Not everyone in the family is desperate to get soaked in a cold mountain river, and that's completely fine. A Koprulu Canyon rafting day is easy to enjoy even when one parent would rather stay dry and watch.
Yes, one parent can stay behind at the base
Rafting on the Koprucay river runs from a riverside base near Beskonak, around an hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast. This base is not a bare launch point in the middle of nowhere. It is a proper riverside spot with a restaurant, shaded seating, toilets and space to relax, right beside the water where the rafts set off and finish.
So if one adult simply doesn't fancy the rapids, they don't have to. They can wave the raft off, settle in with a coffee or cold drink, and have a genuinely pleasant few hours by the river while the rest of the family paddles the canyon.
How the day works for a split group
The practical side is straightforward. Your free hotel pickup collects the whole family together by minibus in the morning, and you all travel to the canyon as one group. When you arrive, the rafters get their helmets and life jackets, meet their guide and head to the water. The parent staying behind simply stays at the base.
The classic run is around 14 km through the canyon, with a shorter family route of about 12 km as an option. Either way, the rafting itself is a couple of hours on the water, and the non-rafting parent has the whole time to unwind. Everyone travels back together in the same minibus in the late afternoon or early evening, so nobody is left waiting alone or arranging their own transport.
What the parent at the base can actually do
The riverside restaurant is the natural anchor for the day. Many bases serve lunch here, so the parent staying behind can eat, order drinks and enjoy the shade and mountain air at a relaxed pace. It's a green, cool valley setting, a lovely contrast to a busy beach resort.
- Relax at the restaurant with food, tea, coffee or a cold drink.
- Watch the action as rafts come down the river and pass the base.
- Mind younger children who are below the minimum age, so they don't miss the trip.
- Take photos of the family as they set off and return.
This is also the ideal arrangement if you have a little one under the family route's usual minimum age of around 6 to 7. One parent can stay with the youngest child while the older kids raft with the other parent.
Watching the family finish
One of the nicest parts of sitting it out is being there when your family floats back in, grinning and dripping. Rafts finish the run back at or near the base, so the parent who stayed dry gets the reunion, the stories and the best photos, all without setting foot in the cold snowmelt water.
Good to know before you book
A trained guide rides in every raft and steers the boat, and helmets and life jackets are compulsory and provided. The life jacket keeps you afloat, so a strong swimmer you do not need to be for the family route. The rapids are grade II to III, beginner and family friendly, livelier in the spring snowmelt around April and May and gentler in high summer. The season runs roughly from April to the end of October.
If you're comparing options and want to see the full range of trips, our tours page lays them out clearly, and the rafting from Side page covers pickup and timings from your resort. Prices depend on the route, group size and season, so always check the live price on the booking page.
Ready to plan a day that suits everyone in the family, rafters and relaxers alike? See how easy it is on our rafting from Side page and book with confidence.