What to pack when rafting the Grand Canyon

Don’t forget these essentials.

The Grand Canyon is a harsh environment, especially in summer when temperatures surpass 100 degrees Fahrenheit. And if you spend a week rafting there, it will feel even more extreme as you switch between hot air and cold water. Add camping into the mix, and you’ll definitely start missing the comforts of home.

I recently spent a week on a Grand Canyon rafting trip with Wilderness River Adventures. The company provides an excellent packing list, but some of us followed it more closely than others. I talked to my raftmates about what they were glad they’d brought with them — and what they were sorry to have left out of their dry bags.

What it’s like to go on an exhilarating Grand Canyon rafting adventure

It’s a grand old time.

An eight-ton motorized raft chugged down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. Inside, I sat with two new Australian friends. Our seats were called “the bathtub” — and it’s obvious why. Every minute or two, we entered another set of giant, heaving rapids. We shivered in puddles of water, even though the air temperature was about 100 degrees Fahrenheit. We were also shrieking, laughing our heads off, and getting sillier by the minute as we tried kicking the rapids away from us with our soaked shoes.

This is what a typical summer day rafting through the Grand Canyon with Wilderness River Adventures (WRA) is like. Our seven-day trip started at Lees Ferry and covered 188 miles of sometimes roiling, sometimes calm river. We had the best imaginable view of the Grand Canyon — from the bottom up. We listened to the river all day and night as we stargazed, marveled at waterfalls, and spotted cute lizards doing pushups.

Rafters looking out at a river between canyon rock walls.
A calm stretch of water. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Could a Grand Canyon rafting trip be for you? Read on to find out.

Commercial vs. private

Potential guests must choose between joining a commercial group or getting a private permit and bringing their own raft. For most people, a commercial tour is the better option. The Colorado River rapids are huge. Unless you’re an experienced rafter and a wiz at reading currents, don’t even think about leading your own trip. Plus, permits are hard to get. If you enter the private rafting lottery system, you might wait years for your chance.

If you opt for commercial, there are a few options. I went with the cushiest choice — a seven-night trip on a motor-driven raft. The 35-foot-long raft included two inflatable pontoons to help keep it afloat. WRA also offers oar-powered boats, either rowed by the guide or by all the participants. The company’s trips last from three and a half days to two weeks. The shortest trips entail a grueling 10-mile hike into the canyon to meet the rafts.

A person standing near three rafts parked on a river in a red rock canyon.
The Wilderness River Adventure rafts, parked for a lunch break. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

“It has been voted one of the number one outdoor recreation vacations in the world for multiple years running,” Richard Adkins, our trip leader, told me. “It’s crazy because it’s a very small number of people who can actually do this. We only let 18-23,000 people come through here a year.” 

Adkins is in his 29th year as a raft guide, so he has shared canyon views with thousands of people. “The way to see the Grand Canyon is definitely from the bottom up, instead of from the top down. People want to experience the whitewater but they also want to see the Grand Canyon. And a lot of people just want to say that they did it.”

A typical day on the Colorado River

Our two-raft party could accommodate up to 24 guests and four guides. My group had only 17 guests, so there was lots of space to spread out. We ranged in age from 10 to early 70s and included four Australians, two Canadians, and 11 Americans.

On the first day, a bus took us from the rafting company office in Page, Arizona, to our put-in spot at Lees Ferry. There, we had the first of several orientations, focusing on how to get on and off the raft and where and where not to sit. We learned about the wettest places on the boat (the bathtub and the shower, the spot on the front side where water shoots up between the raft and pontoon and comes down on your head) and the driest (elevated seats in the back called the chicken coop).

A rocky canyon.
Nonstop scenery in the Grand Canyon. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Our days on the river started early — coffee call was at 5:30 a.m., and we were on the raft every day by 7:30 a.m. The days began cool and shaded by the canyon’s enormous rock walls. Many of us wore rain gear to protect us from the cold rapids until the day heated up. 

We’d cruise along for a couple of hours, alternating between rapids and flat water, gazing at the canyon’s incredible rock formations. Each day included pit stops (where we’d look for discreet places to pee in the river) and a lunch stop where the staff expertly set up a table with elaborate sandwich fixings, chips, and cookies. Some days featured optional side hikes to waterfalls, our guides offered bite-sized bits of geology and history info here and there. Sometime in the afternoon, Adkins would choose our camp for the night. Since campsites are on a first-come, first-served basis, we never knew where we’d end up.

