Archive for the ‘Canyoning Trips’ Category

Geronimo Canyon

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Here is the Geronimo Canyon video, followed by a trip report written by Rob Luikens:

Having wasted days and nights eating and drinking with family and friends to usher in the new year, it was high time we grabbed our gear and went off to do something fun. We hadn’t heard any first hand feedback on this canyon, but the book described Geronimo Canyon as a great canyon, and that’s more than enough for us.

We left our cars at the fire shed at about 10:30 and walked down to the Wollangambe. We missed our turn off and ended up a bit far downstream. Thankfully, it was fairly easy to find our way back to where we were meant to be. A short walk over a saddle and we were on the correct ridge. At 1:30, we made it to the first abseil. We stopped for a sandwich, and Shane made friends with an exceptionally inquisitive skink, who seemed to love tuna in sweet chilli sauce and was willing to risk life and limb to get some.

Then came the first abseil. I wasn’t anything too difficult, but you have to be careful recovering the rope. The start of the canyon is quite pretty, and has lots of little fish swimming in it. Excited, the group continued on. After about 10 minutes of high canyon walls and Lost World type scenery, we reached the jump in that gives the canyon its name. I abseiled down and checked it out. Once I’d cleared it Shane and Jake jumped down. Both came out screaming about how cold the water was. Even at this time of year it’s pretty chilly in there. A couple more minutes of swimming and scrambling and we were at the next abseil. It wasn’t what I’d call a difficult abseil, more like irritating. The rope got covered in mud making it slow going. The ground was mossy making it hard to get a good footing. After that, it was another fairly short walk and scramble until we hit the Wollangambe. We had a well earned soak in the river, got out of our wetsuits, and began the 2 hour odd stroll back to the car.

Not a bad day all in all. The canyon gets its grade 4 more from being slippery and sometimes tricky that extremely physically demanding. It’s nowhere near as demanding as say Claustral. I wouldn’t call it one of my all time greats, but it was a good, albeit rather short day.

Rob Luikens

 

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Whungee-Wheengee Canyon

Friday, January 11th, 2008



Open my book of favourite canyons ever, and stick Whungee-Wheengee straight on top of the list. I had such a great time doing Whungee-Wheengee that I am sure I will be back many times in the near future, and will probably even do a Serendipity-Whungee-Wheengee double day of awesomeness sometime too, just to cram as much incredible canyoning into one day as possible.

Stewart from the UNSW Outdoors Club ran this trip, and he took Su Li and myself on this adventure through one of the most interesting, and sustained canyons I have ever done. From start to finish, you are having a good time. The canyon stays narrow, stays beautiful, and stays interesting the whole way down to the ‘gambe. And then when its over, you get to bask in the sun as you float down the ‘gambe, reflecting on all of the cool stuff you just did!

For example, the first thing we did in the canyon, was climb down into a pool, swim 5m, then swim UNDER a chockstone, pop up on the other side where things were getting darker, then swim a few more meters in a very very narrow section only to find another chockstone which we had to swim under. Because we couldn’t see any light on the other side of the chockstone, we weren’t certain that we were in the right spot, so Stewart pulled out his headlamp and went under first (luckily there was a bit of a gap between the water and the chockstone, so we could get light through.) It looked like there was room on the other side of the chockstone, so we swam under. Boy am I glad we did - you duck under this rock, swim a meter, then come back up for air only to find yourself in a pitch black cave with a roof covered in glow worms. It felt like I had just stumbled into a planetarium and I was meant to be looking up at the starry night sky… A hint of light up ahead then turned into dim beams of light pouring in through a tunne, creating another incredible light/dark effect which I only wish I could capture on film somehow to show everyone.

And that was the first thing we did in the canyon. I was immediately blown away by it. And while there were no more super cool duck under glow worm caves, the canyon still continued to impress simply because it stayed to perfect the whole time. There was no boring creek walking bits, and no ‘connecting’ bits as you find in most canyons, Whungee-Wheengee was canyon from top to bottom. No filler. Lots of great swims, often through ridiculously narrow slots, several duck unders, lots of great light beams filtering down through the narrow canyon walls, illuminating ferns that bright green.

Even the hard bits were good fun. Graded at a 5, I expect that simply comes from the difficulty and regularity of the climb downs, overs and arounds. Rock climbing experience definitely helps in this canyon, the ability to jump onto small slippery surfaces without falling off the edge, and a reasonable ability to not be too scared by heights are all highly recommended traits. Even with those, you won’t find the going through Whungee-Wheengee ‘easy’ - you have to pay attention the whole way through the canyon.

