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Take Action, Win AdventurePublished: August 4, 2004by: Robert EbischAugust 9, 2004
"I'm going to say, 'Forward, one, two, and everybody paddle,' can you handle that?" Greg Pratt tells them. Two lefts, one right, one left, he wields an imaginary paddle with his arms, demonstrating how working together they can take the boat where they want it to go. All 14 of the kids, ages nine through 12, are eager to board the big yellow rubber rafts, but they listen politely while Greg Pratt tells them where to sit, how to sit and how to control the boats. Coming along are two additional RiverReach guides and Steve Wheeler, recreation coordinator at the city's Glenarm Recreation Center where the kids spend a good deal of their time in summer. Glenarm is one of 20-some city recreation centers in Denver, most in low-income neighborhoods. River rafting is new to this group, and Lynsey Chapman, age 9, admits to being a little scared about the promised whitewater. Pratt gives them the basics of safety, demonstrating how to reach in and seize the life jacket of anybody who should fall overboard. "It might be fun," he says. "In fact, maybe we'll push Judah in today just to try it out." Judah Biffle, a parent volunteer, smiles as everybody laughs, including his son Ronnie who will share one of the rafts with him. Finding the Wild City "It's an opportunity to show the kids that the environment is right here," says Pratt. "For me, that's the most important thing we do. Even in the middle of the city, there are birds, beavers and muskrats. A couple of years ago there was even a bear right down where we launch the rafts. I've seen deer right downtown. It's not the same as a big whitewater trip in the wilderness, but it gives kids the idea that wildlife exists right here in the middle of our urban jungle." As the rafts drift between streets and industrial buildings, Pratt directs the attention of his passengers to a row of almost perfect brown spheres, each with a silver-dollar-sized hole in its center, on the underside of a highway bridge. "Those are nests," he says. "Anybody know what kind of bird makes those nests?" He waits. "What you do after you chew your food," he says, and makes a gulping sound. "Swallow," shouts Ronnie Biffle. A River Renewed "What kind of bird is that?" asks Caleb Rayburn, 11, pointing to a large, white bird standing stilt-legged in the shallows ahead. Pratt identifies an egret, then a night heron, and urges the kids to keep an eye open for turtles. The South Platte urban waterway is a point of pride for the Denver of today. But when RiverReach founder Jim Pearson moved to Denver in 1971, there was nothing to be proud of in the river once described as 'too thick to drink, too thin to plow.'" "The South Platte was pretty much a sewer and a dump for much of the Denver area," Pearson says. Beginning in the mid-1970s with the organization of the non-profit South Platte River Greenway Foundation, however, the city began dumping dollars into the river instead of trash. Over the following decades, dumps and wasteland became parks and bikeways, and the river became a river again. But Pearson, a Denver attorney and avid whitewater rafter, didn't see a corresponding renewal in use of the river itself. With fellow owners of a local sport company, Alpenglow Marine and Sport, Pearson started the Platte River Rafting Company in 1990 to change that. A year later, they reorganized as the non-profit River Heritage Society, running raft trips on the river for Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, seniors -- any groups in Denver that might not go to the mountains for whitewater adventures but would be interested finding a piece of that adventure in Denver. "But what we found," Pearson says, "is that we floated through some of the poorer neighborhoods of Denver and some of the kids loved to come down and throw rocks at us from the bridges or the shore. We thought, 'Instead of getting in fights with these kids can we get them involved in our programs?'"
"Earn It." At least 50 percent of the kids who raft with RiverReach have earned it through community service. When adult organizations and other youth groups pay RiverReach to guide raft trips, the money goes to support free trips for young people who have volunteered in their community. "Part of RiverReach is to seek funding for programs," says Pratt, "and in summer, we donate trips elsewhere on other Colorado rivers through the Colorado River Outfitters Association, a trade group of rafting organizations." RiverReach and Denver Parks and Recreation also launched a ski program at Loveland Ski Area west of Denver, where eligible kids who satisfy homework requirements and participate in community volunteer projects get a free (to them) ski day with lessons. Between 1,000 and 2,000 Denver kids have that opportunity each year. And there's the annual two-night, three-day pack trip in the Flat Tops Wilderness Area southwest of Steamboat Springs, Colorado. The kids pack into a fishing camp and learn how to ride and care for their horses. A Denver Parks and Recreation Program, it was launched by Ron Picaso more than two decades ago as a one-day horseback trip. Picaso credits RiverReach with helping to fund its expansion to a pack trip and find financial assistance to keep it going. Keeping the Rafts Afloat
The group gets quiet with anticipation and a little dread as the roar of the first rapids approaches. Digging in frantically with their paddles, they rock and lurch and scream as the rafts shoot one by one down the first smooth chute through standing waves and snow-white foam. And then they pull the rafts to the riverbank and go swimming. |
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