Three kids standing under a waterfall.
Getting drenched in a waterfall. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Camp life

Once we arrived at camp, everybody staked out the best campsites. Some campgrounds had areas where a couple or family could have a bit of privacy. At others, people were lined up in a row or otherwise close to their neighbors. 

After choosing a site, we made fire lines off the raft for a massive unloading. We passed the cots, camp chairs, dry bags, and kitchen gear from person to person until it was all on the shore. At our campsites, we set up rickety blue cots and made our beds with a sheet and a sleeping bag. We had some free time to read, write, socialize, and huddle under bushes and tiny rock ledges for shade. 

As we descended into the canyon, it got hotter and hotter. Adkins’s advice on climate control was: “If you get too hot, get in the river. If you get too cold in the river, get out.” There was a lot of getting in and out of the river. We also experienced a lot of sand, as frequent sandstorms blew it into every crevice.

Two blue cots and camping materials in the middle of a sandy desert canyon.
Home sweet campsite. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

At mealtimes, the crew cooked amazing dishes. These are some hardworking people. I don’t know how they run the rafts all day, keep guests safe, and then whip up elaborate meals in the camp kitchen, from fish tacos to Dutch oven brownies. And they accommodated many diets. Our trip had a vegan, a vegetarian, a pescatarian, a couple of lactose-intolerant people, and a diabetic. Nobody went hungry.

Two people stirring pots on a stovetop outdoors.
Guides Shyanne Yazzie and Jared Castro cooking a delicious meal. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Elimination was also a big topic of discussion around the camp. All solid waste must be packed out, so we had mini toilets that had to be packed on and off the boat at every campsite. Also, we weren’t allowed to pee anywhere except directly into the river or in a bucket at camp. This was to prevent the campsites from smelling like giant litter boxes.

A portable toilet and yellow bucket by a river in a canyon.
Camp toilets with a view. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

In the evenings, we all pulled our camp chairs into a circle. Our group included a family of seven — three siblings, a spouse, two kids, and a teenage cousin — with a long family history of rafting the Grand Canyon. This was the first time for the kids but the second to fourth time for the four adults. 

Fellow traveler Megan Dukes first came as a child and fondly remembers having a family adventure together. “My favorite part was the evenings when we sat around, and I got to hang out with my cousins that I don’t get to see that often,” she said. “And being on the boat with my family.”

A circle of folding chairs and people outdoors in a sandy area in front of a canyon.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

After a few days, everybody felt like family. Spurred on by our youngest members, the evenings were soon full of fun. We faced off in a cutthroat card game called Egyptian rat screw and a roleplaying game called Ultimate Werewolf. 

Highlights of a Grand Canyon rafting trip

Rafting through the Grand Canyon is an incredible experience. For me, the scenic highlight was a side trip to the Little Colorado River, which is a milky aqua color. We parked the rafts and walked a short distance to where the Colorado meets the Little Colorado. You can see where they connect when the aqua stops and turns dark green. We put our life jackets on like diapers (very inelegant) so they’d cushion our bums as we floated down the Little Colorado. It was some of the most beautiful water I’ve ever seen.

Clear blue water stream through a rocky canyon.
The amazing aqua water of the Little Colorado River. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

My guides were another highlight. I stayed on the raft piloted by Shyanne Yazzie, who is part of the Diné (aka Navajo) tribe. Her swamper, or assistant, was Kim Bighorse, who is Apache. Eleven tribes once lived in the Grand Canyon, Yazzie told me, though only the Havasupai remain. She and Bighorse greatly enriched the trip by sharing family stories and the traditional interp. Today, most of the rapids that bear people’s names commemorate white guys, so obviously, some stories are missing. I felt lucky to be guided through the Grand Canyon by Yazzie and Bighorse.

Then there were the stars. I slept better than I expected on my cot, but it still wasn’t super comfortable. So, I’d often wake up in the middle of the night. For a moment, I’d forget where I was. Then, I’d open my eyes and be blown away by the stars, moonlight, and enormous canyon walls.

As Yazzie told me, “I feel like everybody should come down and raft the Grand Canyon at least once in your life. Because it will change your life and it will also open your eyes to new possibilities and adventure. Take a pause in your busy life and just come down and enjoy this grand beauty that not a lot of people get to see.”

