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By Tina Fisher Cunningham
Fisher Forde Media 

Kern River demands respect

The Forde Files No. 193

 

July 6, 2019

Tina Fisher Cunningham

Tons of melted Sierra snowpack squeeze down the narrow Kern Canyon.

This year, with the Sierra snowpack at 180 percent of normal, the Kern River is a raging monster. While the water flow has peaked on both the upper Kern (above Lake Isabella) and the lower Kern (below the lake), the river still is dangerous.

The increased flow is awesome for rafters who thrill to the whitewater challenges in safe, professionally managed operations, but it can be lethal for visitors who do not understand the danger they are facing, and who underestimate the sheer power of the moving water.

At a June 27 press conference, Kern County Sheriff Sgt. Steven Williams, who works with the volunteer search and rescue teams and Kern County Fire Department, said that 19- and 15-year-old males from San Bernardino and an 11-year-old Bakersfield girl had been lost in the river during the previous weeks.


"The girl was walking along on the rocks and slipped in," Williams said. "The river is beautiful, but it can be very dangerous."

The body of one of the males was recovered on June 25 a mile downriver from Keysville. The others remain missing, along with a man who disappeared into Lake Isabella earlier.

On July 1, search and rescue volunteers were called out to locate a 41-year-old woman who was missing after floating away from Keysville Beach on an inflatable raft. A Sheriff's helicopter spotted her and directed rescue operations.

"We do more rescues than we do recoveries," Wilson said. "We rescued 12 versus the three who were missing during the same period."


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Swift Water Search and Rescue team Capt. Aaron Lynam urged parents to focus on the safety of their children.

"Don't get too close to the river," he said. "Watch your footing. Stay off the rocks. Watch your kids. Use common sense." Life jackets should be worn when playing anywhere near the river, he said.

Kern River Outfitters owner and manager Matt Volpert concurs about the life jackets.

"We recommend that nobody swim now without life jackets," Volpert said.

The four rafting companies that operate on the Kern River employ guides who have extensive safety, safe boating and swift water rescue training.

"All the incidents [people having accidents] involve pool toys, no life jackets or young people," Volpert said.

"We are talking to campers to make sure they understand the hazard right in front of them," Kern Valley Search and Rescue Capt. Brian Baskin said.


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Lynam said that people get into trouble "eddy jumping," when they attempt to go from one calm section to another, and they may breach the white "eddy fence," beyond which the faster current can sweep a person away

It is hard to protect yourself if trapped against a tree or a rock.

"That is 1,200 pounds of pressure," Bakersfield volunteer Doug Ely said. "You aren't going to get out of that unless you can bench-press 1,200 pounds."

Tina Fisher Cunningham

Kern County Sheriff Sgt. Steven Williams, left, urges the public to be aware of the power of the Kern River. Search & Rescue volunteers, from left, Kern Valley Search & Rescue Capt. Brian Baskin, Bakersfield Search & Rescue Capt. Aaron Lynam, Yerania Molina and Doug Ely.

The Kern River is the third most lethal river in the world, according to the website wonderslist.com. Number one is the Amazon in South America. Number two is the Yellow River in China. The Kern is the only river on the North American continent to be accorded the "lethal" title out of the 15 listed.


To donate to the Kern Valley, Bakersfield or Tehachapi Mountain search and rescue volunteer organizations, access their individual web sites. They save lives.

 
 

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