Well,
Since no one has posted a trip report for awhile, I’ll tell you folks about my little Colorado river trip this last weekend.
Started in Fruita, Colorado, about 250 miles from the headwaters of the river up in Rocky Mtn National Park. Fruita is just west of Grand Junction a few miles. This trip was liveried by Centennial Canoe so we were able to put-in on private property about 5 miles above the public put-in at Loma.
.
This trip had a wine tasting theme so Plum Creek Winery brought along 36 bottles of their wines for the 18 of us for Friday and Saturday night.
Loma is where the river turns away from I-70, goes into the redrock canyon and gets pleasant. Its also where you have to register to be on the river.
From that point to the take-out at Westwater, Utah, the only civilization is the Union Pacific RR tracks along the river right with the California Zephyr going by once a day and a few freights.
The river was high and fast; just within its channel. No beaches to speak of like there will be later in the season. The water dropped about 6 vertical inches in the 3 days we were on it. We stopped every hour or so to jump in the water to cool off (it was in the mid 90’s) or look at petroglyphs
and tied the boats to the Tamarisk (Salt Cedar) that lined the banks everywhere. That stuff is a real pest that the forest service is just now trying to figure out how to control. When we set up camp I had to chop my way into a thicket of it to clear out a place for my hammock. The Cottonwoods were either too small (4â€Â
Since no one has posted a trip report for awhile, I’ll tell you folks about my little Colorado river trip this last weekend.
Started in Fruita, Colorado, about 250 miles from the headwaters of the river up in Rocky Mtn National Park. Fruita is just west of Grand Junction a few miles. This trip was liveried by Centennial Canoe so we were able to put-in on private property about 5 miles above the public put-in at Loma.

This trip had a wine tasting theme so Plum Creek Winery brought along 36 bottles of their wines for the 18 of us for Friday and Saturday night.
Loma is where the river turns away from I-70, goes into the redrock canyon and gets pleasant. Its also where you have to register to be on the river.

From that point to the take-out at Westwater, Utah, the only civilization is the Union Pacific RR tracks along the river right with the California Zephyr going by once a day and a few freights.
The river was high and fast; just within its channel. No beaches to speak of like there will be later in the season. The water dropped about 6 vertical inches in the 3 days we were on it. We stopped every hour or so to jump in the water to cool off (it was in the mid 90’s) or look at petroglyphs

and tied the boats to the Tamarisk (Salt Cedar) that lined the banks everywhere. That stuff is a real pest that the forest service is just now trying to figure out how to control. When we set up camp I had to chop my way into a thicket of it to clear out a place for my hammock. The Cottonwoods were either too small (4â€Â