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MultiSport tours in USA, Montana
Lewis and Clark Canoe Voyage


Itinerary for Lewis and Clark Canoe Voyage


For people of all ages interested in Lewis and Clark, this trip offers the ultimate experience: an excursion through the Missouri River’s Wild and Scenic White Cliffs area. It is a journey of stunning beauty that puts you in the explorers’ moccasins–but with the kinds of high-quality treatment that Lewis & Clark could only envy.”

Day 1
– Travel from your home to Great Falls, Montana. We recommend you arrive early enough in the day to allow time to visit the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center. In the evening, meet with the Team Leader at the hotel at 7:30 PM for a one-hour orientation meeting to answer any last-minute questions and give you your waterproof bags to pack. Dinner is on your own at a nearby restaurant.
Day 2 – Meet your Team Leader at 7:30 AM and board our bus for a two-hour ride to the canoeing trip launch point. Along the way we stop for a brief visit to Montana’s ἀrst town, Fort Benton, originally established as a fur-trading post.  From here we continue to “Decision Point” at the conᴀuence of the Missouri and Marias rivers.  A tributary to the Missouri that Lewis and Clark had heard nothing about, they spent over a week here deciding which river was in fact the Missouri.  After learning about this fascinating chapter, we proceed on to Coal Banks Landing where our canoes and cargo raft are waiting.  Once at the river our staff prepares you with a thorough safety orientation while your per-sonal gear is loaded onto our cargo raft. This orientation provides instruction on how to ride in a canoe, how to paddle and other tips to prepare you for the days ahead.  Once this is complete, everyone chooses a canoe, and climbs aboard.  The Upper Missouri River has smooth water and a current averaging about two miles an hour.  After paddling a few miles, we stop for lunch.  Our delicious riverside lunches are smorgasbord affairs. While some of the guides set up lunch, another will give you a “camp orientation” talk to explain how we minimize our impact on the river, where to wash up, how the toilet system works, where to brush teeth, place trash, etc. Then it’s time to make a sandwich and enjoy the open-air dining experience. Summer weather is typically hot and dry, with day-time temperatures in the 80’s and 90’s and nights in the 50’s and low 60’s.  (Early and late summer is cooler.)  We resume our downriver travel after lunch, stopping for a short hike to an Indian site of interest.  We travel between 8 and 11 miles the first day and arrive at camp around 4:00 PM.  After you carry your personal gear to the tent of your choice, enjoy free time for swimming, hiking, reading or just relaxing.  Hors d’oeuvres are served around 6:00 fol-lowed by dinner around 7:30.  After dinner a campἀre is lit and an evening of laughter and sharing begins.
Day 3 –  We wake you around 7:00 AM with the smell of fresh-brewed coffee.Breakfast is served around 7:30 and while we clean up the kitchen you pack up your personal gear.  The canoes and cargo raft are loaded and we depart from camp about 9:30 for an adventure- packed day of canoeing, great Western scenery and fun.  Soon we arrive at Eagle Creek where Lewis and Clark camped on the night of May 31, 1805. We spend several hours hiking in the vicinity of Eagle Creek and Neat Coulee, viewing the alcoves, amphitheaters and sandstone cathedrals of the White Cliffs. Meriwether Lewis was much taken by this area and we read some of the quotes from his journals. Across the river is La-Barge Rock, named after one of the most famous steamboat pilots on the Mis-souri.  This is the land of the Blackfeet Indi-ans and as we travel we learn about their culture and their role in the early fur trade.  During the Lewis and Clark Expedition Lewis had an encounter with a Blackfeet party along the Marias River that re-sulted with the death of two Indians and Lewis riding fast to get out of their territory.  After lunch we paddle downstream pass-ing Citadel Rock, a massive igneous intrusion immortalized by German Prince Maximilian’s artist Karl Bodmer in 1833.  (See the book “Karl Bodmer’s America”.)  The Missouri has cut a veritable storybook of geology through this ancient seabed of sedimentary rock. Later on massive quantities of magma rose great depths along faults and invaded the upper rock layers and solidified.  In places the igneous rock has “capped” the softer sandstone and the subsequent erosion has created hoodoos and other fascinating for- mations.  We arrive in camp by 4:00 PM with plenty of time to hike to the “Hole-in-the-Wall,” swim and relax. After dinner and the evening campἀre, watch for a glorious star-studded sky.