That said, the abseils aren’t very difficult. There was an initial one to get down into the creek, then shortly after the duck unders we did a second abseil which I think you can avoid by climbing down a difficult bit. The last two abseils are unavoidable and follow rapidly one after the other. Once at the bottom of the last abseil, it is only a short walk to Wollangambe Two, but even that short walk is incredible - it is walking through this 1m wide slot with 50m vertical walls straight up either side of you. It is quite a surreal place to be. And then suddenly it goes around a corner and we found ourselves stepping into the bathwater temperature of the Wollangambe. Well maybe it wasn’t bathwater temperature, but it sure was a *lot* warmer than the frigid waters of the Whungee-Wheengee.

We had a second lunch on the side of the Wollangambe as the group behind us through Whungee-Wheengee overtook us, then we caught up to them again around the corner where they had all started jumping in from a side cliff. Stewart and I had a jump each, then we meandered our way down to the end of the canyon, then up the long and slow climb out.

Awesome canyon, everything about it is perfect. Just make sure you are physically capable and with someone who has done it before if you want to try it. And never try to do it in high water or with a threat of a thunderstorm. Those duck unders could be quite dangerous if the water was any higher.

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Arethusa Canyon Trip Report

Monday, December 31st, 2007

This is one of those trips which will be brought up in campfire discussions for years to come. “Remember that Canyon where we had to walk out in the dark with a couple of headlamps and a couple of crappy torches between 5 people?” Yeah…this canyon didn’t go exactly as planned.

Arethusa is a less well known and less travelled canyon than most around Katoomba. I’m not exactly sure why - my best guess is because the standard guide book ‘Canyons Near Sydney’ mentions it once being polluted, and so maybe that turns a lot of people off it. It could be argued that it is the difficult walk in and walk out that deters people - but that is only the case because so few people do it. If more people do it, then clear walking tracks will appear and the walk in and out will be pretty straight forward. So I’m not sure why more people don’t do it, but thats the way it is, and that is why there is no track leading into the canyon, and why there is no walking track out from the canyon.

That being the case, we found the directions we tried to follow from the Canyons Near Sydney book lead us to a pretty solid cliffline on the way into the canyon. So we decided to ditch those directions, and followed our own navigations from the Katoomba Topographical map. We picked a path down a ridgeline, down into a gully which met up with Katoomba Creek just under the high tension powerlines.

We followed Katoomba Creek for more than two and a half hours
before reaching the start of the main canyon, marked by an obvious abseil. Again the guidebook describes getting through Katoomba creek mostly dry as possible, but our experience was that we had to do several swims. I expect the water level was a little higher than normal, but I have trouble imagining staying dry throughout the 2+ hours spent in the creek.

We climbed up to a ledge on the right hand side above the abseil, and anchored from several slings wrapped around a decent sized tree. The start was a little difficult, but I dropped down first, and boy the bush bashing in and long walk through the creek was worth it just for this abseil. Dropping straight down into traditional blue mountain canyon alongside this awesome pumping waterfall. The waterfall was just awesome (see the photos…) and as I called “Off Rope!” down the bottom and stepped off from the small rock I was standing on, onto the sandy bottom, I got a bit of a fright as I sunk to my waist (seriously) in sand. I’ve sunk to my knees in light packed sand pleny of times, but never to my waist before.

Anyway, continuing on through the canyon was pretty standard fare - there was a lot of climbing down slippery rock surfaces (all of the rocks were very slippery actually. I guess regular traffic through most other canyons helps wear away the slippery mosses and algae etc that normally cover all of the rocks), and quite a few swims. There were very few jump ins because there were always large rocks just under the surface. Some of the climb downs were quite tricky and dangerous - high risk of twisted ankle mostly.

The end of the canyon came quickly enough (took us 1.5-2 hours to complete the main canyon) and we had some lunch atop the waterfalls (I think it was about 3:30pm, or maybe even 4:30pm at this point). We abseiled down Arethusa Falls and started climbing our way down the creek (large boulders, lots of negotiating a way through it all) to the small waterfall which marked our exit from the creek up to the cliffline.

