I paddled a technical section of the Trinity River in California with my sister in law
Oh, the beautiful Trinity Alps and Trinity River. It's one of the rivers I dearly hoped to run once more in life, but that's fast becoming a quixotic impossible dream.
Another way I learned whitewater in California when I was a novice first class, aside from paddling with the Sierra Club and Santa Rosa club, was doing solo tandem trips with my novice second class partner, John. We paddled many class 1-2 and 2-3 rivers together, learning and muddling our way through rapids, often with just blind luck.
One weekend in 1981 we drove all the way from San Jose (me) and Palo Alto (him) to do the Trinity and Klamath rivers in far northern California. I had no information on the Trinity except that Ann Dwyer had given me the name and phone number of some paddler up in that area. I called him. He told me where to put in and take out, and then ominously intoned: "Whatever you do, don't go past that take-out. If you do, you will be in Burnt Ranch Gorge. You won't get out of there alive!" Okey, dokey, that sounded clear enough.
So, we ran the Trinity. It was gorgeous—the crystal water, the majestic mountains, the cloudless sky. There were strange old machines along parts of the shore, which we didn't know the purpose of: mining? fishing? We made it through all the rapids and took out at the take-out, avoiding a Burnt Ranch death.
A couple of years later, Bob Foote was running Burnt Ranch Gorge in an open canoe (Mad River ME), but John and I probably would have died.
Fast forward to the summer of 2004. I had driven from Connecticut to Sacramento to pick up my custom made Huki outrigger canoe. Paddling it on mountain lakes and tidewater rivers throughout the Sierras and northern California coast, I found myself traveling east along the Trinity River Highway, looking down at fond memories from 23 years earlier. I pulled into the old put-in, which had become a lot fancier for the raft company business. I wanted so much to paddle the gorgeous Trinity again that I almost thought of doing so in my 22' long, 30 lb., unmaneuverable outrigger canoe. I didn't do such a foolish thing, of course, but I plaintively vowed that I would come back one last time in a canoe that could run flat water as well as 2-3 whitewater such as that section of the Trinity River.
That was one of the reasons I bought my Hemlock SRT—to make another 10,000 mile cross-continent trip with a boat versatile enough to paddle lakes, rivers and whitewater, especially including the blissfully nostalgic Trinity River.
Windmills. And I'm no longer even Sancho Panza much less Don Quixote. Lots of windmills.