Yosemite opens in-park paddling to Merced River recreationists


California's Merced River is now open to paddling inside Yosemite National Park.

California’s Merced River is now open to paddling inside Yosemite National Park. Photo by Paul Martzen/American Whitewater



Kayakers and rafters have a new cliff-lined paddling playground in the heart of Yosemite National Park. While California’s Merced River has long been a hotbed of paddling outside the boundaries of the park, paddlers have now gotten the green light for a coveted section within the park as well. Yosemite National Park recently released its new Wild and Scenic Final Comprehensive Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement for California’s Merced River, putting paddling on the same footing as climbing and hiking within the park’s boundaries.


“The big take-home message and biggest coup is [the] park’s treatment of boating,” says American Whitewater’s California stewardship director, Dave Steindorf. “Now they’re treating it as just another way to travel through the landscape, just as backpackers and horsebackers. And the user numbers are in line with other trailhead users.”


The new plan places paddling on equal footing with other park activities by managing visitor numbers similarly. (The percentage of visitors who boat is estimated to be less than five percent, which is comparable to the park’s climber and backpacker use.) The plan considers river segments as “water trails” or backcountry routes, opening new segments to boating for the first time.


What’s all this spell for floaters? Official access to what Steindorf calls the “best one-day river trip you can do anywhere.”


While the traditional 3-mile, calm-water “pool toy” and raft-rental stretch in the heart of the valley remains unchanged user-wise—it still takes floaters from the horse corrals by Stoneman Bridge/Lower River Campground to Sentinel Beach—now an additional 45 private boaters per day will be able to run the river through the entire length of Yosemite Valley, a section that was closed before. The stretch goes 5.5 miles from Sentinel to Phono, including a 2-mile Class I section to the El Cap Bridge and an additional 3.5 miles to Phono, rated Class III–IV. “It’s an incredible section,” says Steindorf. “The rapids are actually a distraction … you just want to sit there and look up all the time. It’s by far the best way to see the valley.”


Merced River

Recreationists will be expected to have the right gear, in good condition, to explore the new in-park sections of the Merced River. Photo by Jose Gil / Shutterstock.com



Steindorf recommends making the trip before Memorial Day to avoid crowds, and says that they’re still working out the details of permit allocations, which will likely be a combination of online and onsite sign-up options. “And bring a bike and ride your shuttle to avoid the extra car fee inside the park,” he says.


Additional kayaking options that are much harder in difficulty have also been opened by the plan; they are still in the park, but outside of the valley. Daily-use limits will range between 10 people per day through the Class V+ Merced Gorge and 50 people per day on the Class IV+ section from El Portal to the park boundary. “The gorge section isn’t for everyone,” Steindorf says. “It starts out as Class V+, and then it gets hard.” Additionally, the multi-day, self-support Class V South Merced is now also officially regulated, with user capacities set at 25 people per day, as is the multi-day pack-raft section above Nevada Falls.


Park officials expect that the river’s hydrology will play a hand in managing boating use. With boatable flows rarely extending through July, the park expects most people will boat between March and May. To paddle in the park, boaters will be required to have boats that are in good condition and designed to handle the class of whitewater on that reach. Running that reaches Class II and above will require additional safety and self-rescue equipment. Boaters will also be required to use established put-in and take-out locations, and to avoid sensitive riparian vegetation. As part of the park’s natural ecosystem, large woody debris in the river will remain in place.


“We came to the conclusion that it’s unfeasible to do some sort of skills test,” Steindorf says. “The best way is to let people’s equipment determine the run they can do. It’s the best way to ensure that people with the necessary skills and equipment will be enjoying the river safely.”


In other Yosemite Valley news, the park also released its new plan for the nearby Tuolumne, “officially” opening the coveted multi-day Class V Grand Canyon of the Tuolumne to paddling. “All indications are that it’s similar to what we’ve seen on [the] Merced plan,” Steindorf says. “We commend the park for its open process in developing these plans and finding a balance that will allow for increased paddling opportunities while ensuring resource protection. The Park Service listened, which is great.”


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Written by: editor - Wednesday, April 2, 2014

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