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Gear Garage Live Show | July 1st, 2025

Courtney Sweeney / Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Gear Garage Live Show
Gear Garage Live Show
Gear Garage Live Show | July 1st, 2025
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This podcast is the audio version of the Gear Garage Live Show, where we answer submitted questions and talk all things whitewater.

Today's Show!

  1. Answer Questions
  2. Middle Fork Beta

Some of the Questions that Zach covered in the Q&A section of this episode

Topic: Rope!

Say I'd like to put together something I hope I never need. I have some gear, but I'm wondering what kind of rope you would recommend for a Pin kit. I know you guys are swamped this time of year, so no worries if you don't respond.

Topic: Blower Adaptor

Any beta on if the Makita or Milwaukee adaptor fits the cheap K. I. M. O leaf blower? I’m bleeding money on raft gear, Trying to save where I can.

Topic: Two Rowing Questions

I’m a complete newbie, trying to understand some of the major dos and don’ts as I gain entry-level experience rowing a raft. I’ve heard two things from multiple people, and I’d love to get your take:

“Never exceed 45 degrees to the current”
I understand how this can be safe advice for a beginner, but obviously, there are times you need to break this rule for certain maneuvers. Are there situations where being 90 degrees to the current is okay, and others where it’s a definite no? I get that if there’s an object downstream, the last thing you want is to hit it broadside — so staying at 45 degrees makes it more likely you’ll hit bow-first instead of getting hung up sideways. But in your videos, I see a lot of ferrying at greater than 45 degrees or even rowing at 90 degrees to the current. When you’re 90 degrees to the current, is there concern that water hitting the upstream side of the raft could flip it?

Flipping at eddy lines
I’ve heard a few horror stories of people flipping when they hit eddy lines — no rocks, no holes, just a fast eddy line that flipped them. But in your videos, you show catching eddies by pushing and pulling, and it always looks smooth. What would someone have to do wrong to flip in that situation instead of catching the eddy cleanly, like you do? The stories I’ve heard don’t involve getting pinned or hitting an obstacle — just the eddy line itself. And honestly, the eddy lines you cross in your videos look just as strong or stronger than what they’re describing.

Thanks for your time — I know that’s a lot to unpack!

Topic: Used Rafts?

I did a trip with you a couple years ago down the Rogue River and loved it. I live up in Roseburg and am trying to find a used raft and oar rig setup. I’d like to do your Class III training trip next summer.

I’m curious if you have any rafts that you’re looking to get rid of? I live on the Umpqua River and would like to start rafting it and learning.

Author

Courtney Sweeney

Courtney Sweeney grew up in Texas, and has spent the last decade living in different areas of the Rocky Mountains and on the West coast. She enjoys both melted and frozen water, rafting in the summer and skiing in the winter.

Connect with Courtney: 

  • YouTube
 

Supported By

Sawyer

Cascade River Gear

Maravia Rafts

River Hardware

NWRC Whitewater Education & Safety Training

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Disclaimer: River conditions, obstacles, and rapids can vary for a variety of reasons. Please combine this general information with good judgment and your own river reading skills.


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