With            time, however, as Ellsworth Kolb wrote, "unreasonable fear of the rapids            gave way to a reasonable respect." Cal Giddings, who kayaked the river in the 1950s, remembered a much different river than Powell and Manly            had seen: "One characteristic of those canyons--[they] are probably            the most ideal places for beginning river runners to get going. They            were fairly big waves [but] easy and straightforward. It was very beautiful."