The Fantasy Flash: PL Checks In on Dane Jackson’s Speed Run of Cali Classic

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Well, he’s done it again. Jackson Kayak’s Dane Jackson is turning heads and dropping jaws again, this time in an unheard-of, record-breaking speed descent of California’s heralded 21-mile-long Fantasy Falls, the headwaters section of the North Fork of the Mokelumne River. He made the descent in a little over three hours, on a run most people, mortals anyway, take up to three days to run. But Jackson flashed it in a paltry 180 minutes of hard-charging, make-mayhem-look-easy, adrenaline-fueled paddling.

PL caught up with His Daneness for his thoughts on nailing one of paddling’s most badass speed runs:

PL: How’d flashing Fantasy Falls go overall? 
Jackson: It was one of the those things that once it was on my mind I just couldn’t wait for the opportunity to make it happen. I also loved the challenge of figuring out how water levels would line up, the best way to set safety properly, wrapping my mind around doing it smoothly from the top to bottom. In the end it all came together about as good as I could have had it. It was definitely a different experience coming around the corners and routing straight into rapids normally I would get a quick look at before dropping in, and it was epic.
PL: How hard was it?
Jackson: The biggest challenge was obviously remembering all the lines of the 21 miles, not only to make sure I knew exactly what was coming next, but I also wanted to feel as smooth as possible down the run. The hardest part was levels were getting on the low end to make it happen; it had dropped from prime flows down to medium low-ish the previous day for my one day lap, but scouting things made me feel like there was still a bit more room to drop before it got too low. Though waking up the next morning for the day of the flash and seeing it dropped the same amount again, it was tough to make the call on whether a few of the rapids like Mommy Gorge would still be the same or as clean, since I wouldn’t see them until I was already in there. Though I decided from the scout the day before that I felt I still had a good window til it was too low so decided to go for it.
PL: How many tmes had you run it before?
Jackson: Before I started putting the project together I had done it three times, and after my second Fantasy Flush in 2021, when I was driving across the country I had the idea for the straight through. Then this year I did a one-day Flush with Bren on my birthday, then another one-day practice run the next day, then I did the flash on the third day.
PL: Any close calls?
Jackson: My biggest goal was I wanted to feel smooth down the whole run, I didn’t want to be routing into things and just getting tossed all over place. In the end I am stoked with the run as a whole. I did mess up one of the slides at the top, and got pushed into a hole for a second which was a bummer. It wasn’t a dangerous place and it’s a hole I knew I’d have no problem surfing out of, I was just a little disappointed but in the end it wasn’t bad. I also flipped in the big drop of Mommy Gorge, which wasn’t my cleanest line there but that thing is a different beast in itself. In the end it was one mistake and one flip over the 21 miles, and it felt like it was a lot of my best kayaking which felt awesome.
PL: Were you exhausted afterward?
Jackson: I honestly wasn’t doing too bad—in the end I wasn’t sprinting down the run, just cruising. The goal was never to set any speed record or anything like that, it was more about the idea of flowing down the run with essentially no eddies or stopping. I ended up catching two eddies that were necessary to set up to hit the lines, one in Mommy Gorge, and another at the top of the run. So it was just flowing from top to bottom for three hours and it felt great. Though if I had another 45 minutes to an hour more I bet I would have started to feel it more.
PL: How was your film and safety team?
Jackson: Unfortunately, media wise I didn’t have much out there, though we had a few cameras down the run. Up until literally about a week before doing the flash, we had planned on a heli following me down the run filming which would have been epic. Though, unfortunately, at the last minute we couldn’t make it happen because the run is on the border with some no-fly areas. So, in the end it was mainly GoPro with a few camera angles down the run.
As for the safety side, which was my biggest priority, that came together amazing. It was hard trying to coordinate so many people, but it all came together perfect. There were 19 people all spread out down the run, some had to paddle in the night before to do a two-day run so they could be in position, and some paddled in a few hours before me that morning.
In the end I had safety in all the places I felt I needed it, and I was so grateful to everyone that helped me out on it. The only place I didn’t end up doing safety, which caused me to do an extra portage, was this gnarly little rapid a little ways down the run. In the end I decided that morning that the levels had gotten too low, and it wasn’t worth risking it. So it wasn’t a full Fantasy Flush as for the Flush you have to run everything except the sieve rapid at the top of the run.
Though with the lower flows, in the end it felt like the right call. I was stoked there were so many people down to help me out, which gave me so much more confidence down the whole run, and I was so grateful especially because for some that meant sitting around all day for me to come through for 10 seconds. In the end, although media-wise it didn’t land where I wanted it, the lines and the safety were pretty much perfect for me which was most important. Stoked it came together, definitely one of the best days I have had out there!

Watch Entire Run Here!

The Fantasy Flash, an Edit by Bren Orton

As impressive as Jackson’s run was, filmmaker Bren Orton and Jackson’s safety boaters deserve equal kudos as well for hiking and paddling in, providing safety and capturing it all. Check out the quality videography of his video below at 11:17 in to this California Senders vid. Paired to music that inspires, that’s where Jackson’s speed run of Fantasy Falls transpires, alongside a crew of high-end whitewater kayakers lapping the California classic with him (albeit a little slower). Jackson’s edited GoPro footie and other clips captured by his friends who came to set safety gives you an idea of what this endeavor entails.

