snake river scenic float trips



( intro music ) the last time i came here, i walked 90 miles across the dry, forgotten river channel. but in the spring of 2014, something happened.


snake river scenic float trips, a river of sand became wet once again, and the first time the colorado river kissed the sea in nearly in two decades. we can bring a river back to life, if we try.


male voice over: river colorado. ( applause ) pete mcbride: thank youvery much for coming. it's a great honor to be here. about 20 years ago,i had the... the unusual experience to walkinto the building next door and try to sell them a story, which ended upbeing my first story with national geographic.


it was a story of taking a biplane from london to cape town in south africa. we re-enacted the first african air-passage. they did it in 1920, we did it in 1998. they did it in 43 days in 1920, we did it in 58 in 1998. ( laughter ) but it gave me a very unusual perspective, not only on african aviation,but on rivers.


i got to fly upthe length of the nile river, the longest in the world. so, i came home and... and started talkingto my father actually who got me pointedin this direction, of looking at the colorado river. a river that i actually grew up on, but i didn't really know it that well, to be honest. i knew that the grand canyon is there in the middle,


but i really didn't know what happens to the end of the river below the grand canyon and where does the river actually go, where does it end. and as a native coloradan, who grew up right there, in the roaring fork valley, i thought it would be an interesting story to follow this river. so, i came back home. i came back to a field i spent a lot of time in.


i'd come every summer back home and work on the ranch and move sprinklers like this for flood irrigation systems and i started wondering about the water and where this goes. and how long will it take this water to actually go to the sea, so i followed it. i first started up in the mountains where i live. this is pyramid peak, 14,000 feet. i have actually skied this peak,


and i skied it in june when there was nine feet of snow. i took this photo on christmas day two years ago, there is three inches of snow. so, we are facing some climate change issues and we are also seeing some influence coming in from the west to us. this is snowmass peak,


not far from where i live, also 14,000 feet, and you see that brown tint, that's actually dust that's been blown in from the west because of more development basically through road constructions, some oil and gas. and what happens is it createsa trans-evaporation process where the particles in the... of the dust actuallyretain the sun's heat and melt the snow up faster.


so, we are losing a runoffat a much faster rate, they saywe're losing the river, about 5% of the river due to this trans-evaporationprocess. and the colorado is not the largest or the longest river in the us. it is actually seventh. but many would argue that it's the most loved and litigated.


this is near kremmling, colorado and if you look at the top of the frame that's looking due east, i'm looking at the continental divide, you look what appears to be a healthy river, but in fact, this river is actually flowing at about 50% of its traditional capacity. there are 22 trans-basin diversion projects, basically tunnels that you can't see


that are going underneath the continental divide, in the top of the frame, and taking water to denver, boulder, fort collins, colorado springs... now what's interestingabout this is that water goes over there,that's great, they need the water,but that water never returns to the colorado river basins.so we are taking water that would end upin the pacific,


and we are takingand putting it in the atlantic. so, we are seeing changesright out at the gates. they did a study on the colorado river and just the value it brings from recreation. they've came back with a staggering figure, that is $ 26 billion that this river produces, in revenue through fishing, rafting, picnicking, any form of recreation on the length of the river that runs 1500 miles.


if you put thaton the forbes 500 list, it would be ahead ofprogressive insurance and us airways. so, a river with water in ithas value. most of that water goes towards agriculture. so, i focused a lot on the aerial perspective, in part, because i think it gives us a perspective of where we've been and where we are going with our landscape,


but also because i had this crazy guy on the right, who i could hire at a rather affordable price, my father. so, as we follow this river, we are going to come into utah, beautiful landscape and you can see how this river is sculpting through it. this castle valley. and if you get on the ground, in canyonlands national park area, mesa arch. a remarkable landscape that's been shaped with


the uplift of the colorado plateau and the colorado river of course, helping carve it out and create this magnificent architecture. you could do about a 90 degree turn, go over another ridge and you would look over on this. it is a potash mine. we actually need potash for fertilizer. i have nothing against potash but this image i used to represent industry,


because industry is becoming a large straw on colorado river. potash may not bethat terrible, but oil and gas recentlyhas been picking up significantlyin this part of the world. there was recentlya water auction for... during drought and all the farmers wentto the water auction to see if they can get more waterthrough this drought year.