A person standing with arms raised in the middle of a canyon.
Shyanne Yazzie, guide extraordinaire, in her beloved Grand Canyon. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Social media stunned after No. 2 UCLA eliminated from NCAA softball tournament

Social media reacts to the stunning elimination of the No. 2 UCLA Bruins from the NCAA Softball tournament.

Upsets happen all the time in the NCAA Tournament. Whether it’s basketball, baseball or lacrosse we see Davids beat Goliaths all the time in collegiate postseason play.

However, what we don’t see all the time is the No. 2 seed in the tournament not making it out of the opening weekend, especially in a double-elimination format.

But that’s what happened to the No. 2 UCLA Bruins this weekend. After losing to Grand Canyon on Friday night, the Bruins were upset by the Liberty Flames on Saturday in a stunning 2-1 loss.

The last time UCLA was eliminated from the regional round of the tournament was 2013. That was the third season in a row in which it failed to qualify for the super regional.

The stunning upset opens the door for San Diego State to advance if it beats Liberty in the regional final on Sunday. The winner would face the winner of the Salt Lake City regional between Utah and Ole Miss.

Social media was buzzing Saturday evening at the elimination of the UCLA Bruins and here are some of the best reactions.

Former Vols’ assistant Gregg Wallis previews first season as Grand Canyon’s head coach

Former Vols’ assistant Gregg Wallis discusses his upcoming first season as Grand Canyon’s baseball head coach. Grand Canyon and Tennessee will play Feb. 18 in the MLB Desert Invitational.

The Vols will play in the 2023 MLB Desert Invitational in Arizona Feb. 17-19. The MLB Desert Invitational field will consist of Tennessee, Arizona, Fresno State, Grand Canyon, Michigan State and San Diego.

2023 MLB Desert Invitational: Times, TV info for Vols’ season-opening games

Tennessee’s second game in the MLB Desert Invitational will take place Feb. 18 versus Grand Canyon.

Gregg Wallis was hired as Grand Canyon’s head coach in July 2022. He replaces Andy Stankiewicz who was hired as USC’s head coach.

Wallis served as an assistant coach at Grand Canyon from 2014-22.

He came to Grand Canyon from Tennessee after serving as the Vols’ director of baseball operations and volunteer assistant coach from 2011-13.

“I got here in the summer of 2013 and I have been here until this summer,” Wallis told Vols Wire of becoming Grand Canyon’s head coach. “I actually took a job at Ohio State for three weeks with Coach (Bill) Mosiello, who was at the University of Tennessee with me. Coach Stankiewicz got the SC job and Grand Canyon called me to come back here, so I have been here 10 years with a little three week stay at Ohio State.”

As an assistant coach at Grand Canyon, Wallis and the Antelopes advanced to NCAA regional-play in 2021 and 2022.

“We have gone to back-to-back regionals,” he said. “We went to the Stillwater regional last year and ran into Arkansas, obviously they were playing well.

“The program has been moving well since transitioning to Division-1. The year I left Tennessee, I came here and it was a transitioning program. We were going from Division-II to Division-I my first year.”

Wallis discussed his team ahead of the upcoming season. The Antelopes will play San Diego on opening day Feb. 17 ahead of its matchup with Tennessee.

“We have a good core of guys that have played here for awhile,” Wallis said. “We did lose some key pieces like everyone does. The core of our team has played a lot together. A lot of them were part of our first regional run — Jacob Wilson, Tyler Wilson, Elijah Buries, Cade Verdusco, Dustin Crenshaw — those guys were all freshmen during our first regional run. They have been to back-to-back regionals and are all juniors, so we do have a veteran presence.”

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Charges pending as influencer hits golf ball (and loses driver) into Grand Canyon, forcing National Park Service to ask silly question

The incident led to the National Park Service posting a silly, but an apparently necessary question on social media.

After knocking a golf ball into the Grand Canyon and appearing to lose her driver, an influencer who posted a video of the episode on TikTok now has charges and a court appearance pending.

That led to the National Park Service posting what appears to be a silly, but apparently necessary question on social media:

Do we really need to say, ‘don’t hit golf balls into the Grand Canyon?’

According to a post from the NPS:

On October 26, an individual posted a video to her personal TikTok page showing her hitting a golf ball and throwing a golf club into the canyon near Mather Point. Members of the public helped identify the individual’s social media account.

On October 27, Grand Canyon Law Enforcement identified, located and contacted the individual responsible for the incident. Charges and a court appearance for the individual are pending.

The video was initially posted on TikTok and has since been pulled down, but was preserved on Reddit.

