Ozarks (Rural)
Floating the Meramec, Huzzah, and Courtois starts at the access points
These three streams are the county's signature outdoor draw, and knowing the official access points and rules matters more than any outfitter's pitch.
Three streams meet near Steelville and draw floaters to Crawford County: the Meramec River and two creeks that feed it, Huzzah Creek and Courtois Creek. Locals say the names roughly like show-shaw and coda-way. All three are clear, gravel-bottomed Ozark streams. In season, people canoe, kayak, and tube on them. (In season means the warmer months when the water is right.) When you plan a trip, ask the lasting questions, not an outfitter’s sales pitch. Where are the public boat ramps? What are the river rules? How do water levels and weather change a float? The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC), the state agency for fish, forests, and wildlife, manages public stream access and posts access spots and rules. Check with MDC to confirm put-ins, take-outs, and current rules before you launch. Water levels rise fast after rain, so check conditions close to your trip date.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Crawford County. See every local note for the county on its page.