Canyoneering: Much More Than a Hike in the Park
The “Average Joe’s” extreme sport takes athletes high atop mountains and deep into canyons
- By Jim Morrison
- Smithsonian.com, February 16, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Steve Ramras, who climbs up mountains or clambers down into canyons for 120 days a year, started canyoneering in the late 1970s with college buddies. He’s watched as the sport has slowly become more popular and more technical. “I used to go a whole season without seeing footprints in many of the canyons,” he says. “That’s not necessarily true anymore, but there’s still a limited number of canyons that there’s information on (and amateurs explore).”
Tom Jones, a Utah guide who also sells gear, says techniques have improved so that the sport is safer than before. “But we’re also doing a lot harder canyons,” he adds. “So it may be a good thing we didn’t find some of the canyons we’re finding now back then.”
Ramras, 56, owns a janitorial service in Fort Collins, Colorado, and on the side has written a series of stories about his canyoneering journeys, Tales of an Incompetent Adventurer with titles like “Close to the Edge, and “The Mud, the Blood, and the Fear.” This spring, he will join a month-long hybrid expedition running the whitewater of Colorado River through the Grand Canyon and exploring slot canyons.
Canyoneering, Ramras notes, is different from climbing. If you’re climbing and can’t go any further, you rappel down to the ground and walk out. In canyoneering, once you rappel down into a slot and pull the ropes behind you, you’re committed. “There are all sort of levels [of difficulty] of canyons,” he says. “The majority of them are relatively easy. But there are still some out there where you can run into some pretty big surprises.”
He recalls doing one “beginner” canyon after a snowstorm. Suddenly, what were usually easy strolls over slick rock became dangerous and challenging.
Ramras and Jones and a few others created “Freeze Fest” in the North Wash of Utah, which celebrated its ninth anniversary earlier this year. It’s an extreme, adult camp-out beginning on New Year’s Eve. The brave and the chilly get up each morning and decide which canyons are “relatively safe” to explore. This year, it rained and then snowed, and temperatures dipped into the teens. Still, more than 30 people showed up.
“We refer to it as the stupid idea that caught on,” he says, dryly. “Margins for mistakes are low that time of the year. We don’t recommend the activity for the general public.”
The duo build teams to tackle the mystery and challenge of unexplored canyons. “Forming a group of people who can bring their expertise to bear in a challenging environment is its own reward,” Ramras says.
“Half the time I’m really confident and I don’t have any qualms,” Jones adds, “and then half the time it seems like a really stupid thing.” They walk the rims, if possible, to get a sense of what’s below. They may send someone rappelling over the side for a look. In some instances, a team on the rim may observe, ready to drop a rope and help those below climb out.
“It’s a lot like fun, but different,” Ramras says, laughing, a phrase favored by veteran canyoneers. For Jones, more than a decade after his first sojourns through the slots, the appeal endures.
“Every day in a canyon is just really fun,” Jones adds. “There are canyons I’ve done guiding a hundred times, but every time I go out there I’m still impressed by their beauty.
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Comments (4)
Canyoneering in the US may have started in the US in the 70's, but in Australia the first slot canyons were explored in the 50's, while some of our most famous (and still most impressive) were first descended in the early 60's. It is a pursuit that has rich and diverse routes around the world, with many names, techniques, styles and types of canyons.
Posted by Tim Vollmer on December 6,2011 | 05:35 AM
Wow.. Seeing Steve Ramras takes me back to the early 1970s in the Adirondacks of N.Y.
Posted by Ed Scott on July 16,2011 | 01:33 PM
My family and I recently did a guided canyoneering trip near Zion National Park. We were very apprehensive when the day started but the rappelling part was actually the easiest part of the trip. We went with Red Desert Adventure and actually did Yankee Doodle, one of the canyons mentioned in this article, super cool. Great activity!
Posted by Dave on April 20,2011 | 04:09 PM
I had the great good fortune of being taken canyoneering by my sons last October. We were in the Lake Powell area. I went down my first canyon on my 70th birthday. It was an experience of a lifetime! I now can more fully appreciate the stories I hear and read about the sport and photos of the absolutely phenomenal scenery in that area.
Posted by Judith Havas on February 28,2011 | 09:59 AM