Thirty years ago, on a bike trip through Idaho, a 16-year-old boy named
Eric Hertz met a river runner who invited him to run the Rogue River in
Oregon. Hertz gladly accepted. The trip hooked Hertz on river running
for life. He continued to return to Idaho during the summers, working
on the Middle Fork of the Salmon. A steady career of river running followed
and in 1990 Hertz’ commitment culminated in the creation of Earth
River Expeditions. Soon after starting Earth River Expeditions, Hertz
brought on Robert Currie, a native Chilean, as his partner. The two made
a handshake deal that endures to this day, combining their talents to
tackle the daunting challenges of international expeditions.
As a global outfitter, with trips offered on some of the world’s
most wild and remote rivers, Earth River Expeditions was a natural pursuit
for Hertz. The list of trips offered reads like a whitewater wish list:
the Bio Bio (Chile), Upper Yangtze/ Great Bend of the Yangtze (China),
Primrose (Yukon), Magpie and Great Whale (Quebec), Talkeetna (Alaska),
Colca (Peru), Po Tsangpo (China), and Futaleufu (Chile). The inspiration
behind Earth River Expeditions was fueled in large part by a desire to
protect rivers of the world. Hertz wanted to facilitate “on the
ground conservation.” Early on, Earth River Expeditions established
a relationship with the Audubon Society, and created the Earth River Fund.
The fund was designed, says Hertz, “to increase awareness of the
danger to the world’s rivers”, and monies raised have gone
to protect the Great Whale, Bio Bio, and Futaleufu, to name a few. Good
intentions notwithstanding, Earth River Expeditions is a commercial outfitter,
and thus Hertz needed a business model which lived up to its aspirations.
Setting out to commercially run the world’s most remote and wild
rivers, Hertz focused on some core themes to guide Earth River Expeditions;
experience, safety, and trust. Guided by these principals, Earth River
Expeditions has enjoyed steady growth throughout the past ten years.
“About 30 percent per year,” says Hertz.
The first year they took only three clients down one river, the Futaleufu.
Last year 350 clients, and this year 500 will partake in the Earth River
experience.
The key to any successful business is its employees, and Earth River
Expeditions is no different. The stakes of the game are raised on rivers
like the Colca, so the skill of the players must be raised accordingly.
Calm heads, tamed egos, and a team mentality are what Earth River Expeditions
looks for in a guide. A quality resume and solid references are standard
also, but the quality most sought is a respectful, professional attitude.
With this in mind, Earth River Expeditions will train prospective guides
first on one of their runs. Over time, as the guide learns the river,
Earth River Expeditions will make the call whether the chemistry is right
to bring him on as an employee. According to Hertz. “The lowest
ego will make for the best guide for Earth River Expeditions.”
The importance of good chemistry is accentuated by the fact that Earth
River Expeditions relies heavily on return clients and word-of-mouth marketing.
A negative experience can directly impact future sales. Further, Hertz
prefers guide/client relationships to evolve with mutual respect, keeping
over-the-top schmoozing to a minimum. As a result of these criteria, Earth
River Expeditions brings a slightly older and wiser crew of guides, averaging
nearly twenty years of experience on the worlds most respected rivers.
The pursuit of quality goes beyond personnel. Hertz also emphasizes innovative
equipment and client preparation. By teaming up with Sotar to create custom
boats for big water, Hertz feels they’ve hedged their bet. Another
innovation has been the design of a safety cataraft with a front deck,
the preferred rescue vehicle of Earth River Expeditions. On all their
runs, except the narrow Colca, Earth River relies exclusively on catarafts
for rescues, using their agility and capacity to maximize effectiveness.
“Kayakers too often end up as cheerleaders,” says Hertz. On
the client side, there is a physical standard expected of all potential
rafters. Further, for some rivers, there is a state-of-mind waiver. When
presented with such a waiver many clients change their minds, which Hertz
considers sound preventative medicine. For those who make it to the put
in, a one-day guide school is performed. Here clients go over rescue techniques,
swimming, flipping, and other scenarios they may encounter on the river.
Having selected the most qualified guides, customized both passenger and
rafts and rescue catarafts, and educated the clients, Earth River Expeditions
puts on the river with confidence that all assurances for safety have
been taken.
Offering international trips on remote whitewater often means dealing
with layers of foreign government bureaucracy. Each country, each region
and community in that country, has its own red tape to go through. “The
key”, says Hertz, “is to take things in stride.” A good
attitude in a time of adversity is often all you have going your way.
Further, a negative approach can alienate the powers that be and make
things more difficult. Establishing respectful and trusting relationships
has been the key to Earth River Expeditions ability to operate in so many
countries. Hertz tells of the time when a large sum of money, money for
user fees for the Yangtze, was lost in the wire transfer. With thousands
of dollars missing, and delicate relations with their Chinese partners
at stake, Hertz waited for the situation to play out. In the end, the
money was found, and the trust invested in his partners validated. The
value of picking quality, trustworthy people as his oversees associates
proved vital towards achieving the goal of incredible trips on incredible
rivers.