March 8, 2010

The Season – Butze or Bust

 

Kokatat Ambassador Paul Kuthe is one of the stars of a new web television series developed by Bryan Smith and Fitz Cahall, called The Season. Paul takes us through another episode of their adventure to Butze Rapid…

 

The Season Episode 8 from Fitz Cahall and Bryan Smith on Vimeo.

 

We heard about this wave a couple years ago…an untapped tidal zone that only local whitewater boaters know about. We didn’t know what to expect really, but we knew we wanted to put sea kayaks on it. It took us a year or better to get all the logistics sorted out and our schedules aligned, but last summer it all came together.

Dave White, Nick Jacob, and I CRAMMED ourselves and our gear into Nick’s Subaru Outback Sport in an effort to be under the 7′ height limit enforced by B.C. Ferries. We had learned on previous adventures that over height = over priced! We were operating on a shoestring budget and determined to get to the Butze without spending too much cash. We also didn’t want to miss our ferry over to Vancouver Island after the long night on the road, so when we finally rolled into Tswassen we just decided to sleep in line for the ferry.

We woke to a symphony of big diesel engines firing up the next morning. Crap! It’s time to board!! We all stuffed our sleeping gear and rolled onto the boat within minutes of waking up. We were to meet Bryan Smith and Phil Tifo in Nanaimo that morning. We did a big food shop, prepared our provisions for the journey and drove the length of Vancouver Island to Port Hardy so we could catch our next ferry!

The folks at the Port Hardy Terminal were nice enough (or they just pitied us enough) to give us a parking area and a HUGE zone to prepare the boats for the next mornings departure. We needed to get all 5 of our boats stuffed to the gills because we were walking onto the ferry leaving the cars behind for the next week. This included all the usual food and camping gear that goes with ANY multi day trip into the BC wilderness, but we also needed to find room for a full size movie camera, a laptop, tripods, and multiple still camera set-ups so we could document the experience.

We hoped we were making the right call…As we cruised past some of the most sought after sea kayak destinations on earth, we hoped that this rapid in the middle of nowhere would be worth it. The ferry from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert is every bit of 15 hours. By the time we hit Prince Rupert, it was already 10pm and the sun was setting fast. We were faced with the prospect of either paddling into an unknown tidal race in the dark or spending our third night at yet another ferry terminal.

I can’t say we made the wrong call, but I will say that I didn’t sleep much that night. Just as we were getting settled in and making friends with the swarms of local mosquitoes and flies, our make-shift camp in the corner of the ferry terminal yard was invaded by the freight train that comes to unload every night.

We were set-up to the outside of the curve of the tracks such that it seemed as though the train was literally going to run us over. The ground shook, the train whistle blasted repeatedly, and the crossing signal seemed to be mocking us… ding ding dinging incessantly. About the third time the train backed up and pulled forward triggering the crossing signal, Dave White lost it. All he could do was laugh. His laughter was infectious and soon all five of us were hysterically laughing at ourselves. What were we doing here???

The next morning we launched and paddled into the zone. On the paddle up we approached what we thought must be the first set of rapids. As we drew near we realized that what we were seeing was actually huge piles of foam floating head high on the water’s surface. Whatever stirred up this much foam must be powerful. It should have served as a clue to what was to come, but we thought little of it at the time.

We arrived as the day’s flood was reaching it’s peak. We were finally here!!! From the looks of it, the rapids were going to be SWEET. We unloaded the boats, went for a quick surf on the tail end of the flood and then we all passed out in the sun to enjoy our first bit of sleep outside a ferry terminal. None of us realized It would be our last view of the sun for that trip, and it would also be our last un-interrupted slumber on that particular island.

Stay tuned for another episode of The Season coming soon!

February 2, 2010

The Season

Kokatat Ambassador Paul Kuthe is one of the stars of a new web television series developed by Bryan Smith and Fitz Cahall, called The Season. Here is how he got started with the project:

The Season Trailer from Fitz Cahall on Vimeo.

