Photos from the 2023 Rafting the Grand Canyon Photography Expedition

December 31, 2023

How do I define the trip of a lifetime? For me, it's a trip through the Grand Canyon, rafting the Colorado River over 18 days and covering 225 miles. It's hanging on as the bow of the raft breaks through a wave in a rapid, and the water of the river briefly engulfs the boat. It's camping on sandy beaches, eating great food, and sleeping under the stars. It's hiking to hidden waterfalls deep in a slot canyon and watching the cliffs of the canyon glowing fiery orange and red in the early morning light.

A few months ago, my group, our river guides, Sally, and I shoved off from Lees Ferry, mile 0, on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park. The photos below and on the following pages, of which there are four pages of photographs in total, are all from this year's trip. I hope you enjoy viewing them as much as I did making them.

An image of the Colorado River winding its way through the red cliffs of the Grand Canyon.
Past the Palisades

The Colorado River winds its way through the Grand Canyon and beneath the towering cliffs of the Palisades of the Desert.

The cliffs of the Grand Canyon reflect in the Colorado River with clouds above. A large beach has formed along the river.
Conquistador Aisle from Blacktail

Looking downstream through Conquistador Aisle along the Colorado River as sunlight breaks through a gap in the clouds. From Blacktail Canyon in the Grand Canyon.

Before Glen Canyon Dam was built, the river carried more sediment through the canyon resulting in many beaches along its banks. In the Spring of 2023,the Bureau of Reclamation conducted a High Flow Experiment (HFE) releasing water from Glen Canyon Dam at a rate of 40,000 cubic feet per second (cfs). The result was the formation of many new beaches. Later in the summer of 2023, the Bureau of Reclamation closed the tap and only released about 5,000 cfs through the canyon. The resulting low water revealed even more beaches.

A dark and moody photograph of a waterfall in a slot canyon in Grand Canyon National Park.
Darkness Falls

A waterfall cascades into the darkness of a remote slot canyon in Grand Canyon National Park.

A waterfall cascades out of the redwall cliffs of the Grand Canyon.
Vaseys Paradise

As you round the bend in the Colorado River at mile 32 just below Stantons Cave, you begin to hear the soft sound of water cascading across rocks. As the sound becomes more evident, you get your first view of the waterfall at Vaseys Paradise. Pouring out from a cave in the Redwall limestone high above the river, the waterfall delicately makes its way down the cliff face, passing through a hanging garden of helleborine orchid, Emery’s sedge, western redbud, narrowleaf bricklebush, coyote and Goodding’s willows, watercress, and red cardinal monkeyflower.

On his historic 1869 expedition down the Colorado River and through the Grand Canyon, Major John Wesley Powell named it in honor of his friend and noted botanist, Dr. George W. Vasey, who was Curator of the U.S. National Herbarium and Botanist of the Department of Agriculture. Dr. Vasey never saw the springs that bear his name.

A tall waterfall cascades in front of a massive red rock cliff in the Grand Canyon.
Enchantment of Deer Creek

Deer Creek emerges from a slot canyon and plunges one hundred feet before finding its way to the Colorado River.

Water trickles over a sandstone pour-off in the cliffs of the Grand Canyon.
Papago Canyon

A trickle of water gently cascades down a pouroff into a dry creekbed. Papago Canyon near the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

A very tall waterfall becomes a stream winding its way through boulders in the Grand Canyon.
Approaching Deer Creek

There are many waterfalls in the Grand Canyon, but one of the most beautiful is Deer Creek Falls. This waterfall emerges from a crack 100 feet above and cascades into a pool. Deer Creek then winds its way along a short course before reaching the Colorado River.

A small waterfall deep in the Grand Canyon is located within a slot canyon with white cliffs framed by dark overhanging boulders.
Hidden Falls

This small waterfall in a slot canyon disappeared for many years after a flash flood filled the lower part of the canyon with rocks. Years later, the powerful waters of another flash flood cleared the rocks away, and this waterfall returned. Reaching this waterfall requires you to wade and sometimes swim in cold water below a large chockstone. On the day that I made this photo, the water was nearly up to my neck.

Storm clouds cling to a cliff in the Grand Canyon as the sunlit cliffs reflect in the water of the Colorado River.
Clearing Storm in Marble Canyon

As a storm clears with clouds still clinging to the rim far above, the golden light on the cliffs reflects off the waters of the Colorado River in Marble Canyon.

