You cannot hold your phone while you paddle grade II-III rapids on the Koprucay river, and you would not want to risk it in cold snowmelt. That is exactly why a dedicated photo and video team works the rafting run through Koprulu Canyon National Park.
Why bother with the photo service at all?
Rafting through Koprulu Canyon is one of those trips where you are fully hands-on: both hands on the paddle, life jacket zipped up, helmet on, guide calling the strokes. There is no free moment and no safe place to hold a phone. The water is cold snowmelt even in July and August, and one lively rapid is all it takes to soak or lose a device. The professional service exists so you can throw yourself into the experience and still come home with proper images of it.
What the team actually captures
The photographers know the river intimately, so they position themselves at the best vantage points along the canyon rather than shooting randomly. Typically you can expect:
- Action shots at the rapids - the moments where your raft drops, spins and throws up spray, usually the frames people love most.
- Your whole raft together - group photos of everyone paddling, which are almost impossible to take yourself mid-river.
- Canyon scenery - the dramatic rock walls and turquoise water of Koprulu Canyon as a backdrop to your run.
- Candid reactions - the laughs, the nervous grins before a rapid, and the relief afterwards.
- Short video clips on many trips, edited into a highlights sequence of your rafting session.
Because the team follows the river every day, they know where the good light falls and where the biggest splashes happen, so the results are far sharper and better framed than a shaky selfie could ever be.
Why it beats risking your own phone
Plenty of first-timers ask whether they can just film it themselves. Honestly, we would advise against it on the water. Your hands are needed for paddling, a dropped phone is gone in fast cold water, and even a waterproof case can be knocked out of your grip on a bumpy drop. The professional gear is built for exactly these conditions and the shooters are standing safely on the bank or on rocks, getting angles you simply cannot reach from inside a bouncing raft.
If you still want a keepsake without any cost, secure your phone in a dry bag and take your own photos on calmer stretches or before and after the run. But for the genuine white-water moments, the pro service is the reliable way to capture them.
Is it included, and what does it cost?
Here is the honest part: the photo and video package is usually an optional extra, not automatically included in the rafting price. Cost depends on the operator, on whether you want photos only or photos plus an edited video, and on how the images are delivered - digital download, USB, or prints. Prices change from season to season, so we will not quote a figure here that might be wrong on the day.
The simplest approach is to decide at the base. You will usually see the photos and clips displayed after your run, and you choose then whether to buy - there is no pressure to commit in advance. If it matters to you, mention it when you book so you know what is on offer for your specific tour. You can review the current rafting options and what each includes on our tours page.
Quick tips to get the best shots
- Wear a bright top - you will stand out from the raft and the water in every frame.
- Face the bank and smile when your guide shouts that a photographer is ahead.
- Keep paddling through the rapid - action photos always look better than posed ones.
- Check the display screen at the base before you leave so you do not miss any images you love.
Rafting the Koprucay is a genuinely memorable day out around an hour inland from the Side and Manavgat coast, and good photos let you relive it long after you have dried off. Browse the rafting trips and book your run on our tours page, and ask about the photo and video service when you reserve.