Southwest Missouri
The Elk River is McDonald County's signature float stream
Float-stream recreation on the Elk River is the single biggest outdoors draw and a major part of McDonald County's economy, so understanding how the river and its access points work is the most useful outdoors fact for the county
The Elk River, running through the far southwest corner of Missouri past Noel and on toward the Oklahoma line, is McDonald County’s signature float stream. In summer it draws canoeists, kayakers, and tubers, and that floating traffic is a real part of the local economy. A few things are worth understanding before a trip. The river is a natural Ozark stream, so conditions change with rainfall: it can run low and slow in a dry spell or rise quickly after storms, and water levels are never safe to assume from an old visit. Public access is a mix of Missouri Department of Conservation accesses and private outfitter land, and the rules differ between them. Check current river conditions, gauge readings, and the location of public accesses through the Department of Conservation before you go, and confirm whether a put-in or take-out is public or operated by a private outfitter. Treat any specific outfitter, low-water crossing, or ‘best stretch’ claim as something to verify rather than assume.
References
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