and they were outbidon every single count by oil and gas companies. and one oil andgas well can use one to five milliongallons of water. just downstream is one of my favorite images. i took this with my father. we had to actually break into the airport because to get here at sunrise, the airport opened at sunrise,


so i had to crawl over the fence and let him in. but this is a double oxbow naturally occurring, and just downstream there, you come into, what i call the seas of the desert'. this is lake powell, the change is dramatic the ecology of this river. they say that it receives up to 1400 cargo ship containers a day of silt and sediment, that's basically the memory


of the colorado rockies falling down and it gets deposited in this reservoir which affects the fish and ecology downstream. and we are quickly finding outhow much sediment is in there and what's happening becausethe lake is dropping rapidly. we are in our second decadeof drought and that white line is the bathtub ring on lake powell. it's about 75 feet. lake powell is now at 51% capacity.


if you go there right now, it's dropping one to six inches a day. and that's the dam, glen canyon dam. it producesa 120 million dollars in revenue through its hydroelectric program. it goes back to federal programs for transmission lines and actually native fish species programs downstream. we are getting to such a point of


drought and water shortage that we are approaching what is called 'dead pool' when there isn't enough water to go over through the turbines and spin those turbines. now just below that dam, starts the grand canyon. it is 277 miles of one of the most enchanted places on the planet that i've seen. it's like going to another world of geology and magic.


of course, it is not real anymore to some degree because this river fluctuates through the habits and needs of man as we have hydroelectric demands with air conditioning and what not. it's called... as a whole the grand canyonis called as 'america's rooflesscathedral'. there is a proposal out there right now


to build a 1.4 mile long tramway, it will descend 1300 feet and carry 4000 people a day into the grand canyon. now, those of the people thatdon't like to hike or boat, may think that's great. however, it is also a sacredconfluence right there. believed to be sacredby the hopi and the zuni and some of the navajo, so it is creatinga big controversy


and we are going to seethat play out in the next few years. this is the humpback chub. they've basically been swimming in this river for 6000 years. and now there is only about 6000 of them left, because they like warm water and once we put that dam and of course it is the cold water coming up through the dam, so they've retreated


to this little confluence, it's milky color because of its high calcium content. there's four species of endangered fish left, two have already gone extinct. this is nankoweap point. and those are the granaries of the puebloans that have been there since 1100 a.d. and so many of the native americans who live around the grand canyon,


there are actually 11 tribes that surround the grand canyon national park, and they believe that this is where they came from and where they go. this is their spirit world. and just to give youa little idea behind capturingsome of these images, i conceived this imageabout five years ago, when i went down there onanother trip,


but you have to...first you have to get a permit to get down there.you get that, then you go downon the river trip, then you have to securea camp site near the spot becauseyou can't reserve those, it's 'first come first serve'. then you have to hopefullytime your permit lines up with the full moon,then you have to go up with some,some high powered spotlights


because you can't go upto the granary, so you've got to shine themon a very specific tripod. and hope it all lines upand boom! that's what sometimesone image can take. now, we may go throughwhooping and hollering as touristsin the grand canyon, but there are many peoplewho take it very seriously. this is a havasupai elder who has come down. i happened to go down there this last spring


and it just coincided with the hopi, zuni, navajo and hualapai spiritual trips. that's partially funded by that money coming upstream from the glen canyon dam. so, this is a big deal and of course, i asked him, 'what do you think about all these people hooting and hollering and having parties in the grand canyon?' he says, 'well, there's nothing i can do about it, but i just hope you respect it.'


in 1903, president roosevelt came to the south rim of this canyon. it's on the right side, you can see the south rim and in the very right corner up there and he says, 'leave it as it is. the ages have been at work on this and man can only mar it.' and i think we've done a pretty good job, but the threats are definitely looming


in the distance to mar it. there's new developmentthat wants to be built up all around the grand canyon,there's water challenges, there's this tramway. uranium mines have been tryingto get in there for a while, they've been fended offfor about 20 years. but it's somethingthat's not going to go away anytime soon if we don't keepa close eye on it. the river on the other hand,


we may have not done the best job of maintaining it through the canyon. now the water color here is emerald green, it looks beautiful, but it is not very natural, and it just represents how we have changed the dynamic of this river and of course that clear waters eroding a lot of natural sand and sediment. now, this is one of the most storied rapids, this is called the v-wave, if you can get through here


and not lose your oars, you're in great shape. i went through it with my brother in these boats that some boatmen described as being built of papier-mã¢chã© and baby bird bones. this is the 'oh crap' face of here we go into the v-wave, i'm on the left, my brother on the right, he's got more of an 'oh crap' face. this is 'oh god, we've just... plan a has just gone sideways,


because we've just lost an oar, we're going to plan b'. this is 'oh we are going to die' because we are going into the big kahuna wave now with no oars. we're taking this little tiny flimsy wooden boat, through the middle of this giant rapid and we realize we're about to flip. so... we thought we were dead.


