Kayak Camping Lake Powell, UT 10/6-10/2015

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
Telejon and I just got back from what may be the most perfect kayak expedition that we've been on. Perfect in that the weather (clear with highs in the upper 70s, lows in the 50s), the paddling conditions (including one shockingly calm day), the boat traffic, the campsites, and the scenery all couldn't have been any better.

We had originally planned to depart Salt Lake City on Sunday morning, but it soon became clear that a persistent weather system was going to blanket southern Utah with rain for Sunday and Monday, and we pushed our departure back by 48 hours. That turned out to be a good decision, as the soils were drying out and skies clearing when we arrived at Farley Canyon mid-afternoon on Tuesday.

Farley Canyon is in the uppermost portion of Lake Powell, just downstream of Hite and just below where, at the current water level of 3,606 feet, the Colorado River empties into the lake. Bringing a power boat this far upstream is ill-advised at the current lake level, but even a fully loaded kayak draws only a few inches of water. The nearest usable boat ramp is located 43 lake miles away at Bullfrog, so throughout the entire trip we'd encounter only a true handful of people each day. The end of the graded road into Farley Canyon is designated a primitive campground by the National Park Service, but we were the only ones there as we pitched camp next to the truck. Getting to the water a half mile further requires a high clearance vehicle with 4WD. Dinner that night was fresh grilled rib eye with a bacon bleu salad, accompanied by the last cold beers we'd enjoy for days.

20151006_153113.jpg


20151006_162923.jpg


20151006_182850.jpg


On Wednesday morning we packed up camp and headed for where the lake water starts in Farley Canyon to launch our trip.

Lake Powell trip topo.JPG


20151007_072749.jpg


20151007_092950.jpg


20151007_103458.jpg


We paddled into the mouth of White Canyon in search of Fort Moqui, an Anasazi ruin that was destroyed when the Glen Canyon Dam flooded the countryside at the site of what was, before the lake, a frontier hamlet also known as White Canyon. It was the eastern landing of a ferry that crossed the river from the original townsite of Hite, where the river's irrigation allowed large fruit orchards. It's rather a shame, but all was flooded into oblivion in the creation of the lake. In recent years water has receded to leave a pile of rocks where Fort Moqui once stood. We couldn't find it, and were only able to surmise that it's currently underwater.

We continued south through hundreds of western grebes dotting the water and diving as they fished. None allowed us to get close enough to capture a decent photo.

2015-10-07 12.07.15.jpg


2015-10-07 12.20.08.jpg


We paddled on along the eastern shore to cross at The Horn, where we climbed out of our boats and scrambled up through through driftwood, thorns, rocks and impossibly soft, loose soil to a saddle that afforded views of the lake in both directions. It provided a good view of the paddle ahead, and we spotted what could be our campsite that night on Monte Cristo Island. It was also steak fajita night!

20151007_134801.jpg


20151007_141856.jpg


20151007_142433.jpg


2015-10-07 14.43.14 (1).jpg


20151007_151855.jpg


20151007_164457.jpg


20151007_164603.jpg


20151007_164850.jpg


20151007_183025.jpg


20151007_185459.jpg


2015-10-07 19.22.07.jpg


Had the water level been about 10 feet lower there would have been a land bridge from the island to the eastern shoreline. For now, however, we were isolated, and the only evidence of critters we spotted was a gecko or two scrambling across the island's rocks. I slept very well that night to the sounds of water lapping againt the shoreline of the island, but was awakened at 5:30 a.m. by the lonely howl of a coyote only 100 yards away on the near shore. We'd have to be careful with our food overnight whenever camping on the mainland.

After a quick breakfast of hot oatmeal and coffee we broke camp and continued south. The northerly wind from the night before was persisting, and washed 1 to 2-foot waves over the starboard stern of our boats as we approached Castle Butte and entered the shelter of Good Hope Bay. It was here that we encountered John, a hardcore solo sea kayaker from the San Francisco Bay area who had arrived via Blue Notch Road the night before. We paddled into his camp to get information on the condition of the road (and once we heard, we were glad that we hadn't tried to launch from there). He was out for a full month of touring the upper reaches of Lake Powell. He declared Powell to be his second favorite paddling site, only after Baja where he has traveled by kayak for up to six months at a time. After exchanging pleasantries Jon and I continued on.

20151008_095202.jpg


20151008_123535.jpg


We landed on Kung Pao Island, a tiny jumble of rocks upon which we'd have our lunch that day.

20151008_133850.jpg


20151008_130816.jpg


20151008_130051.jpg


After lunch we continued south in search of a spot for the night, eventually settling on what we'd call the "Beach Camp" beneath the Trail Cliffs after 9.94 miles of paddling for a hearty "seafood night" dinner of linguine with white clam sauce, only after we each took the opportunity for a quick bath in the lake to remove a two-day accumulation of desert dust and dried sweat.

20151008_143201.jpg


20151008_150056.jpg


20151008_152655.jpg


20151008_183252.jpg


20151008_190711.jpg


20151008_201315.jpg


20151008_204104.jpg


Once again I was awakened just before dawn to the howl and bark of coyotes, this time further from camp but much more sustained than the night before.

