Kevin
Fedarko’s book The Emerald Mile was first published in the summer of 2013 and
became an instant hit with river rats and water geeks alike. It is basically the story of the spring of
1983 when the winter snow pack continued to build unexpectedly in the Rocky
Mountains until Memorial Day weekend when it all started to melt all at
once. This snow melt runoff caused
unprecedented flooding along the Colorado River systems that stressed the Bureau
of Reclamation on-stream dams, their engineers and their operators. From this adversity came an opportunity for a
select, almost mythical, group of river runners and guides. They seized the moment, as well as the high
water, and attempted to break the fastest rowing record thru the Grand
Canyon. These stories are seamlessly
woven together in this book to provide an enlightening and entertaining story
of the various, often competing, special interest groups, and stakeholders of the
rivers and the water in the west.
Kevin
Fedarko was originally a staff writer for Time magazine and a contributor to
Esquire and Outside as well as other magazines.
He is a part time river guide in the Grand Canyon which manifests as
respect, almost reverence, for that place and the river that carved it. This may contribute to his over-the-top storytelling
and his fraternity to the culture of the river guides. Every chapter is an adventure, and every
subsequent chapter is an exciting opportunity that is not to be missed. He also translates the complex hydrologic
engineering concepts and numbers into layman terms that flow like water. The book therefore reads itself and is
impossible to put down.
Along with
his complete history of river running and the development of the culture of the
western river guides, Fedarko does equally well in describing the operating
engineers for the Bureau of Reclamation at Glen Canyon Dam. They are first seen anxiously watching car
sized sandstone boulders shooting from the spillway tunnels and then hopefully putting
plywood on the dam’s spillway gates to hold back the relentlessly rising level
of Lake Powell. Only BOR dam operator
Tom Gambel really knows how close we really came to losing the dam that year. From this gripping true story we all become
more aware of the power, persistence and patience of the Colorado River from
this story. As these competing cultures
converge in a crescendo of crisis, Fedarko navigates the storylines like a well
season river guide riding an invisible eddy line.
The story
starts benignly enough at the beginning, where most good stories start. Don Garcia, a captain in the 1540 Coronado
expedition sent to find the seven golden cities of Cibola, accidently stumbles
upon the Grand Canyon and is relatively unimpressed. From that inauspicious first sighting of the
Canyon by a white men, to the courageous first navigation of the Canyon in 1869
by John Wesley Powell, the story proceeds systematically to the dam builders,
conservationist and the river runners of modern times.
Martin
Linton is presented as the enlightened entrepreneur and environmentalist who
perfects the method of running the river in elegant but fragile wooden Dory
boats. He also fights along side David
Brower of the Sierra Club against the dam builders for the preservation of the
canyon. His Dorys are subsequently named
after environmental tragedies and we are introduced to a beaten and battered
boat called the Emerald Mile that is named after an old growth, Redwood clear cut
in Northern California. This bastard
boat is adopted by guru guide Kenton Grua and meticulously repaired and rebuilt
for its epic run.
Along with
his equally skillful and obsessive friends, Steve Reynolds and Rudi Petschek,
Grua ignores the National Park Service closing of the flooded river and, on the
night of June 25 1983, launches the Emerald Mile just below the dam into a
river swollen to almost 100,000 cubic feet per second. This book is unmistakably about this historic
run but it is wrapped nicely in the other side stories of the canyon, the
river, the dams, the conservationists, the guides, the bureaucrats and the
competing interests for the American west.
It could be
the text book of a Western Water 101 course and stands among the great books in
this category along with Cadillac
Dessert by Mark Reisner and Beyond
the 100th Meridian by Wallace Stegnar. The Colorado River is the poster boy for the
exploitation of the waters and the resources of the American West and this book
is a revelation of the complex consequences that arise when you mess with
mother nature, for thrills or for profit.
This is also
the story of hubris and arrogance, confidence and adventure and the surprisingly
counter-intuitive forces of nature on our unsustainable life style. It is a rollicking ride full of the
hyperbole and didactic exaggeration, courage and legend and the conquering of
the gear and the fear that is the lexicon of the river culture. Strap yourself in and prepare for a frantic
and fantastic journey. You will not be
disappointed.
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