Haris Hardern or Hardern Media agreed to make an little video of me competing at the Tryweryn for the Younguns freestyle event. I came 2nd in this competition but unfortunately I won't be able to attend the rest as I am working for PGL canoeing on the Ardeche in the South of France!
https://vimeo.com/66247363
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Wednesday, 19 June 2013
Friday, 7 June 2013
Conquering The Nile at 17

It just goes to show if you want something enough and keep at it you will get there.
In summer 2012 me and my friend Jacob would talk about future trips on our to do list. Uganda came into the question, we did a bit of research on how easy it would be to organise a trip there in the winter. It all looked pretty simple considering this is Africa, but that's often the view of an optimistic 17 year old.
It was a possible maybe for a few months then surprisingly became a definite when we bought our flight tickets! Jacob decided he wanted to go for 2 months as it was his gap year, I was still at college so I couldn't go for that long but I decided a month of paddling should be enough! I had a message before the trip from Edd asking if he could join us. Three is a nice group size.We booked a 3 day guided course with Kayak the Nile as we didn't want to get out there not knowing anything about the area or the river.
Anyway, when the time came for us to leave home, it all felt very surreal not to come back for a month.
We met Edd at the airport; all of us very excited.
Jacob had booked us into a hotel that night, the taxi picked us up, shoving the kayaks on the roof (not tied on!). The hotel was a site of paradise, and it was one of the cheap ones!
Kayak the Nile picked us up in the morning, this time tying the kayaks down. It was a 3 hour journey to Nile River Explorers (NRE) This is where we had our first taste of the culture of Africa. It was mad! Everywhere was so busy coming through Kampala, it was full of people trying to make a living with whatever they could. The roads are just crazy there! This lasted for about 2 hours then we reached the countryside which was full of farmed fields, lush green vegetation and banana plants with mud huts tucked away in the greenery.

Our first day of white water was upon us, we met our guide David (one of the locals) and drove downstream to below the dam to set off on day 1. I was very surprised when one of the local children started walking off with my kayak, they walk them about 500metres to the river for you and David paid them a bit at the end. They are mighty strong for 6-10 year olds!
We got on the warm yet refreshing water and set off down the first rapids. I have never paddled any big volume rivers so this was a shock to the system, being pushed about a lot and not being able to roll so easily. It was at this point when I was worried I might not be good enough for the river and wondered if I had made a mistake coming here so young.


It generally goes that Club wave works in the lower water in the morning and Nile Special works at higher levels in the evening. The levels change throughout the day due to the dam release. We spent a lot of time here at the waves with the Hairy Lemon Island just 5 minutes downstream.

We knew that the US Jackson Team would be staying on the island with us so we were pretty stoked when EJ and Dane Jackson came up and introduced themselves to us. I had only ever seen these guys in kayaking videos on the Internet so it was very surreal to be paddling with them. There were also a lot of other talented and professional paddlers there such as Nick Troutman, Bren Orton, Clay and Stephen Wright and Martin Knoll.
Day 3 of our guided trip saw us get a lift up to Kalagala rapid. This rapid is parallel to Itanda and Hypoxia, as they are in different channels and are all huge rapids. We decided to wait a bit to paddle it and have some more practice first. We paddled on down to the Lemon using some different channels this time.

After a fews day of full on paddling you definitely feel as if you need a break. Jinja is the nearest big town to the Island at about an hours drive away. We took a taxi that got caught speeding, of course he got away with it somehow, this being Africa. Jinja is a nice town if you visit the right places. Jacob and I found ourselves in a dodgy, run-down machinery market were a man followed me with a metal pole. When I turned round he just smiled at me and laughed. We did find the right market in the end and it's mad in there, you can easily get lost! Jacob had a great shopping list consisting of a mattress, washing bowl, phone, pillow, biscuits, tarp, ruler, needle and thread. He managed to find everything! It was then time for some Westerner food in Flavors Internet Cafe and then off to the Lemon for a sunset Special session.

A lot of our time was spent on the waves just upstream from the Island. Once I had got used to the rope I could actually concentrate on trying to handle this wave! After a few evenings on it I was starting to get bigger bounces and bigger blunts. It's rather amazing, yet annoying, to see some of the pros do tricks you can't do, but they manage without a paddle! I had a few beatdowns on Club wave and was close to swimming a couple of times but luckily it never happened.



I was getting used to the big wave trains by this point and they are so much fun!
Unfortunately Edd didn't make it to this paddle, he was feeling ill so we decided to get to the medical centre in the morning. We went to town while Edd was getting checked out and by the time we went to see if all was finished we were told he'd gone on a boda boda (motorbike taxi) to have a warm bath (he had been craving one). We found him again eventually, although he was unimpressed as the bath wasn't that warm. Luckily he didn't have anything seriously wrong with him so we headed back to the Lemon. Unfortunately he went home a couple of days after as he just wasn't feeling it.
We had heard all of this talk about Itanda so decided to go and see what all of the fuss was about. The Aussies had the same idea so we had a team to run the rapid! We scouted for a long time looking and memorising the line down this monster. In the end me and Jacob said we would go first, we did rock, paper, scissors to see who would have to go first. I lost so went first. We both trekked back to our kayaks and started ferrying across to the lead in. This was definitely the most scared I have ever been before any rapid because I knew if I got it wrong it would not be a fun swim and I would get a lot of down time. Jacob and I decided to train it one after the other about 25 meters apart. I went first, dropping in to the big lead in ramp and capsizing, but rolling up still with time and still on line. You then have to paddle like crazy river right and hit the line just behind Pencil Sharpener, a huge diagonal curling wave, without going in it! Then you have to charge hard right to miss the Cuban which is a big crashing wave/hole. I missed it and Jacob just clipped, getting flipped but was far enough right to wash out of it. The next challenge is to cut behind a nasty hole called Ash Tray and this time charge left to miss another monster of a hole called the Bad Place. Both me and Jacob missed these holes and came out of the rapid alive and still in our boats. It was the best feeling, looking back at what I had just completed successfully, as I always thought this would be way out of my league.

We got out and celebrated with the others. It was now Tom and O's turn. They also both had successful lines even if Tom did overtake O mid rapid. The others portaged with the idea of maybe doing it another day.
As you can imagine, transport over there is pretty hectic. One of the cheapest ways to get around is by boda boda and we used these quite a bit to get up the river and to and from town. We would strap two kayaks onto one boda boda and then both sit on another. They were also by far the most fun form of transport, especially if you're with a big group as they love the race. It's definitely more dangerous than the river! Another cheap way is to use a matatu, this is a Kind of mini bus where they cram as many people inside as possible. And there is the truck to hire out but that's definitely not the most comfortable of rides and takes a long time! We had a lot of arguments about money with drivers but that's all part of the fun, always trying to get the price down as they are charging you 'white peoples' rates.

We did quite a few more river trips while we were there, I did Itanda 3 times in total, all successful! I witnessed a couple of people going straight into the guts of Cuban on the biggest day. One of them managed to roll up in the foam pile and surf it out and the other just got pushed out the back and rolled up just missing Ashtray. I ran Kalagala a total of 5 times I think, again all successful. The big waves just became more and more playful as I got more confident with them.
I would definitely recommend it to any white water kayaker with grade 4 experience and a reliable white water roll. We went at the right time of year as there were so many other paddlers on the island to paddle and party with. It's great for a little winter's retreat to get away from the frozen finger paddling in the UK.
I will definitely be back to Uganda, but not sure when, as I want to focus on some creek boating for a little while.
Thanks a lot for reading!
Jake
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