Jackson has long been at the top of the sport and the length of time he has been innovating and pushing the limits is mind boggling. Click below to watch the 30-year-old son of Eric Jackson doing his old man proud by having some beautiful quick lines through serious whitewater.

Full POV here:

Read on for River Description from LiquidLore

Fantasy Falls is a great name for a river – for this one it’s fitting. Fantasy Falls is the headwaters section of the North Fork of the Mokelumne River, and it is one of the classic California Sierra multi-day river trips. It starts high up in the mountains at about 7000 feet where there will be snow at the put in. The water is icy on the first day as it descends to a large reservoir you’ll find three days after you leave the cars behind. This is a challenging but rewarding trip with a wide variety of good whitewater. Though you will have to walk some things, avoiding a portage-fest means running a lot of class V, and there is no shortage of stout rapids there to test anyone willing to take them on.

The shuttle on Fantasy Falls is long. The put in is easy to find – along highway 4 heading up through Bear Valley and over Ebbets Pass you’ll find a bridge over the river, which at that point is just a little creek that is well signed. There are several good parking spots by the bridge. The simplest option to reach the take out at Salt Springs Reservoir is to follow the directions linked above. Salt Springs Reservoir is at the end of Ellis Road off of highway 88 – the turn is easy to miss. Follow this well marked road for about 30 miles to reach the reservoir. In the end it’s about a 2.5 hour one way trip from put in to take out. The clever and brave can attempt a much shorter shuttle on the river left side through a maze of old logging roads.

Fantasy Falls runs in the early part of the high Sierra river season. Generally speaking it should run after the Royal Gorge is done, and before Upper Cherry comes into play, depending on the weather and snowpack. People will go and check the flow when it’s expected to start running, so try and find someone with this beta! The put in bridge has a spray painted gauge on the downstream right side, with the top mark meaning high water. The river is still a decent medium flow at 3 inches below the below the bottom line. If you don’t want to rush, plan on boating for 3 days.

From the put in at the road bridge the river isn’t much to write home about – the crystal clear water meanders downstream around a bend and out of sight. After starting out though it doesn’t take long for the river to begin producing rapids – unfortunately the first few miles are relatively low volume manky boulder piles – it’s combat boating for sure and you’ll want to keep your eyes out for wood. You will most likely carry around a couple of short choked up sections but for the most part it’s all good to go, if shallow, and there are even some fun boofs to be found amongst the boulders.

The junk eventually gives way to some nice meadow sections with great scenery. Tributaries begin joining the main river and the volume slowly and surely begins to grow, and soon you’ll arrive at the first bedrock sections – once it arrives the majority of the whitewater is on granite for the rest of the trip. The difficulty of the rapids build slowly and it’s usually later in the day by the time you will reach the first major gorge. Be careful to scout carefully when you reach new gorges on this run – some of them have seductive entrances that really need to be inspected from the bank beforehand. The first gorge is all runnable and everything can be dealt with at water level. It ends with a distinctive backender-slot-to-angled-ledge rapid. There is good camping at the end of this gorge.

After a brief open stretch with a couple of granite rapids the river rolls around a corner and drops into the second gorge – this is a big U-shaped affair that is ultra classic and that is certainly one of the stand-out gorges of the run. Below this gorge is the usual day 2 section which consists of a good mixture of big gorges, open rapids and even some flat meadows with awesome scenery. Expect tough kayaking, scouting and portaging – scout the gorges carefully before dropping in. Late on day 2 or early on day 3 there is a massive rapid/waterfall that most people will portage. If you push hard you can get as far as Fantasy Falls proper on day 2.

The last day of boating starting at Fantasy Falls is all bedrock with some of the biggest rapids on the river. After a mile of good boogie, Fantasy Falls is an incredible 30-15 double drop set in an awe-inspiring mountain amphitheater. If you don’t camp here take some time to soak in the surroundings. The last few miles have good rapids right into the lake, including the infamous Island Slide and the “California class III” slide dubbed Show Me Your Tits.

From the last big slide you’ll all too soon reach Salt Springs Reservoir. The clean white granite closing rapids are a great way to end off such a classic class V 3 day trip. It’s one of the best in California. You do still have a long paddle across the lake and the drive back to the put in, but you’ll be so stoked about the river that those few hours will just fly by.

Nick Hinds
Nick Hindshttps://paddlinglife.com/
Nick Hinds grew up in NC, spending time canoeing and c-1ing around the western part of the state since he was 11 years old. During his 4 years at University of Colorado at Boulder he added whitewater kayaking, so he could earn money teaching at Boulder Outdoor Center. Starting as an intern at Paddler magazine in 2003, Nick began his 20 year career in the Paddlesports Industry. He worked for 4 years with Eugene in Steamboat at Paddler, then 8 years with Canoe & Kayak magazine after moving to Seattle. Spearheading the guidebook for Washington and Oregon, in 2016 he helped publish Paddling Pacific Northwest Whitewater . After 4 years with American Whitewater and 3 with Werner he now handles advertising and marketing partnerships for Paddling Life.

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