We took our wetsuits off, rinsed the sand out of our shoes, and started the stupidly steep climb straight up to the cliffline. The path was occasionally there, regularly not, then after a short while of traversing along the cliffline, it simply ceased to exist. It was hard going as the ground was steeply falling away to the right constantl, we were walking on loose dirt/rocks/scree with very few plants around to either hold on to or to stabilise the dirt, and where there were plants, they were usually sharp, spiky, thorny plants which just made things unpleasant. (Lawyer Palms? Not sure if they were or not, but there was one particular type of vine with razor sharp thorns on it which liked to trip you over and cut your legs open at the same time)

We kept trudging along this damn cliffline for hours, forever certain that just around the next bed…surely Beauchamp Falls would be just there… but it just kept not happening. Bush bashing, on an uneven unstable ground, with a group of 5, makes the shortest distances take so much longer. This wall section was less than 2.5km, but it took us around 5 hours to get to Greaves Creek. After 3 it was obvious that nightfall was coming, and we started to lose group Morale. There was talk of setting up camp and waiting until morning. Where we could ’set up camp’ exactly was another problem in itself - there was not an inch of flat ground anywhere, and getting down from this cliffline presented its own set of problems - the further down you went, the steeper, rockier, and dodgier it got.

The simple fact was, that getting stuck on this hillside wasn’t an option, and we had to press on. It was obvious though, that the situation had destroyed morale - we had been walking for several hours, it wasn’t fun walking, it was uncomfortable and a few of us had already run out of water. The group was moving slower, fatigue was setting in, and as light was failing, the risk of accident was rapidly increasing.

I wanted to get down to the creek below us, because I knew that the other side of the creek was a walking track. A walking track would resolve all of our morale issues, and simply prove that we could make it out tonight. I picked a line down the hillside, always moving towards Beauchamp Falls, and managed to get incredibly lucky by finding myself at a point above the river which wasn’t too difficult to get down into the ankle deep water. I reached the creek bank just as it got so dark that I had to pull my headlamp out.

Rob had a headlamp, I had a headlamp and a spare mini LED torch, and trev had a small torch too - Ifound the route across the creek, then guided everyone across. Alan climbed up the other side, and immediately found the path - I can’t express in mere words just how incredibly super duper holy crap releived I was. Nightfall was breaking point. If we didn’t reach the creek just as night fell, there was a good chance we wouldn’t have been able to convince the group to keep moving. Reaching the creek was a good start, but if the track wasn’t immediately on the other side - if we had to climb up the ridge for several hundred meters or something stupid like that, it could have been just as bad. But there it was. We had the track, and we had enough light (sort of - 4 light sources, 5 people) to follow it. Only another 2 hours of walking uphill to go! And all of us out fo water… :(

The trip from there was otherwise uneventful. We filled up a bottle with some running water as a safety, but rationed out the last 500ml water which rob had between us occasionally. And walked our way back up Rodriguez Pass Walking track to the Grand Canyon Walking track, then onto Pilcher Trail, finally walking back to the car along the dirt road. We got out first bit of phone reception on Pilcher trail at 10:30pm, and got messages out to loved ones telling them that we were alive, not injured, and everything was fine - call off the resuce parties! We got back to the cars at about 11:20pm, and have never been happier to be at the end of a days canyoning.

Better yet, we even managed to drive the two hours home (we all live in Sydney) without falling asleep while driving!

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Claustral Canyon Trip Report and Video

Monday, December 24th, 2007

I organised a trip through Claustral Canyon because I was constantly being pestered by people to do it. I had already done it four times, so wasn’t in a rush to do it again - even though it is right up there as one of, if not the best canyon in the mountains, I’d rather keep doing canyons I hadn’t done before. Nonetheless people wanted it, so I organised it, and before I had a chance to think about it, we had 6 people wanting to go and suddenly I was worried that we would get too many people in a canyon which has a very slow and cold choke-point that you don’t want to try to get through with a large group of people. To make it worse, I realised that it had been regularly raining, or at least constantly drizzling up in the mountains for at least 3 weeks by this point. So while the there had been no real rain over the 5 days or so leading up to our trip, there was also no chance for the water to really subside very much thanks to the constant cloud cover and drizzle.

Seeing as it hadn’t rained leading up to the day we went though, I didn’t call it off and the six of us went ahead anyway. We signed in to the new logbook - we were the fourth group in it I think. It was placed there by NPWS shortly after the recent fatality in the canyon only two weeks before our trip.

