Mother's Day Paddle: Estacada Lake
What should you do when you can't be
with your own mother and do something nice for her? You should do
something nice for someone else's mother. If everyone does this then
your mother will be well taken care of. On this particular Mother's Day I decided to be extra nice to my Kayak Partner. And what could be
nicer than taking your Kayak Partner Kayaking?
The club (wait, I have been told that
for legal reasons the club is not actually a club. We are a meetup.
We are just a random assortment of people that happen to show up at the same place at the same time for a similar function. We are NOT a
club. A club implies organization and structure and contracts which
may or may not imply liability in the event of accident, injury, or
act of God) was meeting at the River Mill Dam non motorized boating
ramp at Timber Park at the dam end of Estacada Lake on the Clakamas
River (you get all of that?). The sun was sneaking out in fits and
peaks and my partner and I convinced ourselves that we really didn't
need dry suits, or at least that if we wanted to do some rescue
practice later we could put our suits on then. So in light shirts
and sun glasses, we launched ourselves out into the day.
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The boat launch |
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Cross those orange floats and be sucked into the Vortex of Death (c) |
The Clackamas River is a (seemingly) snow and ice fed
little thing that is lined with communities that used to be fed by
Oregon Timber and are now slowly being replaced by gentrification
growing out of urban Portland. Estacada is the site of an old timber
mill and a rails to trails along the river marks out the railroad that would haul the lumber out. Now there is still a dam at the site with
a PG&E hydro electric facility. But it is a tiny one. A tiny one
that is still no doubt stopping the salmon runs. It is also old and
probably soon to be removed. The problem with these old dams is that
it is too expensive to replace them because the changing laws and
regulations on fish and wildlife (which the original structures have
grandfather clauses for) would be too restrictive. Good or Bad?
Actually, I think that once the price of gas goes up to where it
really should be, putting in a hydro-elective facility that is fish
friendly and good for the eco system would probably be a quite
reasonable price.
Ok. So. Dammit Dammit Dammit. I wrote
the above history of Estacada based on my going there once and then
making the entire thing up. But it turns out that I got it wrong.
Here is what
wikipedia
has to say about it (in my words, hit the link for theirs). The city
of Portland needed electricity and the Clackamas was the best nearest
river to dam for generation. PG&E started construction on a
number of sites up the river, however it was very hard to get men and
equipment to the sites because of the poor roads, so they first built
a railroad up the river to the area. There were 4 dams built. Now,
once there was this great railroad system set up and the towns had
grown up to build the dams and such, that spurred the timber business
to move in and cut down all of the trees. So boy did I get that
backwards.
I also like the origination of the name
“Estacada”. That is: no one really knows. But feel free to take
your pick of the choices offered on wikipedia.
On this day, we launched out of Timber
park (hey look, a disk golf course. How...... nice) and we were
pretty much alone with our “random group of like minded
individuals” on the water. The non-motorized craft launch is just a
little dock for canoes and kayaks that sitås right up against the
dam. Don't get sucked in. We paddled upstream and quickly started
running into some of the many little side creeks that waterfall their
way into the Clackamas.
And so you find why they built the dam
here. It is at the foot of a set of cliffs. The end of a little
canyon through what I am guessing is an ancient lava flow. Perfect
place to back up some water and make a good pressure head for
hydro-electric generation.
There are some pretty cool old
constructions up there. One looks like it was a tunnel drilled
through the rock to form Faraday lake. Perhaps a diversion dam for
more power generation. Can't find anything on it, may have to do some
actual “go there and see” research.
The lake, being in a canyon, is long
and narrow. And, also from being in a canyon and from all of the rain
we have had lately, there were a lot of little (and not so little)
waterfalls entering into the lake on both sides. The water was COLD
COLD COLD. Really gonna need to put those dry suits on before we do
any rolling practice.
We met up with the group at the first
major water fall. Not a big fall, but very pretty. Some people got
out to walk around and the trip leader (if a non-group had a leader,
which they don't) brought mother's day cookies.
We had a ways to go up the river, So we all pointed our various types of vessels that a way.
Further up the lake the canyon sides
were steep right into the water. You could paddle up to the side
and see water cascading down through the blackberry and Maiden Hair
ferns. The Maiden Hair really loves to grow on a wet cliff face. Over
on the other (north) side of the canyon, it was dry and rocky and
here we had Indian Paint Brush and what I think were some kind of
harebell.
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Maiden Hair and waterfall |
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Indian Paint Brush and .... Harebell? |
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Stone Crop |
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And it wasn't easy to take those pictures. |
We all rafted up after a while in the
little eddy and ate our lunch and chatted. Just a nice random
collection of people that happened to be out on a Mother's Day
paddle. Our mother's would have been happy that we all had the
camaraderie.
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Everyone else shows me how to do it. |
We finally called it a day and headed
back down the river. We were in a hurry to get out of the cold, but
the sun came back out when we were about halfway back to the ramp and
that made things a lot more lazy. People would paddle around and find
a friend they hadn't seen in a while and just have a little chat. I
wanted to do some rescue practice, but decided that the water was
just too fraking cold, even for a guy in a dry suit. So much easier
to just enjoy the sun and the day.
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Old Lava Flow? |
Don't you think?
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