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riverman
 
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Default Glen Canyon float

Now that the water is incredibly low, I am feeling very tempted to float the
river this summer. Of all the stretches of water in the world, I have had a
lifelong regret that I never got to see Glen Canyon before Lake Powell
filled it up.

Has anyone here gone down the new river in recent years? Tell me about
put-in, take out, how much fla****er is there, and are the beaches all mud
still, or is some of it drying out for camping out. Can you hike some side
canyons; is Music Temple exposed. The register at Register Rock?

I think I'd consider taking my Blue Hole 17A with a small outboard for the
long flats. I'd probably rig something like a backboard thing that could lay
above the thwarts to sleep on if the banks were too muddy, and give myself
several weeks to do it.

What info is out there? This could be the last chance in our lifetimes to
see the Glen.

--riverman


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Railtramp
 
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Default Glen Canyon float


riverman wrote:
Now that the water is incredibly low, I am feeling very tempted to float the
river this summer. Of all the stretches of water in the world, I have had a
lifelong regret that I never got to see Glen Canyon before Lake Powell
filled it up.

Has anyone here gone down the new river in recent years? Tell me about
put-in, take out, how much fla****er is there, and are the beaches all mud
still, or is some of it drying out for camping out. Can you hike some side
canyons; is Music Temple exposed. The register at Register Rock?

I think I'd consider taking my Blue Hole 17A with a small outboard for the
long flats. I'd probably rig something like a backboard thing that could lay
above the thwarts to sleep on if the banks were too muddy, and give myself
several weeks to do it.

What info is out there? This could be the last chance in our lifetimes to
see the Glen.

--riverman


That would be a very interesting trip indeed! I look forward to some
follow up posting on this.

I just drove out to the West Coast and back and crossed as many
mountain ranges as I could get through. It looks like the Wind River
Mts had a good snow pack. I would expect the Green River would
have a good flow. Did not cross the Rockies in Colorado though.

My guess is that most of the upstream reservoirs are also very low
so a good percentage of that water will go toward refilling Fontenelle
and Flaming Gorge.

Anything published by the BLM/Reclaimation on how they plan to
proceed?

Blakely
---
Blakely LaCroix (#86)
Minneapolis, Minnesota

The best adventure is yet to come

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Dave Allured
 
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Default Glen Canyon float

Railtramp wrote:

riverman wrote:
Now that the water is incredibly low, I am feeling very tempted to float the
river this summer. Of all the stretches of water in the world, I have had a
lifelong regret that I never got to see Glen Canyon before Lake Powell
filled it up.

Has anyone here gone down the new river in recent years? Tell me about
put-in, take out, how much fla****er is there, and are the beaches all mud
still, or is some of it drying out for camping out. Can you hike some side
canyons; is Music Temple exposed. The register at Register Rock?

I think I'd consider taking my Blue Hole 17A with a small outboard for the
long flats. I'd probably rig something like a backboard thing that could lay
above the thwarts to sleep on if the banks were too muddy, and give myself
several weeks to do it.

What info is out there? This could be the last chance in our lifetimes to
see the Glen.

--riverman


That would be a very interesting trip indeed! I look forward to some
follow up posting on this.

I just drove out to the West Coast and back and crossed as many
mountain ranges as I could get through. It looks like the Wind River
Mts had a good snow pack. I would expect the Green River would
have a good flow. Did not cross the Rockies in Colorado though.

My guess is that most of the upstream reservoirs are also very low
so a good percentage of that water will go toward refilling Fontenelle
and Flaming Gorge.

Anything published by the BLM/Reclaimation on how they plan to
proceed?


Short term management info:

http://www.usbr.gov/uc/water/crsp/cs/gcd.html
http://www.usbr.gov/uc/water/rsvrs/ops/crsp_40_gc.html

There may be more, I'm having trouble navigating their website.

--Dave
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Bill Tuthill
 
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Default Glen Canyon float

An acquaintance took a houseboat + kayaking tip up the Escalante arm
last fall. I think it was lower then than it is now. They saw features
that had been exposed for the first time since the reservoir was filled.
Delicate Arch maybe? Can't recall.

Sounds like you want to come down the Colorado arm. Snowpack is down
from last month, so perhaps this fall the reservoir will be even lower.
http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/sno_narr3_pl
Only 57% on the Gunnison, 50% on the San Juan, 70% upper Colorado.

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