Booked a rafting day near Side and woken up to grey skies? Don't panic - a bit of rain almost never cancels a trip on the Koprucay river.
The short answer: rain rarely cancels rafting
Rafting is a water sport. You wear a helmet and life jacket, sit in an open raft and paddle through spray and splashing rapids - so you are going to get wet whether it rains or not. A light shower or an overcast morning simply doesn't change the experience much. Many guests actually find that cloud cover makes the day cooler and more comfortable than the fierce high-summer sun.
The Koprucay flows through Koprulu Canyon National Park near Beskonak, around 50 km and roughly one hour inland from the Side-Manavgat coast. Mountain weather can look very different from your hotel; it is common to leave a drizzly resort and arrive to bright skies in the canyon, or vice versa. That is why operators rarely make a call based on the forecast at your hotel.
When weather genuinely does affect a trip
Rain itself is not the problem. The two things that can genuinely disrupt rafting are what the rain does to the river and the sky:
- High water after heavy or prolonged rain. A sudden rise in the river can push the current faster and stronger. On grade II-III water this is usually still manageable for experienced guides, but a serious surge may mean the family route is paused or the run is shortened for safety.
- Thunderstorms and lightning. An active electrical storm is the one condition that reliably stops water sports anywhere in the world. If lightning is in the area, guides will hold, wait it out, or postpone - this is about safety, not comfort.
The river also behaves differently through the season. In the spring snowmelt of April and May the Koprucay runs livelier and higher, so heavy rain on top of that has more effect. By high summer the flow is gentler and far more forgiving. The season runs roughly from April to the end of October; in winter the river is too high and cold and tours simply don't run.
How cancellations and reschedules honestly work
Every reputable operator puts safety first, and the guides on the water make the final call - not head office, and not the forecast app on your phone. Here is how it typically plays out:
- Trip goes ahead as normal. This is by far the most common outcome, even on damp days.
- Delayed start. If a storm is passing through, your group may wait at the base until it clears, then head out.
- Reschedule to another day. If conditions genuinely aren't safe, most operators will move you to another date in your stay at no extra cost.
- Full refund. If you can't rebook before you fly home, a fair operator refunds a weather cancellation.
Because policies vary, always check the exact terms on your booking confirmation, and message the operator directly if the weather looks dramatic the night before. Honest companies would far rather move your trip than send you out in unsafe water.
What to do if you see rain in the forecast
Don't cancel on a hunch. Forecasts for a mountain canyon an hour inland are unreliable, and "rain" on an app often means a brief passing shower. Instead:
- Pack as you would anyway - you'll be dressed to get wet, in quick-dry clothes and secure footwear.
- Bring a dry set of clothes and a towel for the minibus ride back.
- Keep phones and valuables in the waterproof storage most operators provide at the base.
- Contact your operator if you have real concerns, rather than assuming it's off.
Remember that the water is cold snowmelt even in July and August, so you'll feel the chill from the river far more than from a bit of rain. A trained guide rides in every raft, helmets and life jackets are compulsory and provided, and the family route usually welcomes children from around age 6-7. The life jacket floats you, so you don't need to be a strong swimmer to enjoy the calmer family run.
If you're weighing up dates, our guide to rafting from Side explains pickup, timings and what to expect, and you can compare the classic 14 km run with the gentler family option across our full range of tours.
Grey sky in the morning? It's very likely still on. Check your rafting from Side booking details, pack your dry clothes, and get ready for a brilliant day on the Koprucay.