The
Naches River (near Yakima, Washington) provides for some fun rafting with subtly
beautiful scenery: the cliffs here are formed from pentagonal interlocked basaltic
columns that rise up to form fortress walls along this stretch of the river. The
bird watching is very good, and the smooth treed hillsides make for interesting
gazes between the frequent Class II and III rapids. The road that travels near
the river is generally out of sight, so the entire length of the river has a secluded
feeling that is punctuated only occasionally by a friendly hand wave from the
owner of a house perched on the shoreline.
Steve
and Brian grinning their opinion of the fun rafting on the Naches. The river's
rapids were interesting enough to keep us all attentive, with digging-deep paddle
strokes and boulder avoidance maneuvers necessary from time to time, but it was
also forgiving enough that we definitely didn't need to be full-on river guides
to get through it. The day before, we took Brian's new raft for its maiden voyage
on the nearby Yakima River. The Yakima is similarly pretty, though the stretch
we took was all meandering flat water: great for practicing our raft-handling
and very peaceful for even better bird watching than on the Naches.