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![]() "Fred Klingener" wrote in message ... "Oci-One Kanubi" wrote in message ups.com... riverman wrote: The parallel with rock climbing rating systems is obvious and inescapable. As the art advanced and more and more routes became 'climbable,' the new routes weren't labeled 6s. They were stuffed into 5.X. When people blitzed past 5.9, the mathematically offensive 5.10, and on were introduced. The rock ratings are independent of such things as climber ability, weather, hangovers, history of mind-altering drug use, etc. They do depend on physical layout, sizes of features, separation distance between them, exposure, difficulty of setting protection, etc. The biggest difference between rock and river rating systems is that the condition of a climbing route doesn't depend so heavily on the recent rainfall. Within a day or two last week, my home stream went from unrunnable low to in-the-trees flood with anything you'd normally call obstacles far below the surface. The only thing worth rating would be the total absence of eddies and the presence of strainers lining both banks. Another difference, I imagine (but am not at all certain about) is that the hardest climbs were probably all rated by the same handful of leading-edge climbers, while rapids are probably rated by lots of different folks in different places, and at different times. Your point about rainfall is important and well taken: imagine a climber getting to what he was expecting to be a 5.4a walkup, only to discover that a recent storm has changed it to a 5.8b. :-) ... None of this really matters a whole lot. Finally, we get to the crux. :-) Just accept that there can be no absolute quantification of a subjective experience in a dynamic environment. But it doesn't HAVE to be absolute! My needs are served perfectly well with RELATIVE ratings. For e.g., if an unfamiliar rapid is rated Class III relative to half-a-dozen other rapids that I know to be rated Class III (at specified levels), then I have a good idea of what to expect from this unfamiliar rapid. The existence of a rating system erodes the fundamental idea of paddling. We are each responsible for our own safety and the safety of our party if we manage to get anyone to go with us. If I'm contemplating running a noisy section of river for which the loss of the boat would mean a 25 mile walkout through alder thickets, what I'd like most from someone who has been there a description of a good place to scout from, maybe an estimate of the extent of the run, the size of the features, the separation distance between them, and the presence or absence of eddies or a pool beyond. The existence of a published rating or description doesn't dilute my own personal responsibility. Depending on the source, the report and rating might be far worse than useless. Good point. Kanubi's point about rating systems being relative falls apart right here. Being relative, and in the absence of an gubmint sponsored rating team, its pretty inevitable that it will be locally relative, so when you get advice from someone that a run is rated such-and-such, you have to find out if that is a local rating, and if so, has anyone ever challenged it. I remember oh, so well, when we were opening up the Penobscot in Maine as a rafting river, and everyone rated the Cribworks as a Class V. Hell, it was by far the biggest thing any of us had ever seen....but now, after 20 odd years of dozens and dozens of boats a day, tens of thousands of boaters a summer, and not one fatality, not one serious injury, even among folks who fell out of their boats, I gotta wonder if our 'locally relative' rating system really was all that accurate, and if all those Carolina boys who assured us that it was really just a bony class IV all along were really right. --riverman |
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