The Saturday Evening Post

RAFTING THE COLORADO

BANG! The sound was explosive, like a gunshot. I woke from a deep sleep and looked around, frightened. Nothing, except bodies curled up in sleeping bags around our campsite on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. Bang! On a ledge just six feet above me, two bighorn rams collided head-on, butting horns during the rut. I reached for my camera, but the movement startled them, and they darted away.

I looked up at the billion-year-old red cliff walls of the canyon rising thousands of feet into the sky. It was first light, and the cliffs were blanketed in pink and lavender. By noon, they’d turn plum and russet, and in late afternoon, a vermilion curtain would form on the walls. When the sun dipped, they glowed burnished copper, and at night in the moonlight, they turned silver. Here on the river, it was warm enough not to need a tent, and I would lie awake for hours mesmerized by the universe of stars sparkling like cluster bombs.

Were the bighorns back? No, it was the food locker slamming shut as a guide prepared breakfast. At the edge of the river, three large yellow rubber rafts and a wooden supply boat were tied up to the tamarisk trees.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Saturday Evening Post

The Saturday Evening Post5 min read
Ocd And Me
I've had OCD for as long as I can remember. My parents just didn't know what to call it. I seemed like your average worry wart. No go-karts for me at birthday parties and no rides at Disney, outside of “it's a small world” (which now seems scarier th
The Saturday Evening Post1 min read
The Saturday Evening Post
ART Art Director Amanda Bixler EDITORIAL Editorial Assistant Jennie Knuppel RESEARCH Archive Director Jeff Nilsson CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Cara Acklin, Pharm.D; Peter Bloch; Wendy Braun; Ken Budd; Stephanie Citron; Carol A. Friesen, Ph.D., R.D.N.; Cable
The Saturday Evening Post15 min read
Yokai
In 1924 at the age of 70, when his hands got so wayward and sudden with the scalpel that he feared injury to his patients, Dr. Hiram Flint retired from surgery in Palo Alto, sold his practice for a handsome price, and purchased a goneto-seed ranch in

Related Books & Audiobooks