WE MIXED SOME POWDERED milk and ate cold cereal in the rain. It streamed off our faces and into our bowls. Dolly was parked right over us and going nowhere fast.
Staying put wasn’t an option. We needed to get back on the river and find a place to wait out the storm.
“Too bad my dad is missing this,” Rio said. “The river is really cooking. I hope you can handle the canoe. It’s going to be a challenge.”
“I can handle what we’re looking at from here,” I told him. “Around the next corner, I’ll have to wait and see.”
“Hey, don’t feel like you have to try it. We can hide the canoe. When my dad gets back from Alaska, we can come back for it.”
Rio was trying to keep it light, but he wasn’t looking me in the eye. He didn’t think I could handle the canoe on this much water.
I took another look at the river. It was fast, real fast—pushier than I’d paddled back home, but not by much. And besides . . . I’d come out here to do some whitewater canoeing, and what I’d seen up to this point didn’t even qualify.
“I’ll let you know,” I said with more bravado than I felt.
“Good for you. I’m sure it will be a blast.” Rio didn’t look convinced.
“We’ll see how far I get. You’ll be out in front to catch me if I capsize.”
After girding for battle, we took a last-minute look at the upcoming miles in the guidebook. Good thing the pages were waterproof—the rain was constant. A mile around the corner, at Mile 30, we would leave the scaly mountain slopes behind. For the next forty miles, we would be in a tight corridor the river had incised in solid limestone, the fifteen-hundred-foot-deep Lower Canyons of the Rio Grande. That’s where the rapids were waiting.
At Mile 34, where Oso Canyon entered from the Mexican side, the river ran under an overhanging bluff. “Use caution at higher water levels,” the guidebook warned.
At Mile 36, a huge cave would appear on the Mexican side, the “Cueva de la Puerta Grande.”
The first rapid we would come to was waiting at Mile 38. It was rated only Class 1 on the 1-to-6 scale.
The first of the major rapids was at Mile 40, at San Rosendo Canyon. It was rated a 3 or a 4 depending on conditions. Ouch. Class 4 was for kayaks, not canoes.
“We’ll take it as it comes,” Rio said. “We’ll go to shore for anything that needs to be scouted.”
I remembered a mantra I had learned at canoe camp, a saying meant to dispel fear and the mental paralysis that comes with it: “Breathe. Organize. Act.” I closed my eyes and took half a dozen slow, deep breaths. I remembered another saying that went, “Stay calm, be brave, and wait for the signs.”
When I felt calmer, I opened my eyes. Rio was standing by the raft, waiting on me. I had the red canoe rigged just how I wanted it. The brand name emblazoned on the bow—Mad River—couldn’t have been more apropos.
I was organized and I was ready. My rain top was zipped and my life jacket was cinched tight with rescue knife in place. My hat was snug. It was time to act. “I’m good to go,” I announced. “Let me help you launch the raft.”
We launched onto a river moving by like an express train. A few strokes from shore, and it was like I’d hooked onto a cable.
My heart was buoyant. With that paddle in my hands, it all came back to me—everything I loved about rivers. There’s magic in moving water. Understanding what the water is doing, making those split-second moves you have to make to put yourself in the right place at the right time, you feel in tune with yourself and the whole Blue Planet. This was what I’d come for.
“Everything good?” Rio yelled.
“Better than that!” I yelled back. “Yee-haw!”
The river was running so fast, it took us no time at all to round the right-hand turn a mile downstream. We entered the gate of the Lower Canyons, with walls of limestone towering on both sides. My cousin had never been here before, same as me. Together, we were doing something epic, paddling into a tropical storm, no less.
Was I nuts?
Yes.
Did I have any regrets?
Ask me later.
As if we needed any more drama the wind began to blow, and blow hard. The clouds darkened, lowered, and swirled chaotically. A stupendous bolt of lightning accompanied by simultaneous and deafening thunder rent the canyon right down to the river, no more than a mile ahead. Five cows and a bull came stampeding upriver, spooked out of their skulls. The skies opened up and poured rain more intense than I’d seen in my life.
“Hello, Dolly,” I sang. “Well, hello, Dolly.” My mother loved that tune.
I could also hear my dad singing one of his Bob Dylan lines. He had one for every occasion. I sang along: “Buckets of rain, buckets of tears, got all them buckets comin’ out of my ears.”
The torrents kept coming. I didn’t need to reach for my water bottle. All I had to do was tilt my head back and open my mouth. The night rain had been merely a lull. The sun was cooking Dolly’s topside, and she was riled up but good. Rio thought she might be stalled and sucking up even more fuel from the Gulf of Mexico.
