see what we’re up to.
( http://www.facebook.com/greenrivercleanup - ),
for all things Green River Cleanup related.
Drop a line; let us know what you think.
GRCU’s goal is to clean and restore the health of the Green
River Gorge and its environment; to protect water quality and quantity for fish
and recreation; to spread the word of its need to be protected and the need to
protect all of our Rivers; to inform the un-informed; to educate our youth
through active youth involvement in the cleanup by organizations like the boy
scouts (learn as you clean) through (planned cleanup activities); to inspire
others to protect their local waterways.
Spread the word, “Leave a place cleaner that what you found
it”.
------------- Jay
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