Monday, 3 December 2007
Nile Freestyle Festival 2007. Results.
Men.
Freestyle.
Mens.
1. Steve Fisher
2. Sam Ward
3. Anton Imler
Womens.
1. Michelle Basso
2. Morgan Koons
3. Jesse Stone
Endurance.
Men’s Endurance Race Results
1st Juma Kalikwani and Mtwalibi Mbozi
2nd Davey O’ Hare and Tyler Bradt
3rd Anton Imler and Doug Mullet
Women’s Endurance Race Results
1st Jackie Fourie and Prossi Merembe
2nd Morgan Koons and Anna Bruno
3rd Michelle Basso and Robyn Munford
Boda Boda X.
Mens.
1st Ibra Mugembe
2nd Sam Ward
3rd Mtwalibi Mbozi
Womens.
1st Prossi Merembe
2nd Morgan Koons
3rd Anna Bruno
This years festival was a roaring success, with super close competition in all events.
Full event report and photo's on the way.
Thursday, 29 November 2007
Nile Freestyle Festival 2007.
60 competitors, Big Air Freestyle on Nile Special, 45km endurance race and the now legendry Boda-Boda Cross where you race the river then race back to the finish line with your kayak on the back of a moped through the jungle!!
The inside story? Well Tyler Bradt broke his foot last night trying to backflip in the bar, currently at the clinic getting x-rays we don't know if he's in or out. Steve Fisher promises to go big, and all eyes are on Sam Ward who is going huge on the wave and fast down the river.
With the Ugandan Team up for re-selection the top three local paddlers will walk away with a spot on the Fluid Team, and the opportunity to push their paddling to the next level. The young boys are pushing hard to take over the reigns, but will they beat Paulo and Juma who continue to impress and have the experience to keep their cool when the heat is on.
With big prizes and even bigger parties we can't wait, it is simply going to be the best freestyle event on thne calander this year!!
Do you want to follow the event as it happens? Well this is the place to do just that, Photo's may have to wait until after the weekend due to upload speed out here in Africa but we're going to post the results and news at the end of every day.
Stay tuned, anyone could win.
Friday, 16 November 2007
Extreme Croquet, or what we do when we don't paddle...
Monday, 29 October 2007
Thailand. The end of a mission.
-Cool buildings up in Chaing Mai-
-The boys make a fire on the multi-day down the Nam-Wa-
-Happy kids way off in the middle of nowhere-
-Josh hangs out with a cool old dude-
And a few photo's of Me, Josh and Sam...
-Josh checks out the biggest hole I've ever seen in a car tyre, on our way to Nan-
-Sam, all Hairy-Lemon'd up- -Photo by Josh-
-Me looking serious about something-
-Photo by Josh-
-Me behind the lens--Photo by Josh-
All that's left to do is to thank all the people who've helped this trip work out;
Big up to all the guys in Uganda who helped scrape together enough creeking gear for me and Sam. Especially Jamie at Kayak the Nile, and Davey at NRE. (Sorry Davey that your Creek boat now has a hole in it and we're leaving it here - hope you don't mind!)
Guys in Thailand. Wick for good advice. And Jason at Siam Rivers / Kona coffee shop (Chaing Mai) for awesome breakfasts, good coffee, great info and help in planning our missions, and for coming and drinking whiskey with us until the early hours. Pete Buick for inspiring Sam to set up a trip here in the first place, and then helping us out with logistics in Thailand from day 1.
Mum and Dad - for digging through my gear at home and sending it half way around the world to get to me in time. And everything else you did to help.
Fluid Kayaks - for making boats that don't break when you slam into rocks.
For me now I'm heading back to Uganda and the Nile. I've got lots of work lined up with Kayak the Nile as well as a few cool projects I'll let you know about if I get them off the ground.
At the end of November we have the 2007 Nile Freestyle Festival and it really is going to be the biggest and best yet, if you've got the cash and the time you have to be there - it's unmissable.
Happy Paddling and Safe Travels.
Will, Sam and Josh.
Friday, 26 October 2007
Upper Mae Klang. First descent number 9.
We put-in at the Siritan Waterfall, way upstream from the slides we paddled the day before. Sam found a line below the top drop, which itself was only a hundred yards from the lip of an un-runnable 70 footer.
-Sam lines it up at the top-
At the first bridge we took out for an obligatory portage. The river goes down 500m of 30 degree slides and then straight off the Wachiratharn Waterfall (below).
-Me running the rapid below Wachiratharn Waterfall-
-Sam mid-boof-
-Josh boofs the same drop-
We gave them a go in our kayaks...
This river has been paddled before, but the upper section - above Wachiratharn Waterfall - is a first descent. Our last for our journey to Thailand.
Peace.
Will.
Mae Klang slides.
-Josh and Sam get 'em in-
Easy.
Will.
Mae Pan Waterfalls
Just to get access above the fall was hard work, we hiked up, then hauled the boats up the cliff and lowered them into the pool above. Then we abseiled into the same pool. Below a 100 footer and above the 50 footer. It was an amazing place to be. Josh hit it first and took a pretty big hit but was fine. I went up after and came through with no-worries. It was my 25th birthday today - what better way to celebrate?
Border-run and northern rivers.
-Doi Suthep Temple- photo Josh Neilson-
Mostly we found rivers needing more water - ironic since only two weeks earlier the entire region had been devastated by monsoon rains which pushed north through Laos and Vietnam. However we found some good spots definitly worth a visit on the next trip. We also found some insane waterfalls which we went and stood under and fed off their energy. No paddling on this trip but lots of fun.
-Sam and Josh loving it-
-Rush hour in the Sunday Market-
Peace.
Will.
Friday, 19 October 2007
Unknown River.
We've been here in Thailand for almost a month now and in that time we've managed to rack up 8 first descents. The process of finding these rivers is not that precise. Every day we have a plan for where we want to go and what we want to find. Often we have two or three areas of interest in mind for each place we go. Then it's a case of a bit of luck and good old fashioned hard work - hiking in asking locals - anything we can do to find the whitewater. Often we find nothing, but overall we've done really well.
-Me on the first paddlable drop-
This river was found on our way back from the upper Ma Sa. We hadn't heard anything about it, all we saw was a sign for a waterfall and the 'cascade resort'. Good enough so we went a checked it out. On the drive up we saw some drops and slides so the next day we came to paddle it.
It was worth the slog for these drops, though this isn't a river I'll return to. It was so manky paddling in super low volume and the river and riverside resembled a sewer. The locals have taken to dumping all their trash over the banks and the result was a smelly river strewn with rubbish and waste.
-Sam on the slide-
-Me on the slide-
-Josh drops over the edge-
Happy paddling.
Will.
Wednesday, 17 October 2007
Upper Ma Sa. Big slides and scary moments.
-This small drop linked the first drop with the next tricky one-
-Josh lines it up down the pin ball-
-Me on the last big one - a sweet slide where you go about 50mph!!-
-Josh styles it down the slide-
Me and Josh got out at the bottom of this run content. The day could have been so very different. I'd been stuck under water 2 hours before and Josh had had to jump in to pull me out. We'd both come away unhurt and carried on to paddle some awesome first descents.
Upper Ma Sa - first descent number 7.
Will.
Josh
Sam