august

In The Press

Futaleufu

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On the Wild Side of Chile

FUTALEUFU, Chile—So, my neighbor said, you really should come along. It’s summer down there in February and this river is supposed to be beautiful.Chile? Yeah, right. That’ll happen. Rafting? On a real river whose name I can’t pronounce which has sharp rocks and big rapids? I don’t think so. But, of course, it did happen.

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A River Too Far

THE JOO-MILE-LONG Futaleufu River begins as an icy trickle high in the Argentine Andes and picks up speed and volume as it roars across the Chilean border toward the Pacific, cutting through high canyons and zigzagging through steep granite cliffs.

Conservation

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Save The Fu

We all put a drop of water on the back of our necks, for luck. Beth, one of the river guides, shouted “Remen a delante!” (Spanish for “paddle forward”), and we launched our raft into the rapids of the wild and phosphorescent green waters of Chile’s Futaleufu (also called the Fu).

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VIVA LA MAGPIE

Floating down a big North American river, the kind that flows for days with no signs of civilization. The water is black and inky,  and when sunlight hits the foam, copper-colored swirls boil to the surface. Each day without fail more rapids pour off the horizon, black granite lines the banks, and thick stands of […]

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Sacrificial People

Will Quebec’s Indians be driven from their land? JON BOWERMASTER reports on a classic conservation conflict

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Sojourn in the Wild

As people have learned to harness the tremendous power of rivers, hydroelectric dams have proliferated.

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Rafting The Great Whale

The Cree Indians have avoided white water for centuries. Now, to help save the river they love, they’re learning to raft it.

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Rafting with the Cree

For 5,000 years, nomadic Cree natives have wandered along Canada’s Great Whale River, a subarctic land of rolling hills, peat bogs and spruce they call “The Garden”.

Exploratories

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Rapid Descent

The blinds are drawn in Eric Hert’z Hotel room in downtown Kunming, China, though it’s neary noon. The forty-year-old outfitter from New York State badly needs rest. His eyes are blood shot from jet lag and stress. “I’m concerned” Eric says. “The best maps we have are 47 years old. We weren’t allowed to scout […]

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The Accidental Explorer’s Guide to Patagonia

WAS ON MY WAY TO MY FAVORITE PLACE ON EARTH. I hadn’t ever been there before and wasn’t exactly sure where it was, but I knew, in the way a man knows these things, that we were drawing closer and that the place I found would be my new favorite place on Earth. Never mind […]

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Rafting the “Unrunnable” Tsangpo

Since 1992, when the Chinese began admitting foreign adventurers to Tibet’s “Great Canyon,” the chasm’s white-water rivers have acquired a sinister reputation. The Yarlung Tsangpo has so far claimed the lives of two kayakers attempting first descents: Yoshitaka Takei, a japanese man who

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The Colca Plunge

At Pope John Paul || Falls-a torrential spill of roaring brown muck at the bottom of one of the world’s deepest canyons-they sat cross legged and prayed for a safe journey.You need all the help you can get when you pierce the Andes by raft.

Magpie

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Top ten White-water Rafting

A float plane takes you to Magpie Lake, the start of this eight-day trip through the remote pine forests of eastern Quebec province.

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VIVA LA MAGPIE

Floating down a big North American river, the kind that flows for days with no signs of civilization. The water is black and inky,  and when sunlight hits the foam, copper-colored swirls boil to the surface. Each day without fail more rapids pour off the horizon, black granite lines the banks, and thick stands of […]

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The New Frontiers

AN ESTIMATED THREE MILLION AT LAST COUNT, the population of whitewater rafting enthusiasts in the United States has doubled in the lase ten years. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of the number of whitewater rivers, which the laws of geology have pretty well fixed for the next few thousand years.

Broadcast Media & Documentaries Featuring Earth River Expeditions

1993 – TBS: “Network Earth”

Director: Barbara Pyle

A documentary chronicling an Earth River conservation expedition down the threatened Great Whale River in Quebec. Features policymakers, environmentalists, and Cree Grand Chief Matthew Coon Come.

1994 – Nickelodeon: “James Bay”

Host: Linda Ellerbee

Filmed during an Earth River conservation journey down the Great Whale River.

1994 – PBS: “That Money Show”

Director: Kate Reynolds

A feature highlighting Earth River Expeditions as a small, family-run adventure travel business.

1995 – ABC Sports: “Women of Adventure”

Profile: Beth Rypins, Earth River Guide

A segment filmed with Earth River’s support on the Futaleufú River in Patagonia, focusing on Earth River guide Beth Rypins.

1996 – National Geographic: “Rapid Descent”

Host: Beth Rypins

Chronicles Earth River Expeditions’ first descent of Tibet’s remote Schuilo River.

1997 – ESPN/Men’s Journal Special: “Raft the Wild Futaleufú”

Director: John Barrett | Host: Don Wildman

A documentary on Earth River’s pioneering Futaleufú River trip.

2001 – Discovery & Travel Channel: “Don’t Forget Your Passport – Patagonia, Chile”

Director: Gordon Seville | Host: Karen Blaine

Explores the wild beauty of Patagonia through Earth River’s Expedition down the Futaleufu.

2014 – National Geographic Explorer: Battle for Paradise

Director: David Hamlin | Host: Boyd Matson

A conservation journey with Earth River through British Columbia’s Headwall Canyon, threatened by clear-cut logging.

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