The walk down was straight forward enough, as was most of the first half of the canyon. I won’t spend long on the details of this trip because I think the photos and the video (to follow) do it far better than words, but a few things are worth mentioning. Firstly, the water level was higher than any of the other times I had done Claustral, although it was still far from dangerous. This did make things more interesting though, particularly the abseils which were flowing quite strongly and making a lot of noise. We had some difficulty on the abseil, but I will leave that story up to the video to tell.

One high point of the trip which I had never done before, was going for a short walk upstream at the Thunder Gorge junction. We dropped our packs and started heading upstream to see what was up there (I knew there was something of note, but couldn’t remember what). We reached a gigantic rock slab blocking the route which we could have probably climbed over, but I was starting to think it wasn’t worth it and that we should just head back - We were starting to get hungry and I knew that there was still a fair distance to cover.

Just as I was about ready to head back, Steven found a small tunnel to the left hand edge of the boulder. It was only about thigh height, and you had to wade in to water, but I was happy to send Steven in and let him clear out the innumerable spider webs that were blocking us… Luckily we did though, because inside that small tunnel was the coolest thing I had seen for a long time. First of all there was a narrow beam of sunlight which found its way in through all of the rocks and boulders and canyon walls above us, and it illuminated this narrow circle of water really nicely. But as soon as I passed through that beam of light the tunnel stopped and a larger cavern opened up, and as I stood up and looked around I was just blown away by the light show in front of me. The roof of this tiny cavern had the most brilliant glow worm decorations all over it. It was just so unexpected to see, in the middle of the day, at the end of this tiny little tunnel. Definitely worth checking out if you find yourself doing Claustral Canyon. Unfortunately it is all but impossible to take a photo of it, so you I can’t even show you how cool it was - you really will just have to go and see it yourself.

The whole canyon was incredibly beautiful though. Even having done it a few times before, it is still shocking to see the way the ferns glow just as you walk out from the bottom of Calcutta Falls. The way the sunlight occasionally illuminates the water drops falling in from above. The green-ness of the whole canyon. Always impressive.

Anyway, here is the video, see some of it for yourself!

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Fortress Canyon

Friday, December 21st, 2007

We were planning on doing Arethusa Canyon, but as soon as we arrived at Katoomba it was thrown into doubt. It was raining and quite cold at the time and we hadn’t done Arethusa before, so were unsure how the weather may afffect the water levels. We had to get some gear so we dropped into Mountain Designs and while there asked the guy behind the desk his opinion - he indicated that it had been raining pretty consistently for two weeks at this point, so we decided to back out.

Fortress Canyon two meter jump inHowever, there were 4 of us up in the mountains - we had driven this far, surely there was something else we could do. That was when I decided that Fortress was an option - I have done Fortress Canyon before, and when I did it, it was flooded (very dangerously actually), so basically the conditions couldn’t be worse than what I had already done, and I know how to survive it in adverse conditions. Everyone else was keen to go, so off down Mount Hay road we headed.

Fortress Canyon EndThere was another car parked in the Fortress Canyon parking space, so we weren’t going to be alone. We walked to the Fortress Ridge walking track, and were about to drop down to the end of the 4WD track (the entry that I know, not the standard one apparently) when we saw two guys walking back towards us along Fortress Ridge. Turns out they (Trev and Jon) had spent all morning trying to find their way in to the canyon without luck (it was very foggy and this was their first time). So we adopted them and our group grew to 6.

View from aboveWe walked down to the end of 4WD track and headed off into the bushes down a path towards the large gully
which eventually takes us all the way to the canyon. The water was flowing reasonably well, but it was certainly not flooding the canyon, like the last time I did Fortress. So we were able to easily walk along the track which followed the canyon the whole way down, occasionally needing to cross over the creek, or walk in it for short periods of time.

The whole canyon is pretty straight forward really. Walk in the creek, walk beside the creek, scramble over and down rocks until you reach the first jump in. Jump in. Swim for a while. More walking then Jump 6m shortly before the end. Reach exit, but continue down canyon to the big waterfall at the end.

We got to that waterfall, but unfortunately the fog completely blocked any concept of a view. Looked more like the end of the world or something - just like that movie, The Gods Must Be Crazy 2 I think it was, where he threw the Coke bottle off the end of the world. Anyway, walking up the steep hill out of the canyon was a bit of a slog, but then, it always is when canyoning.

In the end it was another successful trip, even in inclement weather - no injuries, back in good time, and a good time had by all.

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