Day 4 – We proceed on the mighty Missouri, at times paddling and other times just drifting with the gentle current. The impressive landmarks of Steamboat Rock and Dark Butte loom on the horizon.  We pass the May 30, 1805 camp of Lewis and Clark. They stopped here after a miserable, rainy day on which they only made 5.4 miles. We stop at one or two pioneer homesteads and imagine life 100 years ago. Eagles soar over-head. In the late after-noon we pass Slaughter River where Lewis and Clark camped on both their upstream and downstream journeys. It’s a satisfying day of history, paddling and nature. Tonight’s camp is within walking distance of a prairie dog town and with binoculars and a spotting scope we can observe their antics and social behavior. Enjoy another night of camarade-rie and sharing.
Day 5 -  As we float today we hear the re-markable Indian legend about Arrow River as told in James Willard Shultz’s book “Floating on the Missouri” written in 1902 as a series for Field and Stream Magazine. The river canyon widens and we float through the Judith Basin, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.  We learn about Fort Chardon, a trading post in the area from 1844-45, the negotiations of 1846 between Father Pierre Jean DeSmet and the Flathead-Blackfeet In-dians, the 1855 Isaac Stevens Treaty, and the ἀrst military post in Montana, Camp Cooke, which existed from 1866-1870.  As we float downstream from the Judith basin we enter the Missouri River Breaks and a completely new landscape and geology.  Tonight’s camp features a superb mud bath, excellent hiking opportunities and is our last night on the river.
Day 6 – You may hike downstream a mile, or float, to the Hagadone Homestead where we explore old horse-drawn farm imple-ments, the original homestead cabin built in 1917 and pioneer life. Like many of the early settlers along the river, the difficult conditions and marginal farm land eventually proved uneconomical and the BLM purchased the land to be forever preserved in the Wild and Scenic River corridor. After floating a few more miles we stop for lunch, then continue to our take-out point at the Stafford/McClel-land Ferry, arriving around 2:00 PM.  We carry personal gear to the waiting bus and climb aboard for a three- hour drive back to Great Falls.  Enjoy a hot shower and change of clothes and then meet your guides for a hosted dinner at a local restaurant around 7:00 PM.
Day 7 –  If you drove to Great Falls your car is patiently waiting for you.  If you are flying, take the hotel shuttle 10 minutes to the Great Falls airport.

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Lewis and Clark Canoe Voyage
Tour Code: ZZ-CNRW01
7 days / 6 nights ~$0.00
Dates: June to September

Level : Fitness Level
Difficulty Levels Explained
1. Easy
Easy pace and an average-to-sedentary level of fitness. You should be in good health and fit enough for full day of normal sightseeing and walking.
2. Easy to Moderate
An average level of fitness or some experience with the featured activity is recommended.
3. Moderate
Requires you to have performed the featured activity regularly, with some periods on challenging terrain. Activities are mandatory and you may be traveling at high elevations. You need to be in good health and physical condition to enjoy these trips, with adequate muscular strength and cardiovascular endurance.
4. Demanding
You must be extremely physically fit and are expected to hike or ride four to six hours over steep or more rugged terrain.
5. Strenuous
Prolonged hiking/biking on moderate to difficult terrain (five to nine hours a day).
May include high altitude, rugged terrain etc..
Introduction
Day to Day Itinerary
Rates | Dates
Accomodation
Airport: Great Falls
Activities:
Canoeing, wildlife, hiking, swimming, culture

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