Before Glen Canyon Dam was built, the river carried more sediment through the canyon resulting in many beaches along its banks. In the Spring of 2023, the Bureau of Reclamation conducted a High Flow Experiment (HFE) releasing water from Glen Canyon Dam at a rate of 40,000 cubic feet per second (cfs). The result was the formation of many new beaches. Later in the summer of 2023, the Bureau of Reclamation closed the tap and only released about 5,000 cfs through the canyon. The resulting low water revealed even more beaches.

Water from a creek gushes from a slot canyon in a red rock cliff in the Grand Canyon, becoming a waterfall and plunging 100 feet. The water continues and rushes
Rushing Water of Deer Creek

Deer Creek emerges from a slot canyon and plunges one hundered feet to before finding its way to the Colorado River.

The red and orange cliffs of Tanner Wash reflect in a pool of water with sunlight on its surface.
Stillness at Tanner

I have wanted to photograph this location for several years, but when the Colorado River is running at normal to high water levels, it is inaccessible. In 2023, I was on an 18-day river trip during which the water in the river was running very low, making it possible to access. Sunlight was piercing through a narrow gap in the canyon walls, falling upon a still pool of water upon which the canyon walls reflected.

A pinnacle glows orange in the reflected light of the sun deep in a canyon within the Grand Canyon.
Little Nankoweap Canyon

A massive rock pilar glows in reflected light in Little Nankoweap Canyon, a side canyon to the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

A small cactus grows in a crack in Zoroaster granite in the Grand Canyon.
Pockets of Life

Life finds a way to survive. If you look closely, you can see a small cactus growing in a crack in the rock. From the Granite Gorge in Grand Canyon National Park.

A cave high on a cliff in the Grand Canyon glows orange in the morning light.
G.E. Kincaid's Cave

In 1909, the Arizona Gazette published an article by "G.E. Kincaid," who shared his tale of rafting the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. The Gazette ran two stories about Kincaid's trip, and in the second, he tells of how he discovered a cave entrance about 2,000 feet above the river and hiked up to explore where he claims to have found a treasure of Egyptian artifacts. He reported that he grabbed several relics and left, shipping them off to Washington - perhaps Kincaid was a distant relative of Indiana Jones?

Kincaid's story has led to many conspiracy theories about the "lost Egyptian cave of the Grand Canyon," with some people believing that the Smithsonian Museum is involved in a cover-up and that heavily armed guards protect the site.

When we saw this massive alcove high on a cliff above the river glowing in the low-angle light, I couldn't help but think of Kincaid's tall tale. Photo © Adam Schallau, All Rights Reserved.

Clear Creek waterfall cascades into a canyon of dark blue and gray rocks in the Grand Canyon.
Clear Creek Narrows

Located some distance up the narrows of Clear Creek in the Grand Canyon is a beautiful waterfall with two cascades. Over time, the water has carved a sweeping channel in the rock that causes it to shoot out sideways.

The Colorado River winds its way through the red cliffs of the Grand Canyon with a sunset sky with pink, orange, and vermilion clouds.
Last Light on Peshlakai Point

The last light of the day falls upon the Palisades of the Desert and Peshlakai Point. From an overlook high above the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park.

A small waterfall deep in the Grand Canyon is located within a slot canyon with white cliffs framed by dark overhanging boulders.
Return of Hidden Falls

This small waterfall in a slot canyon disappeared for many years after a flash flood filled the lower part of the canyon with rocks. Years later, the powerful waters of another flash flood cleared the rocks away, and this waterfall returned. Reaching this waterfall requires you to wade and sometimes swim in cold water below a large chockstone. On the day that I made this photo, the water was nearly up to my neck.

Clear Creek Falls in the Grand Canyon is a waterfall surrounded by gray, blue, and peach colored cliffs.
Convergence in Clear Creek

Located some distance up the narrows of Clear Creek in the Grand Canyon is a beautiful waterfall with two cascades. Over time, the water has carved a sweeping channel in the rock that causes it to shoot out sideways.

The full moon begins to set behind the sunlit cliffs of the Grand Canyon.
Moonset from Granite

The full moon sets behind the cliffs of the Grand Canyon. From Granite Camp at river mile 94 in the Grand Canyon.

In North Canyon, a small sliver of water drips into a pool of water reflecting the surrounding cliffs in the Grand Canyon.
Georgia's Reflecting Pool

A trickle of water gently cascades down a pouroff into the reflecting pool in North Canyon, deep inside Grand Canyon National Park.

