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New River Academy takes their kayak school adventures to there southernmost reaches: Futaleufu. Chiles big water paradise in Patagonia offers the most spectacular scenery and unforgettable whitewater. The high school students and Gap year students will get to experience this whitewater gem for themselves this spring.
If you want to know what it is all about you should join us for the Gap year in Patagonia. The Futaleufu is in danger of being damned and lost forever. So get down there and show your love for free flowing rivers.! Patagonia Sin Represas!
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Every morning, the students emerge from their cozy tents, tucked away in the security of the mossy trees. Our campsite here in Hornopiren is perched atop a grassy knoll that slopes gently downward into a craggy ravine, directly to a gorgeously turquoise 10-foot waterfall. This waterfall makes up one of three that we have been running on the Rio Negro, whose tantalizing whitewater is so close to our tents that we can hear it in our dreams. We are enjoying the wonderful countryside hospitality of our host, Dona Tato, who has been serving up three delicious meals a day- she is even spoiling us with homemade pastries for breakfast. Nights are rolling away while we congregate around the campfire, singing along to Tino and Matti’s guitar and Andy’s fiddle. Lorenzo’s ghost stories have us all convinced that his family’s home is haunted.
Weather has been delightful- sunny, warm, perfect, and has allowed for our classes to cluster around the funky, hand-made wooden tables in the yard. My AP English students had a fun project this week, where they learned the importance of being familiar with both sides of an arguement before taking a stance on it. I had them prepare to write a persuasive essay on a controversial topic, repeatedly warning them to investigate the opposition’s viewpoint as well. When the day of the in-class essay arrived, the looks of horror on their faces revealed my sneaky plan. That’s right, they had one hour to write an essay that was exactly the opposite of the thesis they had planned. Matt’s photo classes have been utilizing the gorgeous sunsets and surrounding countryside to explore the world of landscape photography. Taylor and Eric made slideshows showcasing Al Capone and the Flapper era for Tino’s history class.
Today we had a race down the Rio Negro, on a small section beginning with a 25-foot waterfall and ending with a bang as the students landed that boof from the top of the 10-footer. What a great way to end our time in Hornopiren. I left the students back at camp, packing up their tents and gear bags, preparing to rise and shine at 5:30 am tomorrow. We will get on an eight hour ferry to Chaiten, where we will be about two hours away from the town of Futaleafu. I’m sure everyone shares my excitement in experiencing this legendary river!
The Middle Lower Fuy is a fun class 3-4 run with some good play and some good boofage.
Over Christmas break I decided to stay in Chile with alumni, Jake Greenbaum. Here is a video presented by IR of 2 month vacation.
IR Update in Chile from stephen forster on Vimeo.
Here is the Chile Rivers installment of the Rio Claro!
The kayak school has been hard at work producing a video guide series of all the major Chile Whitewater hotspots!
The Veintedos Saltos is a run that should not be taken lightly, and neither is the shuttle. Start driving towards the hosterias at the Pargue Ingles just before you reach them there will be a gate. Go through this gate and find another gate that will be lifted. Lift the gate and continue up the road, until you get to a section where there looks like a dry stream comes into the road. This is where the walk starts. Follow the dry stream and cross a stream that will have water in it. After this you will come to a sign saying Parque Ingles and something else. About 100 feet after this sign there will be a faint trail. Follow this trail to another dry stream bed and follow the dry bed to the river. At the river turn left and lower boats to the section below, go upstream and find a seal launch above a seven foot drop. Put-in and now the fun begins! The seven footer is very clean and easy and can be run any way you please. Then there will be a large 25 footer, that is run center with a plug. Next up is a 6 foot slide to 10 foot drop that runs up the left wall. Ride the left wall and boof late to clean the drop. Next comes another slide drop combo about 20 feet tall. Run it left and boof into the left eddy. When you reach a spot where it looks like a double drop where it is hard to judge the height this is the 30 footer. Run the first drop into the boily eddy and then run te 30 footer on the left, charge left to avoid a rock that may impact the bottom of your boat. A boof is inadvisable unless desiring a lower back injury. Take a rest in the pool below. Now comes the “Canyon” a tight S-bend with water flying every which way and a strong hydraulic in the middle. Boof the hole and keep your paddle close in. the rest of the run gets easy from here. There is another drop nearing the end with pillow half way down. It is a bit of a double drop. Ride high on the pillow and boof to clean the drop. On the next drop stay about 2 feet off of the left wall to avoid a hole and then after another small drop float on to the Parque Ingles bridge for the take-out.
see you on the water!
I was fortunate enough to have the great experience of paddling the Lower Maipo River, a great, safe river with nonstop thrill. To help more people possibly be able to have the great experience of paddling this river my World Geography class paddled the river and mapped it using GPS for a class project. I uploaded our track onto everytrail.com a long with photos from the lower Maipo to show the world a little about the river. I find the opertunity to do this for a class project unique and educational, to say the least. I hope it will encourage many to visit the Maipo.
Widget powered by EveryTrail: GPS Trip Sharing with Google Maps
When this kayak school studies geography, it becomes an immersive experience. It wouldn’t be enough to simply look at maps all day and memorize countries and capitals. At the New River Academy your student will make their own maps that document their travels.
Matt Hill took the geography elective this year and he will be creating an interactive GIS (Geographic Information System) in order to provide other kayakers an exhaustive resource of the rivers we will paddle in Chile.
In order to prepare him for this arduous task, I have given Matt the assignment of mapping the Gauley River. He will be using the kayak schools own waterproof GPS to track the river, mark and label each major rapid, photograph the rapids, and finally write a description of every marked waypoint.
All of this data will be compiled using Google Earth, to create a tour with photos and descriptions, which correspond with every waypoint on the river.
After Matt has accomplished this, he will take these skills and apply them to the Rivers of Chile. Matt will create some of the most detailed online river guides to date, and make them available to paddlers all over the world. Eventually this database of Chile Rivers will be the number one online resource for traveling whitewater enthusiasts, and all thanks to Matt Hill and the amateur GIS team at NRA.
New River Academy
Rt. 2 Box 245
Fayetteville, WV 25484
(304)- 574-0403
Fax: (304) 513-2247
New River
Academy