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Join a kayak/raft expedition on Río Presidio starting at a remote road access point just past several unrunnable chasms. We will face numerous class IV rapids through the second deepest canyon in North America, including in the initial 14 km of virgin river never paddled before!! Use your boat or ours. We welcome anyone: kayakers, rafters, and raft passengers/paddlers. Another 3 days of class IV may be available afterward (Río Baluarte). |
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Río Presidio is a whitewater river gem flowing from remote areas in the heart of the Sierra Madre Occidental into Sinaloa. It passes through the second deepest canyon in North America and eventually debouches into the Pacific just south of Mazatlán. Aside from the spectacular scenery and side-canyon hiking possibilities, this trip should be very appealing to the whitewater enthusiast due to numerous class IV rapids and the potential for adding some class IV-V paddling at the start. Our descent will begin below the unrunnable chasms that were tackled by Stookesberry and crew in 2010 (read a little blurb and see a teaser video clip). They took out where we will put in.The first 14 km of our journey is almost certainly a first descent. It appears to contain numerous class IV rapids that are open and not obstructed with boulders, but with a gradient of 15 m/km (80 fpm), the potential exists for one or two of them to have class V holes/hydraulics. Compared to the neighboring Piaxtla, the Presidio trip has tougher whitewater, fewer calm days, and is more remote - we will not pass any towns on our journey (only a few houses at a place called "El Palmarito"). Unfortunately, the lower part of this free-flowing river was drowned by Presa Los Picachos in 2009. We still can enjoy the main whitewater-filled section of the river and take out at the head of the reservoir. |
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Anyone wanting to join is welcome: kayakers, rafters, and raft passengers bring your own boat or use one of ours. We will accommodate the group. Our group size will be capped at 12, which will include 3-4 guides. Space is limited for raft passengers/paddlers (to 4). With insufficient clientele, we may arrange the trip as semi-self-support kayaking. Come join a historic first/second descent of the main Río Presidio another of the treasures in the Sierra Madre Occidental. After our journey you have the option of staying an extra 3-4 days for boating another class IV river: Río Baluarte ($300 with similar discounts). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TENTATIVE ITINERARY: DAY 2: We will rig the boats and explore the upper sections of the river, hiking upstream on a trail from where we camped the previous night to a point about 6 km upstream where an interesting side canyon enters. Both the side canyon and a bedrock waterfall in the river should be enough to warrant the hike, but as an added benefit, if you carried your boat up, you'll be able to enjoy the class IV-V rapids getting back to camp. We will load up the rafts at that point and head a few kilometers downstream into the virgin 14 km section, tackling the first big rapid on the run. DAY 3: Very soon after launching, we will face a number of difficult class IV rapids and decide what they should be called. [In 2010, Ben Stookesberry, Rafa Ortiz and crew took out at our put-in spot. On Rocky's pioneering first descent in 2000, the put-in road did not exist, so he hiked into Palmarito.] We will only cover about 15 km this day due to frequent scouting of the difficult rapids, a potential portage, and the presence of two other side canyons that look interesting to explore. We will pass El Palmarito and set camp downstream where the river enters more isolated canyon. DAYS 4: Soon we will descend into a boulder-strewn section and face "Cascada Exageración" the toughest rapid in this section that was rated easy class V by Rocky on the first descent. It may merit a portage. We will attempt to make our 4th camp still within the more narrow confines of the main canyon. On Day 5 we will DAYS 6-7: On DAY 6 we emerge from section where the river is narrowly confined and will cruise on class II-III water to a nice sandy camp. On Day 7, we will arrive at the backwaters of Presa Los Picachos, a reservoir completed in 2009 and now flooding its maximal amount at 80 m high. A short paddle across the initial parts of the reservoir should land us at a take-out road where we will meet our shuttle drivers and head back to Mazatlán. COST Special discounts are sometimes offered to folks on our email list, so you are encouraged to sign up (Email List info). TRANSPORTATION SAFETY / HEALTH SAFETY Independent of the drug war, there has always been potential danger for assault in Mexico by armed bandits (bandidos). This is not different now as it was 5 years ago or 10 years ago or 20 years ago. Such risk is common in any third world country where citizens are very poor. In the event of assault, we will do all we can to protect our clients and ourselves, but may have to sacrifice our possessions. Since we can never guarantee against such assault, you must agree not to hold us liable for consequent personal injury/damage/loss you sustain on this outing.
NOTE:There are several take-out opportunities between 56-80 km after the upper La Petaca put-in at the Las Habitas Diversion Dam. Our trip may be as short as 56 km. Also, with enough expert clients, there may be an option for class V kayakers to run the section above our put-in on the first day and meet us at our camp (this would be the lower Río Los Laureles |
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