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<br />... <br /> <br />. '.'.f <br /> <br />The Steamboat Pilot: New recreation sites on Yampa attract kayakers <br /> <br />030212 <br /> <br />,I' <br /> <br /> <br />Weather <br /> <br />570 partly <br />Cloudy <br />Current conditions <br />,.?E1i:3Lf.~,r.~~~,::;!,_", _.'____", <br /> <br /> <br />Community <br />Calendar <br />Reader Forum <br />Groups & Clubs <br />Find a new home <br />Sections, <br />, Front page <br />. Classifleds <br />Service Directory <br />PubHc. Notices <br />News <br />Sports <br />Obituaries <br />Births <br />Viewpoints <br />Style <br />Outdoors <br />The Record <br />Business <br />Real Estate News <br />Featured Properties <br />Arts & Entertainment' <br />South Routt <br />West Routt ' <br />Education <br />Women of Northwest <br />Colorado <br />Special Sections <br />VacationLand <br />i <br />Wedding Guide <br />The Venue <br />Locals 2004 <br />Assistance <br />Search <br /> <br />Page 1 of2 <br /> <br /> <br />Real Estate I Reader Forum I Classifieds I Contact <br /> <br />Summer Vacation Land <br /> <br />IBIlEmail _Printe..l!i!E!lI!I Email <br />~ Story ~ Friendly IEllD Editor <br /> <br />New recreation sites on Yampa attract kayakers <br /> <br />By Tom Ross. Staff Reporter <br />MONDAY, JUNE 2, 2003 <br /> <br />STEAMBOAT SPRINGS - "PARK-N-Pu\Y" IS ONE OF THE strongest <br />trends in whitewater kayaklng, and it's t,hriving in downtown Steamboat. <br /> <br />There was a time when kayakers had to drive great distances and paddle <br />through long stretches of flat water to get to their favorite standing waves. No <br />more. <br /> <br />, , <br />Now, paddlers c~m get off work on a weeknight and be spinning 360s in a <br />perfect wave 20 minutes later. Park-n-play convenience Is here thanks to <br />manmade hydraulics like the new D-Hole. It's just downstream'from the 13th' <br />Street Bridge on the Yampa River in Steamboat. The D-Hole Is named after the <br />Depot Arts Center, just up the bank from the kayak wave, which was installed <br />in autumn 2001. <br /> <br />Longtime kayak instruct()r Barry Smith said he still loves to float a one- or two- <br />'mile stretch of the Y~mpa, hitting hydraulics wherever he finds them. However, <br />Smith acknowledged that increasingly, local enthusiasts are driving to a parking <br />lot nearest their favorite hole and getting In the queue In an eddy to take their <br />turn practicing stunts. The options include the D-HoJe, the new Library Hole a <br />short ways upstream at the confluence of Soda Creek, or the original A-hole at <br />the Seventh Street Ambulance Barn. ' <br /> <br />Visitors to Steamboat who have never paddled a kayak can enjoy watching the <br />, paddlers spin and flip their stubby play boats from bridges situated close to the <br />action, or from the rocks on the banks of the river. The D-Hole and the new <br />Library Hole are visible to spectators looking upstream and downstream from <br />the 13th Street Bridge. It is an automobile bridge, but has sidewalks. <br /> <br />The A-Hole, further upstream, is just below a pedestrian bridge that leads to the <br />, baseball fields at Howelsen Hill. The heaviest stream flows and best kayaking <br />are in early to mid-June. The action picks up after 5 p.m., when paddlers leave <br />their workday lives behind for a couple of hours. <br /> <br />Gary Laceycif Recreation Engineering and Planning carefully designed the D- <br />Hole. Lacey, who has built "artificial" whitewater features in parks all overthe <br />state; designed the D-Hole based on his knowledge of river hydrology. <br /> <br />It is intended to provide sport for paddlers at almost any level of current. <br /> <br />The D-Hole offers more than just great whiteiNaterj it offers convenience. There <br />are parking lots oneither side ofthe river, one at Lincoln Park, and the other at <br />the Depot Arts Center. ' <br /> <br />Essentially, Lacey's design created two large rock wings opposing each other on <br />the opposite banks. They are shaped like two triangles, with their points coming <br />about 25 feet short of meeting each other in the middle of the river. By <br />- channeling the current through the narrow opening, it's forced to accelerate <br />through a pour-over that has the potential to create a standing wave. It's this <br />standing wave that kayakers love to play on. <br /> <br />ht+n'//~..mmT c:!tP~n'lhf'l~tn;lf'1t ~f'll11/~p.d;f'll1/~l1l11l11p.r v::lr.::ltinn l::l11(V~tnrv/17440 <br /> <br />IStory see <br /> <br />'More sei <br /> <br />o:::,liJ <br />Tht! weel <br />inOh~ <br /> <br /> <br />Order a fr <br />YampaVa <br />Estate by <br /> <br /> <br />Marketpla <br />, Real Estat. <br />I Condomini <br /> <br />Autos: <br />t Recreation <br /> <br />Em 10 me <br />Clerical Of! <br /> <br />Rentals: <br />I Homes <br /> <br />More class <br />Submit a ( <br />Find a hon <br />Calendar <br /> <br />4/'\nO()4 <br />