pp1d9642bf.png
ppb59a7066.png
pp66d5aff7.jpg
ppefe49327.png
pp90faa851.png
pp00e6dfb2.png
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp920ae5d7.png
ppcdf9ef78.png
pp428d7161.png
pp1ac84c56.png
pp78490def.png
pp229bc6a8.png
pp7e094f32.png
ppd2376b4a.png
pp03ed7776.png
ppf9278a79.png
ppe0468761.png
ppa56e913d.png
pp7d27355c.png
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp3df4401b.gif
pp160f673d.png
pp19536947.png
pp3df4401b.gif
ppd6e95fad.png
ppf219b536.png
pp3df4401b.gif
pp0726ebe8.png
pp8cde74b9.png
pp2eaa473e.png
ppa1d5f182.png
Imagine a race across the entire state of Missouri, just you and your boat thrown against 340 miles of wind, heat, bugs and rain. This ain’t no mama’s boy float trip. This race promises to test your mettle from the first stroke in Kansas City to the last gasp in St. Charles. Just entering it will impress your friends. Finishing it will astound them… and winning it? Well, you always thought you were sort of a legend anyway, didn’t you? It’s time to prove it.
The Missouri 340 is an endurance race across the state of Missouri. Competitors will start in Kansas City and finish, some of them anyway, in St. Charles. With numerous towns and hamlets, the course offers plenty of opportunity for resupply while enroute. The Missouri River is also incredibly scenic and isolated in some stretches, with wildlife and beautiful vistas to rival any river in North America. But if you're trying to win this race, you won't have time to enjoy  any of it.

Participants are allowed exactly 88 hours to complete the course.  There are nine checkpoints along the route where paddlers are required to sign in and sign out. Cutoff times will be associated with these checkpoints based on the 88 hour pace. Failure to miss two consecutive deadlines is grounds for disqualification. To finish this race in 88 hours is a huge accomplishment. Only 2/3 of the teams were able to do that last year.

There are no dams, locks or portages on this stretch of the Missouri. You could, conceivably, finish this race without ever having left your  boat. (We don't recommend it.) This doesn't mean that the race is without danger. Any time you put yourself on the water, especially  moving water, you assume a certain amount of risk. The Missouri 340 course is all on Class I water. The current is about 3 mph and there are no rapids. The biggest hazard to paddlers would be motorboats, mostly fisherman, and the occasional towboat pushing barges. In river obstacles would include wing dikes, buoys and bridge pilings.

Thanks to the United States Coast Guard, the river is marked over the entire course with mileage and channel markers. It is almost impossible not to know, within a mile or less, your exact location. At the pre-race meeting and safety check, racers will be briefed on how to read these markers, how to handle a tow and barge passage and what constitutes public property on the river. Paddlers will also be provided with a racing guide that includes available services in towns, emergency phone numbers, etc.

Missouri River 340 registration deadline is
July 15th, 2009
Limited to first 200 boats
Contestants, please read the Paddler's Guide
ppc7f2f4c7.png
pp833bf7b9.png
pp062f63c6.png
ppa0c82d37.png
Congratulations to Members of Team Texas
2008 Missouri River 340 Champion’s
David Anderson, Jeff Glock
West Hansen, David Kelley
Mike Rendon, Richard Steppe