but we made it somehow.( laughter ) of course we smiled at the end. it was the first time i got to show my brother the grand canyon, it was a highlight for me because this river on some levels, there's an expression called, 'river capture'. where one watershedwill basically out-erode another oneand capture its water


and take it with you. and essentiallywhat has happened to me is i feel like the colorado riveron some level has captured my curiosityand part of my soul, so i keep going back,so it was a real treat to share with my brother. when you leave the grand canyon you come to lake mead, hoover dam. you've all heard of this remarkable piece of engineering


that they built in 1935, it used to be the largest dam in the world. and just like upstream, but even worse at this point, lake mead is now at its all-time record low, 39%. las vegas,which sits next to lake mead and myself includedwhen i started this project, many of us point to las vegas, the oasis dream,the big problem. their water intake is so closeto the water level now,


lake mead, that they areactually spending a billion dollars to constructthe third straw. they are basically buildinga bathtub drain, from under here, all the wayback over to vegas. because if the water levelgets any closer to their intake valve, by law they might not be able touse it. so, we are fearing some very significant changesin infrastructure.


vegas at the same time, which is very interestingto me when i learned this, they wrote a law of the riverin 1922 which basically divvied upthe colorado river into seven states, they cut it upinto different pies, and nobody... vegas didn'treally exist in 1922, so nobody expected there to bethis booming oasis dream. so, they didn't give themvery much water. so, vegas is now forced to use their water very wisely.


they recycle a lot of their fountains and pools, they do mandatory pool coverings, a lot of fountains are grey water, they've been taking the smart-scaping,zero-scaping to another level. they realized 70%of their water from the colorado river is going to people's front lawns, so they started a program where they actually pay people


$ 2 a square foot, and it is now a $ 1.50, to tear out their front lawn. i took that first picture at 8 in the morning. i took that picture same day at 11. crew came in, ripped out the lawn, gave the guy a check, and adios! and the hope of course, is that the oasis dream that many of us may love and enjoy will be able to continue on some level but also


the oasis dream for critters like this, the rocky mountain toad, that had a love affair with my camera when i was looking for humpback chub, wouldn't leave me alone, they'll have water too. the gila river downstream, this was taken in 1936. one of the last tributaries of the colorado. that's today. that was taken by my friend jon waterman,


who paddled the length of the colorado river. and then we come back down into yuma, arizona, right before the colorado river crosses over the us-mexican border. a massive amount of lettuce production here, agriculture throughout the region, and so if you are sitting there saying, 'this is interesting, pete,colorado river is beautiful maybe i'll go raft it one day.


but i mean, come on,i've got plenty of water here in washington d.c.,why does this concern me?' it actually concerns all of uson some level because every piece of lettuce that you buyin the grocery store in the months ofdecember and january come from the colorado river. that's the only placethat supplies the nation. it's basicallythe nation's salad bowl


comes fromthis part of the world. so, we all eatthe colorado river whether you areaware of it or not. i grew up on a cattle ranch, i'm not opposed to the production of beef, if it is done wisely. i don't know if this is the wisest method... having feedlots in the imperial valley where it's 128 degrees.


so i think we need to start moving towards smart agriculture. there are also someantiquated laws where if you don't useyour water, you will lose it. so, there are farmersin this area that are growing five-six cuttings of alfalfa and actually shipping itto asia, because they don't want tolose their water even thoughthey don't need the money.


so, in some wayswe are actually exporting some of our water in the form ofalfalfa to asia. and then you come after... to the last major dam of the river. there are 12 major dams on the river. this is the morelos dam. this is u.s-mexican border, for 22 miles the river becomes the border and runs due south.


and if you go below the dam, which i did with jon when he was paddling, just two miles into mexico, you come to the end of the river. ben franklin said, 'we learn the value of water when the well runs dry'. this is the well running dry. this is what it looked like when i was paddling through. jon waterman:what is this stuff?


pete mcbride: all i know isi'm not that excited to get into this water. jon waterman:so this is what's become of the mighty colorado? pete mcbride: yeah. so, we packed up our boats.. 90 miles shy of the sea and started walking. there were many times where i wondered why the hell i was carrying a boat on my back.


