Hi Larry,
Here are some photos of our 4 week Alatna River trip last
summer. Our Alaskan rivers guide book said the upper Alatna would be a good
family outing with any type of boat. Well, you better have one tough family-
and a SOAR is the ONLY boat to do this fast shallow water!
We flew in with BRA from Bettles early- June 10th- hoping to
find deep-run off water. There was still ice on Gadeke Lake and snow on the
mountains but the water was way too shallow to paddle on Gadeke Creek. We
lingered at the lake a few days for the best hiking of the whole 4 weeks and a
great lake trout dinner. Gadeke (gad-key) Creek was way too small and shallow
to paddle. We almost had to pack up and carry everything for 4 miles down to
the main river. You wouldn't want a wide, heavy raft or a folding canoe or
kayak for this upper section- the rocks are too sharp! The SOAR slid right
along the bottom fully loaded.
Lining was tricky in the fast water with big boulders. Linda
steered the front from shore with her paddle while I held on to the back handle
and pushed over and around rocks and held the boat back in deeper sections.
Several sections of the creek had thick brush on the sides with sharp dead
branches sticking out. I walked the boat right down the middle of the creek.
Moving slowly, we reached the main Alatna after two days of lining. But the
main branch wasn't much deeper- we continued lining for several more days
rather than risk a dunking. Short sections were deep enough but the channel
would soon braid into shallows.
After about 40 miles and five days of lining we could get in and
paddle but still had to watch out for sweepers. Just below this slower braided
section we came to a nice, narrow gorge which was a pleasure to paddle until it
opened up at Ram Creek rapids. We found them easy to line on the left side.
Below Ram Creek the river gradually slowed and allowed us to paddle all day and
enjoy the scenery. These cliffs are just above Kutuk River and the popular
Arrigetch Creek area.
We stayed a few days at one of the Arrigetch Creek outlets. Did
a day hike up stream to see the awesome peaks of Arrigetch valley. It is a
multi day hike to really get up into the Arrigetch and we hear it is well worth
it. But we were not prepared to leave most of our gear behind with all the bear
sign around. We took another two weeks to meander and fish (grayling and pike)
our way down to Allakaket. There our BRA pilot picked us up for a hop over to
Walker Lake and a 4 week adventure down the Kobuk River- but that's another
story!
We bought the SOAR to do long trips like this one. Last year we
did 8 weeks on the Noatak without having to get a resupply drop-- we never
could have fit enough stuff into our Klepper to do 8 weeks without a food
drop.
Enjoy your web site and love the boat.
Will and Linda Forsberg,
Fairbanks, AK