The red and orange cliffs of Tanner Wash reflect in a pool of water with sunlight on its surface.
Tanner Wash

I have wanted to photograph this location for several years, but when the Colorado River is running at normal to high water levels, it is inaccessible. In 2023, I was on an 18-day river trip during which the water in the river was running very low, making it possible to access. Sunlight was piercing through a narrow gap in the canyon walls, falling upon a still pool of water upon which the canyon walls reflected.

The rim of the Grand Canyon glows red and yellow in the last light of the day as clouds fill the sky above and the canyon below falls into shade.
Above Three Springs

The distant rim of the canyon glows in the late evening light. From 'Above Three Springs Camp' in the Grand Canyon.

Redwall Cavern forms a orange glowing archway framing the Colorado River and the cliffs of Marble Canyon.
Redwall Cavern

Located at a large bend in the Colorado River within Marble Canyon, a massive natural amphitheater has been carved into a towering limestone wall. In August of 1869, Major John Wesley Powell and the men of his expedition camped here. In his journal, Powell, who was prone to exageration, estimated that 50,000 people could comfortably fit into the cavern, and while this may be a bit of an exageration, it illustrates how massive the cavern actually is. Redwall Cavern is located at river mile 33 in Grand Canyon National Park.

Clear Creek Falls in the Grand Canyon is a waterfall surrounded by gray, blue, and peach colored cliffs.
Convergence in Clear Creek - Panorama

Located some distance up the narrows of Clear Creek in the Grand Canyon is a beautiful waterfall with two cascades. Over time, the water has carved a sweeping channel in the rock that causes it to shoot out sideways.

Dark cliffs of Vishnu schist in the Granite Gorge of the Grand Canyon are highlighted by the sun.
Layers of the Granite Gorge

The Granite Gorge is a prominent section of the Grand Canyon, known for its rugged terrain and towering rock formations. Within this geological formation, the river has revealed ancient rocks, specifically the 1.7 billion-year-old Zoroaster Granite and Vishnu Schist. The Upper Granite Gorge, extending over a length of 41 miles, stretches from below Hance Rapid to Elves Chasm.

Tall cliffs in sunlight reflecting in the Colorado River deep in the Grand Canyon.
Reflections at 196

The sunlit cliffs of the Grand Canyon reflect in the cool waters of the Colorado River. From Hundred and Ninetysix Mile Creek in Grand Canyon National Park.

Fractured limestone glows red and reflects in the water of the Colorado River.
Fractured Marble

When the Powell Expedition floated through this area in 1869, John Wesley Powell wrote in his journal, "The limestone of this canyon is often polished, and makes a beautiful marble. Sometimes the rocks are of many colors – whites, gray, pink, and purple, with saffron tints."

Powell mistakenly identified the rock as marble when, in fact, this section of the canyon is mostly limestone, dolomite, and sandstone. Thus, the name 'Marble Canyon' is a misnomer as the canyon has no marble.

In North Canyon, a small sliver of water drips into a pool of water reflecting the surrounding cliffs in the Grand Canyon.
North Canyon Panorama

A trickle of water gently cascades down a pouroff into the reflectin pool in North Canyon, deep inside Grand Canyon National Park.

Tall limestone cliffs glow yellow, orange,, and red in the reflected light of Saddle Canyon in the Grand Canyon. A tree with green leaves gives scale.
Beckoning Light in Saddle

The warm glow of reflected light in Saddle Canyon, a side canyon to the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

Distant cliffs glow orange in the morning light and reflect on the surface of the Colorado River as it meanders through Conquistador Aisle in the Grand Canyon.
In Search of Gold

The Colorado River reflects the golden light bouncing off the cliffs of the Grand Canyon in Conquistador Aisle.

The Colorado River is surrounded by the massive cliffs of Marble Canyon in the Grand Canyon.
Marble Preserved

Looking downstream from river mile 40 on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park. This location was to be the site of the first of three dams that the Bureau of Reclamation planned to build within the Grand Canyon. Thanks to the efforts of David Brower of the Sierra Club, this site, along with many miles of canyon upstream from here, were preserved.


Fine Art Prints

The photos above are available as large fine art prints. The prints are available as Classic Prints on Fine Art Paper, Epic Prints on a Metal Float Mount, and Luxe Prints with TruLife® acrylic. You can click most of the photographs above to view them large and learn more about ordering a fine art print.


Upcoming River Trips

We still have a couple of spots left on the 2024 Rafting the Grand Canyon 10-Day Photography Expedition & Workshop. Our group meets in Flagstaff on April 29th, and we put on the water the very next day. We come off the river on May 9th.

A Tour West "S-Rig" raft departs Lees Ferry at mile 0 on the Colorado River, heading downstream on a 10-day, 226-mile river trip...