What a show. More lightning, more thunder, and waterfalls pouring over the canyon rims all the way down to the river. Some of them ran yellow, some brown, some red. The waterfalls were everywhere, falling a thousand feet and more.
We had a lot of dodging to do. With all the flash flooding, the river was running with debris, every sort of thorny shrub and scrubby tree. Even deeply rooted salt cedars had fallen in.
As fast as we were going, the canyon walls were flying by. It wasn’t long before we saw Oso Canyon entering from the right. Rio motioned me alongside to make sure I was on top of the situation. The mile-by-mile guide had warned us to stay off the Mexican side, where the river at high water ran under a head-chopping ledge.
As we drew closer to the side canyon, we gave each other plenty of elbow room. Rio took a wide-left run, far from the head-chopper, and I did the same. The waves were wild, but I was able to reach out and brace on them when necessary, and apply power strokes when I needed to climb over their crests.
Dolly kept it up. She was throwing everything she had at us. It was getting harder and harder to see our way through the windblown sheets of rain. Some of the gusts were so strong, they picked up the water off the river and threw it in our faces. There was more and more debris in the river.
I pulled alongside Rio. “This is crazy!” I yelled.
The rain was spilling off his bedraggled straw hat like he was standing in the shower. “Totally,” he yelled back.
We rounded a corner and spied the cave, a huge yawning void fairly low in the cliffs on the Mexican side—La Cueva de la Puerta Grande, The Cave of the Great Door. The door was more than great; it was immense.
We agreed in a nanosecond that we should check it out. We were in dire need of a safe, dry place.
At normal water levels, it might have been tough to find a break in the cane anywhere near the cave. But the cane was flooded, and we floated over its tassel tops. We landed in a boiling eddy at the foot of the slope falling from the mouth of the cave. Rio jumped from his raft, tie-rope in hand. He went down hard on the muddy bank, and for a second it looked like the river had him. He managed to scramble up and over the bank without letting go of the rope. “You okay?” I yelled.
“I’m okay!” he hollered as he ran limping to tie up.
With the raft safely secured to a boulder, Rio limped back to help me land. I tossed him my rope and he steadied the canoe as I stepped out. “Safely off the river!” he declared, all pumped up. “Give me five!”
“You hurt your knee?”
“Yeah, but it’s nothing.”
We clambered up the muddy slope, seventy feet or more, to the mouth of the cave. It was horizontal across the top and vertical down both sides, square as a door frame. What an amazing sensation it was to suddenly step onto dry ground, out of the weather and under the protection of that massive ceiling of limestone.
We still had some more climbing to do. We could only hope that the slope inside the cave would lead to some usable ground above.
What we found up there was way better than that. We came upon an almost perfect circle of hard-packed dirt maybe a hundred feet in diameter. Here and there lay a few rock slabs fallen from the ceiling, but otherwise the ground was smooth as the infield of a baseball diamond. At the rear wall we found ancient pictographs—a snake, a scorpion, a hand, and a crescent moon.
I’d never felt so removed from modern times or so connected to people from the distant past. It was like I was sheltering in this cave thousands of years before, looking down through sheets of rain to the swollen river during a flood just like this one.
“This is a whole other river than I’ve ever seen,” Rio marveled. “This is the river that carved these canyons.”
“At the moment, the Rio Bravo looks more berserk than brave.”
“Right on. The word bravo is closer to berserk than brave. Bravo means ‘fierce.’”
“You mean, your middle name means fierce, not brave?”
“You got it, primo. Bravo is a word you use to describe something wild and aggressive, like a bull running amok. When the conquistadors named this river, it was probably flooding, something like now. Rio Bravo. Fierce River.”
We decided to bring everything up from the boats that we would need for an extended stay. We had given ourselves nine nights, ten days given the likelihood of low water throughout the journey. As it was, we were well ahead of schedule. We could wait out the storm here and get back on a falling river with plenty of time to spare.
I went aboard the raft and began to hand the gear up to Rio. Once the raft was empty, we would be able to carry it to higher ground well out of reach of the river.
We were nearly done with the unloading when we heard a shout. We looked upstream through the rain and saw a rowboat. A dark-haired man was at the oars and a dark-haired boy sat on the front thwart.
The metal rowboat was pitching and bucking in the heavy water. The boy was tossing out water with a plastic milk jug converted into a bailer. “It’s them,” I said. “Carlos and Diego.”
“In a rowboat, without life jackets!” Rio exclaimed. “That’s insane!”