11.07.2015 Views

fall 11 / 24:3 - Grand Canyon River Guides

fall 11 / 24:3 - Grand Canyon River Guides

fall 11 / 24:3 - Grand Canyon River Guides

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

grabbed…they had a chain around the front that youcould barely get your fingers on…Ted grabbed mywrist, and I remember looking up at him and saying,“Don’t let go of me!” And he pulled me back in. Sothat’s a vivid memory—But the one that really hit mewas we got to the Little Colorado, and when the water’sthat high, it pushed all the Little Colorado up intothis unbelievable, blue…It was June, right? So beforethe rains. It was just this incredible blue color. And itwas like this huge Olympic pool. There wasn’t a rockshowing, and we motored a ways up and parked. Wewere standing there with these little orange boats, littleorange Rogue <strong>River</strong>s—didn’t know it at the time—butthey came puttin’ on through, comin’ on down theriver. And there’s just this bronzed, blond goddess inone of these boats, and she’s got these four guys in herboat, and they kind of waved at us, and she went onout. I just remember looking at her and saying, “Wow, Iwanna do that!” And that was Fritz.* * *Yeah. I loved the trip. It was a six-day trip. I rememberseeing those little rowing boats and thinking, “I wannado that!” I did ask Ted Hatch for a job. I was, what,twenty-three? He did the sort of metaphorical equivalentof patting me on the head and saying, “Thankyou. Now run along and be a good girl.” I wrote to himand asked for a job, and luckily he didn’t give me one,because he might have, and then who knows, I mightnot have ever discovered rowing.Steiger: Do you remember who the crew was onthat trip?Sadler: Jim and Jane Blackburn were the two thatreally come to mind. I think they were from Alabama.They were the ones who were running the boat I wason most of the time. And there was a woman namedBarbara. A guy named Dennis—he just had this wildred hair. I remember him because he had a t-shirt thatI think it was one of those geology pun t-shirts thatsaid something like “subduction leads to orogeny.” Andthen I don’t remember the other two, but there were sixcrew. I still have a picture of all thirty-some odd of ussitting for our group photo on the boats. Oh my God,that was a lot of people! I mean, I didn’t think anythingof it at the time. It was kind of like, “Oh, isn’t this howall the trips are?” I remember we got to the end, and weflew out at Whitmore. I’m in my town jeans and mytown shirt, and we’re waiting for the helicopter, andI…God, it makes me sad even now to think about it. Ijust could not stop crying. I went down by the water,and I was kind of pretending to wash my hands. I wasstanding on a rock and kneeling by the water, and Iremember I was just crying, like, “I do not want toleave. I have to come back here.” So that was my firstexperience with the river. I mean, I know a lot of boatmenhave had the same experience, either started out aspassengers, or brought along by an older brother, sister,friend, whatever. I know it hits everybody—or a lotof us—just the same way, just right between the eyes,like, “This is what you’re supposed to be doing.” In allhonesty, I don’t think anything ever in my life has beenas clear as that, before or since.Steiger: Yeah, me too: three-boat motor trip, criedand cried and cried at the end. I didn’t think I wasgonna be doing it for the rest of my life. I did think, “I’dsure like to do that again.”Sadler: Yeah, I didn’t think of it as a career, I justfigured it’d be something I’d really like to do. Andthen you start and you can’t imagine doing anythingelse. But when you start, you’re in your early twenties—who’sthinking about the rest of your life in yourearly twenties?! Two years from now was the rest ofyour life. I mean, all you know is that you’re loving thismore than anything. You’re truly, incredibly, amazinglyhappy, and so just keep going. Then all of a suddenyou’ve been doing it twenty years, or thirty years…orforty years!Steiger: Yeah. And then one day they don’t let youdo it anymore. Then you’re really fucked!Sadler: So you’ve got to find something else to dowhile you’re doing it. Yeah. So that’s my not-so-thumbnailsketch.* * *Luckily for the entire <strong>Grand</strong> <strong>Canyon</strong> boating community,Christa Sadler has managed to find plenty of other stuffto do throughout her boating career. In addition to workingfor CanX, azra, Expeditions, oars/Dories, Tour Westand others, Christa did a stint as president of gcrg in themid-’90s, and published a collection of stories written by<strong>Grand</strong> <strong>Canyon</strong> boatmen: “There’s This <strong>River</strong>…” thatnow gets read aloud from or handed out on the river on adaily basis. Another book: “Life in Stone,” is a classic texton the fossil history of the entire Colorado Plateau.This Adopt-a-Boatman interview was recorded in twosessions—September <strong>24</strong>, 2007 and February 8, 20<strong>11</strong>.* * *Well, I was born in California and grew up kind of allover northern and southern California. My mom wasa librarian, which now seems remarkably appropriate.My dad was a businessman, he did lots of differentthings. For a lot of my life he would be a general man-boatman’s quarterly review page 29

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!