pete mcbride: the coloradoriver has run to the sea of cortez for 6 million years,not a single drop of it has run naturallyto the sea since 1998. it was one of the largest desert estuariesin north america. this is the westernflank of it over on the baja side. 3000 square miles, jaguars, cottonwood forests, it took me two days to find this image.


that's what we've changed it to. some people say, 'well,who cares about the delta, you know, who... why should weput water down there?' but i... can pretty muchguarantee this guy cares. 20,000 cocopah indians used to live in the delta. this was their traditional fishing grounds. this guy learned to fish here. it's dried up in his lifetime. and i'm pretty sure if this happened to my river


in my backyard, i'd probably feel similar, feel frustrated. just to give you an idea where that is exactly, this little red circle, it's in the center, that's the delta. that little frappuccino pit i was paddling, it is on the middle bottom-third of that circle. so, i think if these rivers often as arteries, they help connect communities, they actually help connect wildlife.


they support our agriculture. they keep salinity in our water table at bay. potentially you know, they connect our human spirit on some level. so, i think the colorado today is a very powerful metaphor on so many levels because it shows us what happens when we ask too much of a limited resource, it disappears.


i ended here in the delta. this last spring there was an experimental pulse flow, thanks to the hard work of very, very many from a vast group of people and this is what became of the river. this was actually less than 1% of the river's annual flow. it was mexico's water, it was part of a new agreement called 'minute 319'. very interesting because, uh,


mexico basically hadan earthquake that fracturedits irrigation system. they said, 'we need some help.we can't store water anywhere. it is time to work togetherfor a change'. so, they went to the u.s. and this is two miles in this about where that frappuccino pit was. beautiful scene of people coming out from all over mexico.


not only restoring the vegetation, but the spirit of the river. anyway, mexico said 'we need help'and u.s said 'alright'. so, they came backto the table and said 'alright, we are goingto renegotiate mexico's water, they do get an allocation,but now they are gonna make sure thatmexico's allocation is shares in surplusand shortage


and that they will dedicatesome water to the delta. so, this was that waterdedicated. it was released foreight weeks to see how it did to try to spawnsome of the seedlings, cottonwoods, and willows,and it was pretty remarkable. we took paddle boardsand canoes all the way across it. in 1922, aldo leopold took a canoe across the delta and he wrote,


'the river was nowhereand everywhere', for he could not--for he could not decide which of a hundred greenlagoons to take to the sea. beautiful line that i've used over and over at water talksabout the colorado river, and i never ever thought that i would actually see thisand paddle across a green lagoonin the delta. so, it is very encouragingto see


that we can make a change. ( music ) male 1: we gonna have to goover that. pete mcbride: not good. this is an improvement. i swear. you're moving. ( speaking in spanish ) this is called moving an inch...an hour. bushwhacking this terrain


in a trickle of water with the paddleboard is an upgrade. trust me. what are we doing here? my backyard river, the colorado... i have been chasing its flow for years. most people think of it as that loved architect of the grand canyon, carrying the memory of the rocky mountains near my home in colorado.


but it is different down here at the end, where severe plumbing on this southwest lifeline have sucked it dry, so we can eat baby spinach in january. two countries decided to work together to restore a delta. the hands of many lifted the gates on the morelos dam and released a temporary pulse of water.


less than 1% of the river's flow. mexico's allocated agua into the delta to see what happened. a river of sand became wet once again. and a fiesta ignited down downstream. locals celebrated the return of their rio. the native species exploded with seeds. the river party only lasted a few weeks though. partake? we did what any river lover would do.


we floated it, by canoe, paddleboard, and eventually slogged it by foot, crossing the shallows. i believethis is the colorado, it is hard to tellbecause generally the rio colorado had no water. but as you can see, it is a pretty friggingnice river right now. male 2: it looks amazing.


usually,this part of the river is completely dry,it's sand always, and it has been many yearslike that. now on may 7th, after nine 13-hour long paddling days... male 3: i'm so tired,i can barely stand. we crossed 90 miles of the delta and reached the sea. it was the first and only paddleboard crossing


of the new delta. and the first time the colorado river kissed the sea in nearly two decades. on many levels it was a preposterous journey, foolish, or even wrong headed... i don't feel likei'm getting anywhere. it was also beautiful and symbolic. that with a relative trickle,


snake river scenic float trips

we can bring a river back to life...


if we try. ( applause ) ( outro music )


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