Influencer hitting golf ball and losing golf club into the Grand Canyon from NationalPark

The canyon is 277 miles long and varies from four to 18 miles wide. The Colorado River cuts more than a mile deep at points. Myriad side canyons form other worlds, some filled with lush vegetation, others relentlessly arid landscapes.

So while it might seem like the space is vast, NPS went on to explain why this is unacceptable.

Throwing objects over the rim of the canyon is not only illegal but can also endanger hikers and wildlife who may be below.

 

https://www.facebook.com/GrandCanyonNationalPark/posts/pfbid0REgaE8R8TGtHpqXRAH2x5QLwE5hwp5AqbphASgmsVM6TszuHPj5hMKxqQPmbxcFul

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‘Unusual’ virus outbreak hits Grand Canyon campers and rafters

Watch out for contaminated water on your next Grand Canyon trip.

For over 150 Grand Canyon visitors, a trip into the wilderness has resulted in norovirus. Often spread via contaminated water or contact with an infected person, the virus has left many rafters and campers with symptoms such as stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. The biggest spike in infections so far occurred during April and May, and control measures implemented in early June seem to be helping lower reported cases. 

To prevent further cases, the National Park Service (NPS) released a report on the outbreak and precautions visitors can take. The report’s suggested practices to avoid norovirus include refraining from shared food and drink, regularly washing your hands, and only drinking filtered and chemically disinfected water.

The Grand Canyon.

“On rafts and in camps, norovirus can spread quickly. The best way to prevent norovirus is to practice proper hand washing and general cleanliness and ensure the safety of your drinking water,” NPS explained in its report.

Safe access points for water at the park include park-provided water fountains and spigots. It’s also important for visitors participating in water-based activities such as rafting to avoid consuming nearby water.

The Grand Canyon River Outfitters Association (GCROA) is collaborating with the CDC to further investigate the outbreak. As GCROA executive director John Dillon said, “it’s very unusual for us to experience something like this in the backcountry.”

Arkansas vs. Oklahoma State: How to stream and listen to Saturday’s game

Hagen Smith gets the start on the mound as Arkansas faces Oklahoma State in a winner’s bracket contest

The Arkansas Razorbacks got back to their old ways on Friday in the Stillwater Regional opener against Grand Canyon.

The Razorbacks and Antelopes nearly matched each other in hits, but Arkansas did more with their opportunities. Behind a two-home run day by [autotag]Cayden Wallace[/autotag] and a three-RBI performance by [autotag]Michael Turner[/autotag], Arkansas ran away with a 7-1 win over Grand Canyon, snapping a four-game losing streak. 

The most noteworthy item from the game was that Arkansas only used two pitchers, Connor Noland and Kole Ramage, to grab the win, which gives Arkansas more options out of the bullpen over the remainder of the series. Noland threw 7.0 innings in his start, his longest outing since tossing 8.0 innings against Ole Miss on April 29. Kole Ramage closed the game out by working 2.0 innings and striking out three batters.

For Oklahoma State, six Cowboy batters recorded multiple hits in their 10-5 win over Missouri State on Friday night. Jake Thompson recorded three hits while Nolan McLean mirrored Wallace’s performance by hitting two home runs in the game.

Arkansas will give the ball to Hagen Smith on Saturday. Smith, who last started May 14 against Vanderbilt, has two relief appearances in that time. In his last outing, he threw an inning and struck out two batters in the 7-5 loss to Florida in an elimination game of the SEC Tournament.

The Cowboys are expected to throw ace Justin Campbell. The two-time All-American has struck out 133 batters in 94.1 innings pitched, while holding a 9-2 record. Most recently, Campbell struck out ten batters while allowing three hits and a run in Oklahoma State’s 11-1 win over Baylor in the Big 12 Tournament at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas on May 26.

Arms of the Game: Strong outings by Noland, Ramage save bullpen for future

By using just two pitchers in Friday’s 7-1 win over GCU, Arkansas’ pitching options become greater going forward.

When it comes to regional play, where a team can play between three and five games over a four-day stretch, the team that has healthier pitchers and more reliable arms is usually the team that gets out alive.

For Arkansas, the key to future success become clearer after they were able to defeat Grand Canyon, 7-1, in game one of the Stillwater Regional by only using two pitchers.

