Many years ago and long before White Water Rafting was one of the ‘extreme experiences’ offered to tourists, I had a dare-devil friend, Bruce, who offered to take me down the Clutha River. No, that’s not a euphemism and I was a respectable married lady anyway.
He owned an inflatable dinghy which I think he’d
bought 4th hand from a Surf
Lifesaving buddy, with more patches than an Amish quilt. That’s the inflatable, not the buddy
(although knowing Bruce's mates one can never be sure) and he assured my reluctant self that
he’d ‘gone down the Clutha’ many times and it was an experience not to be
missed.
I’ve seen people on the telly saying the same
thing and often they’re talking about ‘amazing opportunities’ such as having a
live tarantula crawl across your face.
‘I promise you it’ll be life changing,’ Bruce told us.
And what exactly would life be change into? As far
as I could see, there was only one option and I didn’t want to choose it.
Nevertheless, we arranged to meet old Brucie, my
husband and I, at his landing stage.
The husband was raring to go and as excited as a
puppy as we drove to Balclutha.
Looking down
from the road at the raging river in the gorge beneath us, I had serious second,
third and fourth thoughts but the husband assured me Bruce had everything in
hand and all the necessary safety gear; we’d be perfectly all right.
You don’t need safety gear when you stroll to the
shops, or when Auntie comes to tea
(well, actually with my Aunties you do but that’s another story).
It’s only
when you are doing something potentially life
threatening you need safety equipment.
Balcluha is in Otago, on New Zealand’s South
Island, the name is from Scots Gaelic Baile Cluaidh - ‘Town
on the Clyde’ and James McNeill from Dumfriesshire, named it and is
regarded as the founding father.
And this little morsel of knowledge would have
been fine, even comforting had I not read, on the way to what my stomach was
increasingly convincing me was my doom, that the Maori name for the place, Iwikatea, meant ’Place of Bleached
Bones.’
True, it related to a battle which took place in
1750, leaving many dead but I felt I was also on the way to a battle, with
raging, unforgivingly fatal water which would wash my bones up on some distant
shore, many years later.
‘What are you worried about?’ asked the husband as
we merrily bowled along, ‘you can swim.’
‘So could many passengers on the Titantic,’ I
replied trying to keep the note of panic from my voice.
We got to the landing stage and Bruce, grinning up
from his orange inflatable asked, ‘Ready for the experience of a lifetime?’
Somehow that too sounded worrying, lifetimes are
finite.
The boat lifted, moved away from the shore and I
fell into 8ft of icy cold water.
As I bubbled to the surface I swore that if either
man had even the ghost of a smile on his face, it really would become the place
of bones.
I knew that during the course of our devil run
down the Clutha, we’d be getting wet anyway, which is why we’d brought
waterproofs with us.
I just hadn’t anticipated the water being on the
inside of the coat.
True, I was gripping the safety lines every single moment of the mad flight into rushing rapids and was wearing a life jacket which almost strangled me but it was the sheer exuberance and speed of our careering flight which took my breath away as trees and banks flashed by faster than the eye could see.
And did.
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