“We were headed up to the Butze tidal rapids near Prince Rupert last June. The Butze (butzee) is not one wave, but many separate features, including big whirlpools, jaw dropping pour-overs, and huge exploding waves that form then disappear as 30+ feet of tide water squeezes back and forth through narrow channels between the densely packed cedar covered islands laced across Fenn Passage. A couple hours into the 30 hour ferry ride from Port Hardy, Bryan started talking about this new project he was working on, called The Season. We hoped to get some amazing footage of this incredible tidal zone, but none of us really knew much about it. Bryan had agreed to join us and shoot the trip over a year ago, but this was the first time we knew where the footage could end up… if we found anything to surf. We were not disappointed – humbled perhaps, but not disappointed!

The Season follows myself and four other athletes through the course of a single season in the Pacific Northwest. Check out the first episode free at http://www.arcteryx.com/.” - Paul Kuthe

January 14, 2010

Bryan Smith’s The Season Web TV Series Launches

“This summer I embarked on a new project with Fitz Cahall of the Dirtbag Diaries called the Season. The idea sprouted during some late evenings at the Banff Mountain Film Festival in 2008 when we both realized we had a mutual interest in trying to bring professional adventure media and strong story telling to the web. I had just finished two sea kayaking DVD’s and was looking for something new. Fitz had been wanting to bring the video medium to his work on the web. We asked ourselves a couple questions. First, could we take compelling stories from our community, combine it with tightly crafted footage and create small installments that reveal a bigger story? Second could the events of a single season reveal the bigger stories of individual athletes? I’m not sure we knew the answers and we still remain to find out, but we were confident that we had something that just might work, so the Season was born. We started working on the story lines, pitching the project and shaping the look. Then we spent an entire season lugging big HD cameras, a cable cam and various other tools around the Pacific Northwest chasing after five athletes. This has been a labor of love, but we are both excited to share all of our hard work.

The Season is a 22 episode, web TV series following five athletes through the course of a single season. A veteran climber invents a new piece of gear. A pro snowboarder searches for a way to return to the roots of his sport. A boulderer returns from a series of injuries with new perspective. A family man goes to Whistler to test himself against the mountain biking’s elite. A young sea kayaker with a troubled past sets out to reinvent his sport. Kokatat paddler Paul Kuthe is the featured kayaker and we captured some incredible new tidal locations for his epsiodes up in Prince Rupert, British Columbia. You can subscribe to the HD downloads via itunes at www.theseasontv.com. The trailer has just gone live and the first episode releases at the end of the month. Enjoy!”

October 20, 2009

West Coast Kayak Symposium

Team Kokatat is our group of sponsored whitewater and sea kayaking athletes, with backgrounds and stories as mixed as their skill sets. These athletes travel the globe competing and exploring, trusting their safety and comfort to a mix of Kokatat products and apparel. Here is sea kayaker Bryan Smith’s summary of the recent West Coast Kayak Symposium…

This years West Coast Sea Kayak Symposium (click text for link) drew me in for yet another pilgrimage to Port Townsend on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula.  It was an event to remember, as Kokatat, P&H, Outdoor Research and Werner all went in on a giant compound on Officer’s Row.  The whole tribe was together including the latest member:

Nelson

Nelson Geoff Beyriesmith

The days had me busy running some packing clinics on the beach for OR and shooting some stuff for Kokatat.  The beach was packed and the sun was blazing.  Late September can go either way in the Pacific Northwest, so I was stoked to be wearing the shades proud.

Packing

Boats

Saturday night was the big shindig.  We had a gathering at the house for all the dealers, which gave me the opportunity to talk a little about my roots in the sport and where I am going from here. Then the crowd migrated to the auditorium where I had the opportunity to present a multi-media show to a packed house.  It was the first chance I’ve had to present some of my latest work publicly. The big hits were some of the tidal race footage from the Butze Rapids that we shot for a web TV series called “The Season” (click link for a teaser of The Season) and the whitewater footage we shot on the Ashlu for National Geographic.  Great night with lots of energy from the crowd!

Butze

Bryan running the main line through the ebb at the Butze Tidal Rapids in Prince Rupert, BC.

Ashlu

The Ashlu team for the National Geographic shoot. Chris Tretwold, Todd Gillman, Max Kniewasser, Shane Robinson and Eric Shertzel.

For more information about Bryan, see his profile on the new Team Kokatat page here.