Grand Canyon, who entered the game with seven players hitting over .300, were limited in production Friday thanks to the strong start by ace [autotag]Connor Noland[/autotag], and by [autotag]Kole Ramage[/autotag] slamming the door over the final three frames.

The Antelopes nearly matched Arkansas in hits, only trailing the Razorbacks 9-8 in the column, but were not able to make those hits count over the stretch of nine innings. The only run of the game scored by Grand Canyon came with one swing of the bat, a solo blast by Tayler Aguilar to put the Antelopes on the board, 5-1 in the 4th inning.

Head coach [autotag]Dave Van Horn[/autotag] says that being able to grab a regional win by not using many pitchers was very important for the future:

To be able to just beat a quality team like Grand Canyon with two pitchers, that was big.

Noland, who tossed his longest outing since throwing for 8.0 innings against Ole Miss on April 29, struck out four batters while allowing just six hits in 7.0 innings of work today in the win. Catcher Michael Turner explains what made Noland’s start so successful:

“I thought he worked ahead in the count and when he does that he’s super effective,” says Turner. “I thought he did a good job today.”

Van Horn also says that he was proud of the way Noland attacked Grand Canyon’s lethal lineup, saying that he was proud of Noland for not letting them frustrate him.

After a solid seven innings on the mound, Arkansas turned the keys over to Kole Ramage. Ramage, who pitched for the first time since the loss to Alabama on May 25 at the SEC Tournament, extending his streak of not allowing a run in now five of his last six outings by tossing three innings of two-hit baseball to close the game.

What is in store for Arkansas on the mound tomorrow? Van Horn says that he is going to wait on the result of the Oklahoma State-Missouri State game, as Arkansas will face the winner of that contest on Saturday at 6 p.m. CDT.

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Solid production at the plate lifts Arkansas over Grand Canyon

The Razorbacks silenced one of the country’s hardest-hitting teams to win game one of the Stillwater Regional

After a week away from competition, the Arkansas Razorbacks seemed to re-discover their groove at the plate, which lifted them to a much-needed opening-day win.

Arkansas jumped ahead early, and coasted the rest of the way in their regional-opener against Grand Canyon, defeating the Antelopes, 7-1 at O’Brate Stadium on the campus of Oklahoma State University.

Arkansas and Grand Canyon nearly matched each other in the hit column, with the Razorbacks holding a 9-8 advantage. But Arkansas got more production from their hits. The Razorbacks scored five runs over the first two innings on four hits to gain a comfortable advantage, while limiting Grand Canyon, who had seven players batting at .300 or better, to just one run.

The Razorbacks needed a great game to erase their recent struggles and a four-game losing skid. They got the hot start that they desperately needed in the bottom of the 1st inning on a solo moon shot by [autotag]Cayden Wallace[/autotag] to give Arkansas the 1-0 lead.

Arkansas extended their lead to 5-0 by the end of the 2nd inning, headlined by a two-RBI single by [autotag]Michael Turner[/autotag]. With two runs across already, and the bases loaded, Turner sent a grounder up the middle to score [autotag]Braydon Webb[/autotag] and [autotag]Brady Slavens[/autotag] to give Arkansas the five-run cushion.

The Antelopes top hitter put his team on the board in the top of the 4th inning. GCU’s Tayler Aguliar cut the Arkansas lead to 5-1 by crushing his 21st home run of the season to right field.

But, as the old saying goes, “the best teams find ways to respond.” That is exactly what Arkansas did in the bottom half of the inning. With two outs in the inning, Wallace drilled his second home run of the game into the Arkansas bullpen to give the Razorbacks the 6-1 advantage.

The final run of the game came in the bottom of the 6th inning on a single by Turner to score Slavens, which was the second time that the duo combined to give Arkansas a run.

Turner and Wallace combined to plate six runs for Arkansas on five hits for Arkansas. Webb, [autotag]Chris Lanzilli[/autotag], [autotag]Peyton Stovall[/autotag], and [autotag]Jalen Battles[/autotag] also collected hits for the Razorbacks.

The biggest takeaway from the game, was that Arkansas used only two pitchers in the game, which boosts their options for later games in the regional. [autotag]Connor Noland[/autotag] allowed just six hits and one earned run in 7.0 innings, and [autotag]Kole Ramage[/autotag] shut the door by tossing three innings of shutout baseball, grabbing three strikeouts in the meantime.

Next up for Arkansas will be the winner of the Oklahoma State-Missouri State game. The two teams will meet Saturday evening at 6 p.m. CDT.

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