Arkansas River Rafting & Adventure Park Fun w/ Noah's Ark -- Buena Vista Colorado
noahsark.com -- 719.395.2158
Arkansas River Rafting & Adventure Park Challenges w/ Noah's Ark Rafting. Buena Vista Colorado offers some of the Best Whitewater in the State on the Arkansas River and Exciting Aerial Challenges at the Browns Canyon Adventure Park. Come join us in rafting and/or the Adventure Park. Combination packages available.
Colorado Rock Climbing with Noah's Ark Whitewater Rafting Co.
Not only do we specialize in Whitewater Rafting Trips on the Arkansas River and aerial adventures on the Browns Canyon Adventure Park, we also feature half and full day Colorado Rock Climbs for beginning levels and beyond. You will love the stunning views of the Collegiate Peaks Wilderness Area... Colorado does not disappoint and neither do our guide staff. Our well-trained, passionate and service-oriented crew will add a ton to your Colorado family or group vacation! Visit for more information, and to make your reservation today.
Aerial Zip Line Adventure: Browns Canyon Adventure Park
Browns Canyon Adventure Park offers 4 courses (Arkansas River Run, Canyon Rim Team Roller, Colorado Peaks Playpen, Vertical Limit) and 2 High Adrenaline Challenges (Big Drop Swing and the Leap of Faith). This aerial adventure park features state-of-the-art challenge course technology and creative thrill elements, such as broken bridges, wobble logs, and 7 zip-lines. Incorporating team challenges as well as individual obstacles, the Browns Canyon Adventure Park is one of the most innovative and unique Aerial Adventure Parks in the United States.
#HarnessTheChallenge
Directed by Steven Sproul
Noah's Ark Rafting: The Arkansas River
Discover Colorado's #1 raft trip with Noah's Ark - one of Colorado's largest and most experienced whitewater rafting & adventure companies. Experience the world-class Arkansas River on a half-day, full-day, or overnight trip through Browns Canyon National Monument. Our riverfront property is located in Buena Vista, less than 2 hours from Colorado Springs and Denver. Voted Buena Vista's favorite rafting company of the year in 2011, 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2017... Learn more about Noah's Ark at
Directed by Anthony Frederick
Discover Browns Canyon Adventure Park in Colorado
Check out the high-flying adventures at Browns Canyon Adventure Park in Buena Vista, Colo. Suspended above the banks for the Arkansas River, you can zip, swing, jump and climb through a playground in the air.
See more:
Trips To Discover is a destination and travel discovery platform. We aim to inspire you to travel more, to turn day dreamers into fanatical travelers.
Check out our site:
--------------------
Follow Us On Social!
--------------------
FACEBOOK:
INSTAGRAM:
TWITTER:
Colorado Ziplining | OutThere Colorado
We teamed up with Royal Gorge Rafting and Zip Line Tours to try out one of the coolest thrill rides in the state.
Ziplining in Salida, Colorado 2015 with GoPro
One of the 6 ziplines at Captain Ziplines course in Salida, Colorado. This line was the longest zipline at around 700 ft. long.
Browns Canyon becomes a national monument
Browns Canyon officially becomes a national monument on Saturday. Storm Station 7 Meteorologist Cory Reppenhagen tells us his special connection to this dedication.
◂
The Denver Channel, 7News, brings you the latest trusted news and information for Denver, Colorado, Mile High and the Rocky Mountains.
Our mission is to provide useful, interesting news and updates on breaking news to people in the Denver metro area, all across our beautiful state of Colorado and all over the world.
For more download the 7News mobile app:
iPhone:
Android:
Surf in Salida Colorado
This had happend during high water one week prior to FIBArk
Citizens Rally to Save Healthy Canopy Trees in Salida Colorado Part Two
This is Part Two of our video coverage concerning a political rally at the intersection of Tenth and H Streets in Salida Colorado — and at the intersection of an ecologically conscious future, and a government bureaucracy intent on creating sterile streetscapes that are easy and cheap to maintain. You can view Part One on the Salida Daily Post, dated February 3, 2014 (check our ARCHIVES section)...
Following a rousing speech by local activist Linda Taylor (parts of which you can listen to in Part One) the rally participants walked the seven blocks to the north end of H Street and back to their starting place, where an impromptu public hearing took place between the two City Council members present — Hal Brown and Eileen Rogers — concerning the possibility of saving some of the healthier canopy trees by rethinking the way the City administration and Public Works departments allocate funding for street maintenance and reconstruction.
As Council member Hal Brown noted during the discussion, a community with the right intention can find ways to save its historic trees, and he mentioned his previous experiences living in a different city, where a large number of ancient oak trees were saved from a municipal removal plan. He also noted, a few minutes earlier, that the City of Salida had developed a Ten-Year Tree Maintenance Plan back in the early 2000s, but that the plan had now expired and there has been no attempt by the City to create a new plan for tree maintenance.
He then reminded the rally participants that there are real costs entailed in saving historic trees within the Salida city limits. Where does that money come from? What are the long range costs of a tree preservation program?
Rally organizer Linda Taylor related a story about her seven-year wait to have her street-side trees pruned by the City, only to have a Public Works crew show up one day planning to cut the trees down. (We did not hear the exact outcome of that unpleasant confrontation.)
Rally organizer Linda Taylor related a story about her seven-year wait to have her street-side trees pruned by the City, only to have a Public Works crew show up one day planning to cut the trees down. (We did not hear the exact outcome of that unpleasant confrontation.)
Because if you take all of these [historic] trees down now, and you plant them all with ornamental fruit trees, those ornamental fruit trees with the exception of the crabapples have a 20-year lifespan — max — under ideal conditions. So let's call it 15 years.
You put in all those ornamentals. In 15 years, those ornamentals will all be dying out; they will all have to come down again, and here you are with a street with no trees. This makes no sense. You need to stagger the [removal] and teh planting of trees, so that as trees come down, you have others that are growing up. That's how forestry [experts] manage forests, and that's how these trees should be managed. Take some down this year; two years from now, take a few more down that are ready to die; five years from now, take a few more.
That costs money; that takes time; it takes energy; and it takes real creative thinking. And its [apparently] too hard [for our City]. So it's always, just take the easy route out.
We've got to stop that mentality. The easy route doesn't work. It's a lose-lose for everybody. And we want a win-win. We want the city to be fixed; we want the streets to be repaired; we want new sidewalks; we also want trees. We have to really put on our thinking caps; think outside of the box and figure out, how are we going to do this? And how are we going to pay for it? And that's a big thing — but not to make decisions based just on convenience and money. That's unconscionable.
Bryan Dreher R 2 Sprint 2015 FibArk Salida Co
FibArk 2015 takes place June 18-21 on the Arkansas River in Salida Colorado.
salida co things to do in the river: whitewater stand up paddle fun