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Have Forklift, Will Play


Forklift Fun: Three,
two, one...blast off.
Luke Farney getting
airborne.


Don't like your
trajectory? Adjust
the pallet.
Okay, so maybe the summer/fall season is just a little too long for boaters out in Northwest Colorado. How else can you explain this unorthodox use of a forklift in these shots recently sent into PL from photographer and kayaker Clay Rogers?

“What else are you going to do when the river isn't running anymore?” says Rogers, who got his friend’s son, Luke Farney, 14, to seal launch off the lift into Roger’s homemade trout pond in Steamboat Springs. “The tele-loader is a piece of equipment we have to build our house, and the kids have been all getting together to swim and practice kayaking in the pond all summer.”

Put two plus two together, and the result is the biggest drop in the region, one that can be adjustable to diferent heights.

“I must admit it was my idea to launch the kayaks off the forks,” says Rogers, a long-time surf photographer and avid kayaker. “I was dropping some rocks out in the middle of the pond and my kids wanted to jump off of it into the pond. That’s when the light bulb went off in my head. The next day two of them, Luke and Kai, began hucking themselves off the pallet with their kayaks. Then we started raising it a little.”

“I think it started because Luke had to show off for the girls,” he adds.

Not to be shown up, at least one of the girls, Sarah White, joined in the airborne action as well.

But don't expect Rogers to bring his traveling seal launch to a venue near you. "Gas prices make it a little too spendy," he says.









 

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Heard in the Eddy

"Early on that day we came across a fresh dead body that was still in neoprene and had been buried under rocks...it showed us just how delicate life is. Later on we found out that there were two dead in the same pile of rocks..."

--Sam Sutton on paddling Siberia's Argut River in July


"To leave a patient on the side of a river while you get your gear out of the car and set up a rescue system you read about in a book is simply not good policy"
--Duke Bradford, owner of Arkansas Valley Adventures on the rescue of a 13 yr. old girl from Clear Creek on 6/17/10. A rafting guide employed by Bradford was arrested for interfering (read=assisting) with the rescue.

I was a god-damned poster child for bad judgment...dumb, but what can you do when you're hypnotized by a force of nature?"
--North Fork Payette pioneer Doug Ammons on being lured in by record high water to come out of Class V retirement and paddle the Lower Five at a record 9,000 cfs (and subsequently swim).

"My initial goal was to not embarrass myself."
--Tao Berman, after winning his first-ever ramp competition, at the Red Bull Canal Crashers Big Air Contest during Richmond, Va.'s Dominion Riverrock Festival.


If you don't sit in the right place, you'll sink."
--72-year-old Leo Swinimer (as told to the Wall Street Journal) on paddling his 600-lb. pumpkin in Nova Scotia's annual Windsor-West Hants Pumpkin Regatta.






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