Ranon Canyon

17-01-2018

Kent, Anna, James, John, Tal and me

Last time I had done a trip through Ranon canyon Carlos Santana and Rob Thomas were Smooth and Mmmbop was unfortunitely still a thing. A drunken conversation between myself Della and Lerch on the wrong side of 2am saw us up a few hours later working off hangovers in the heat.

It was Lerch’s first big canyon I remember getting to the Junction with Claustral and him asking where the exit was. The look of dejection when I told him it was 2hrs down stream was almost as good as when we got to the top of the camels hump and I pointed out our destination up on Mt Tomah that looked to be separated by another deep chasm and I jokingly said we had come up the wrong ridge…..

Lerch is not a violent man but I think I saw murder in his eyes that day. Luckily he was too stuffed to chase me.

Anyhoo, I had some time off and Kent was out on another one of his multiple day canyon extravaganzas and he happened to be doing Ranon on a day that I could get to. Sweet.

The “normal” entrance to the Claustral system through the Black Hole of Calcutta Falls is spectatualr and all but I always preffered going in via Mistake Ravine and Ranon Canyon. Originally that was probably a snobby thing knowing it was far less visited but it does give you more bang for your buck with some very nice canyon above the junction that gives Claustral a real run for it’s money in terms of greenry. IMO it’s even more fernilicous and still has few signs of visitation.

Anyway there was so much beauty in this trip I think I’ll leave the words to a minimum and let the photos tell the story.

a ranon (1 of 139).jpg
Looking down Mistake Ravine towards the Ranon Brook Junction
a ranon (2 of 139).jpg
Tal on a slippry hand over hand into Mistake Ravine
a ranon (5 of 139).jpg
Ferntacious

a ranon (6 of 139).jpg

 

a ranon (7 of 139).jpg
Fernilicious
a ranon (15 of 139).jpg
Like a lost world
a ranon (17 of 139).jpg
Sandstone, Sassafras and Coachwood
a ranon (20 of 139).jpg
Tal giving Anna some tips on foot placement

 

After the junction with Ranon it somehow gets even more ferntacualr
a ranon (24 of 139).jpg
John dropping into Ranon
a ranon (27 of 139).jpg
Fern ceilings are cool

a ranon (29 of 139).jpg

a ranon (30 of 139).jpg
Kent all chilled out and relaxed

a ranon (32 of 139).jpg

a ranon (36 of 139).jpg

a ranon (35 of 139).jpg
Work life ballence or something

a ranon (37 of 139).jpg

a ranon (43 of 139).jpg
Tal resetting after having negociated the deep pool mid abseil
a ranon (46 of 139).jpg
Anna on another 2 stage abseil with a deep pool between drops.
a ranon (49 of 139).jpg
Kent and James pulling ropes
a ranon (52 of 139).jpg
John dropping down towards the Claustral junction

a ranon (53 of 139).jpg

a ranon (56 of 139).jpg
James in the slot at the Claustral junction
a ranon (59 of 139).jpg
Sun beams in Claustral
a ranon (60 of 139).jpg
Looking out of the Black Hole of Calcutta towards the Ranon Junction. You can make out Anna belaying Kent down the final abseil
a ranon (61 of 139).jpg
Claustral Canyon
a ranon (68 of 139).jpg
The Hulks Fist

OK so this location/pose is probably the most snapped shot in any canyon in the Blue Mtns, if not the southern hemisphere. Sure it’s almost getting cliche and is certainly the classic “Claustral photo” but who cares it is such an epic spot. I thought it became “the shot” after it was featured in National Geographic but a quick google informs me that was the next one downĀ which Ed has captured from aĀ slightly different angleĀ for the 2017-18 Ozcanyons banner.

So who first took it? No idea but two of the best comes from Ed and JakeĀ 

Anyhoo

a ranon (72 of 139).jpg
Claustral canyon

a ranon (74 of 139).jpg

a ranon (81 of 139).jpg
Claustral is such a great slot, deep and sustained. Unfortunitey in 1982 3 people lost thier lives when they got caught in this section in aĀ  severe storm. Between the Black Hole and the Thunder Canyon junction there is little to no refuge in rising water. The Claustral system has a large catchment so it’s important to stay uptodate on weather forcasts and if it looks dicey or you are unsure… Well the canyon will stillbe there next week, next month, next year

 

b ranon-83.jpg

a ranon (86 of 139).jpg

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

a ranon (91 of 139).jpg
Enjoying a bit of sun light

a ranon (92 of 139).jpg

a ranon (93 of 139).jpg

a ranon (94 of 139).jpg
Looking up Thunder canyon
a ranon (95 of 139).jpg
Me and Tal go for a quick look up the bottom 100m or so of Thunder. The water is so much colder
a ranon (105 of 139).jpg
From the Thunder junction down there is a bit of boulder hopping before the canyon closes back in

a ranon (106 of 139).jpg

a ranon (108 of 139).jpg

a ranon (109 of 139).jpg

a ranon (112 of 139).jpg

a ranon (113 of 139).jpg
Tal in the tunnel swim. On my first trip though here it was silted up and was more a shallow wade. Deep and clear today
a ranon (114 of 139).jpg
In the tunnel swim
a ranon (118 of 139).jpg
The chock stones in the tunnel swim seem so far above you as you swim through but the cliffs above dwarf them

a ranon (117 of 139).jpg

a ranon (121 of 139).jpg

a ranon (124 of 139).jpg

a ranon (127 of 139).jpg
A final swim to the exit spot
a ranon (130 of 139).jpg
And then it’s up and up and up
a ranon (132 of 139).jpg
Though the exit gully, Rainbow Ravine is very pretty itself
a ranon (136 of 139).jpg
Looking across to Mt Banks

in my report on our Claustral trip last year I explained how George Caley thought it would be an easy traverse from Mt Tomah across the “low saddle” to Mt Banks. Without knowledge f the deep canyons, only some of which we had just traversed, it’s easy to see why he had thought that.

Anyway anther great trip with great people, thanks again to Kent of organising.

Anna was pleased that on a canyon trip with 5 blokes no F bombs were dropped. Personally I think she blanked a few out.

Party Size: 6 all experienced

Time:8.5hrs car to car, relaxed pace

Is life not a thousand times too short for us to bore ourselves-Friedrich Nietzsche

BACK

4 thoughts on “Ranon Canyon

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s