20151009_085800.jpg


After packing up Friday morning we shoved off onto our longest lake crossing of the trip, a full two miles that despite a mild headwind we negotiated in around 30 minutes.

20151009_094220.jpg


20151009_095601.jpg


Shortly thereafter, however, the wind died and the lake turned to absolute glass. Shockingly, it would remain that way all day and we were able to make good time as a result.

20151009_104826.jpg


20151009_122539_010.jpg


After lunching on a tiny island at the tip of The Horn we crossed the lake twice more to enter Fourmile Canyon, where had planned to stay the night. But it was only 1:00 p.m., and we were easily distracted by playful rock formations at the mouth of the canyon.

20151009_123450.jpg


20151009_132815-01.jpg


The only viable campsite in the canyon was already occupied by a powerboater. It was still only 1:30, and with the smooth water we figured that we could make it to the mouth of Farley Canyon, where we already knew there was a good campsite, by 3:00. It would be a big, big day, but we nevertheless went for it, finally arriving at what Jon would dub Camp Alum.

20151009_150656.jpg


Alum powder is a kitchen spice used for pickling. In the desert southwest, however, it serves a dual purpose. Stir a spoonful into a bucket of silty water, and you come back a half hour later to crystal clear water with all of the waterborne sediment congealed around the alum at the bottom of the bucket. The water is now ready to purify for drinking without the sediment. Camp Alum was far enough upstream in the lake that it was surrounded by a plume of silty water emanating from the Colorado River, and we'd have to use the alum trick to get sufficient clear water for cooking and drinking, although we didn't need water to prepare the fourth night's dinner: chicken quesadillas with diced jalapeños, diced green chiles and habanero sauce. Dinner would wait, though, for despite our (my?) exhaustion we added another 2.6 miles to check on the truck at the Farley Canyon launch, for a total log of 17.12 miles for the day -- a big day indeed!

20151009_175719.jpg


20151009_183218.jpg


20151009_183602.jpg


20151009_190251.jpg


The topography at Camp Alum was such that we had no choice but to pitch our tents right next to one another on the only tiny suitable patch of ground. Jon, however, opted to abandon his tent and climb 100 yards to a high outcropping of rock to bivouac. I drifted off to sleep while stargazing through the mesh ceiling of my tent to the sounds of fish feeding on minnows in the lake and the beating wings of birds flying overhead. Yeah, it was that quiet.

2015-10-10 07.29.48.jpg


Each time I rolled over in the middle of the night my forearms, triceps and shoulders whined about the pain that I had put them through during our exhausting paddle on Friday. On Saturday morning we only partially broke camp before leaving our stuff behind at Camp Alum and heading even further upstream in search of the spot where the Colorado River currently empties into the lake. It was to be a relatively short day.

20151010_111334.jpg


The water became progressively more and more shallow, and siltier and siltier. Eventually it was only a few inches deep as we searched for the channel, trying to not become stuck in the thick silt that lined the lake bottom like quicksand. If we had to climb out of the boat to come ungrounded we would have merely sunk up to our necks in mud, never to be seen again. Jon commented that he couldn't decide if it was really thick water or really wet dirt that we were trying to paddle through. We somehow avoided running aground and found the appropriate channel, successfully reaching the inlet just below the useless boat ramp at Hite.

20151010_151746.jpg


20151010_151556.jpg


We paddled our boats into the river current to drift downstream for a bit before following the trail of tiny bubbles on the water that marked the deeper river channel in the lake. We crossed the lake for our final time to retrieve our gear at Camp Alum and paddle back up Farley Canyon to the truck, logging 7.33 miles on our final day.

Some sufficiently cold beer still sitting in the cooler in the truck never tasted so good.

View attachment Lake Powell.kmz
 
admin":kl2jlx5p said:
the weather (clear with highs in the upper 70s, lows in the 50s)
Interesting considering that we are once again on a run of triple digit days here in SoCal. It's still been close to 90F well after dark at Dodger Stadium the last 2 nights.

This is one impressive report to be prepared so fast after returning. For us amateurs camping is a logistical pain. Admin has this down to a science.

I looked at that topo map, and thought, "I need to zoom this to be able to follow the trip narrative better." To my pleasant surprise the map WAS zoomable, and the underlying image was 2,663x4,847 pixels and was a 7,240MB file. Administrative privilege I guess.

The Google Earth file was impressive too. James and I have had lots of recent practice locating and labeling pins. But I don't know how to draw and save those colored line routes. The few times I have drawn lines on a kmz file, as soon as I pause and try to draw a second line, the first one disappears.
 
Tony Crocker":1fid81uc said:
The Google Earth file was impressive too. James and I have had lots of recent practice locating and labeling pins. But I don't know how to draw and save those colored line routes. The few times I have drawn lines on a kmz file, as soon as I pause and try to draw a second line, the first one disappears.

Those lines were GPS tracks (.GPX files) recorded by my phone. I didn't draw them, I imported them into Google Earth. They were also the source for the routes on the topo map.

And yeah, I do have the ability to override file sizes. :-"
 
Stuck in a tinpot airport in the back end of nowhere, this report is exactly what I needed to spend 20 minutes reading!
 
Back
Top