Custom Green River Canoe Multi-Day
- Where: From Green River State Park (6 day) or Ruby Ranch (5 day) to Mineral Bottom
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What months available:
Best months are late April through early June and September and October
- Number of Days/Nights: 5 or 6 days plus the motel night/orientation prior)
- Cost per Person: per day (includes one night motel stay and orientation prior to launch, then first river day through last day afternoon)
- Cost per Person: $220/day - Adult
- Cost per Person: $180/day - Youth 12 through 17 years
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Notes:
This is CFI’s longest-running river trip! We LOVE Labyrinth!
4 person minimum (adult or youth); 25 maximum; organizer goes free once minimum is met. No BLM Special Area fees.Deposit: $300 per person (non-refundable), applies to total fee (minimum deposit is 4 x $300 = $1200.)
Fee includes motel stay double occupancy and orientation the night before, delicious meals from breakfast at motel through lunch last day, and transportation to/from river.
For moderately active individuals, experienced or beginners welcome. Our CFI trip takes TIME to explore many side canyons on short hikes plus limit time in canoes to 5-6 hours per day. A fantastic flatwater wilderness canoe trip, suitable for families with kids 12 yrs and older. For families with younger kids, we would change this trip to use RAFTS.
Paddle down the Green River through incredible Labyrinth Canyon.
Immerse yourself into the beauty of the serene waters of lovely and remote Labyrinth Canyon, proposed as Wilderness by the Bureau of Land Management. This stretch, which runs from or near Green River to Mineral Bottom, Utah (adjacent to Canyonlands National Park) has been featured in many adventure travel magazines as a must do for both seasoned or beginner paddlers in canyon country. This calm water float trip is a favorite of our guides and this is our longest running multi-day trip. Since 1985, we have hosted countless school kids, “elderhostlers” and special custom trips for yoga and women’s groups.
Our trip starts in Green River, Utah with a motel stay and tour orientation at 7:30 pm the first night. (Note: we can arrange a Moab start/lodging with adequate reservation notice if you prefer.) After breakfast and a short visit to the John Wesley Powell Museum nearby, we head to the river, spending 5-6 days on the river depending on the launch point and trip. We take out early afternoon on the last day and return to town by 5 p.m. Your lodging that night is on your own.
Late spring and early autumn are the perfect times to take this trip – beautiful light, quieter days, comfortable weather. Learn about river life from the prehistoric Native Americans to 19th century fur trappers and outlaws, and 20th century miners and river runners. Stories about Major Powell’s 1869 and 1871 expeditions highlight the week while short interpretive hikes and talks teach geology, riparian ecology and issues facing America’s public lands.
CFI provides canoes (17 ‘ Old Towne) and all river and kitchen gear. Participants must be able to paddle a full day (4-6 hours) and help carry gear to and from canoes. Like all of our trips, we feature a participatory style so you’ll help with light camp chores.
Learn canoe strokes, how to read the river, river safety, Dutch oven cooking and outdoor etiquette. We start the days with warm-up stretching and river quotes. Enjoy great conversations or quiet solo time in camp, and the chance to explore more if you choose.
Our meals on the canoe trip are healthy and hearty, while keeping things trim and light for our boats. There are foods to please meat eaters and vegetarians alike. You can expect breakfasts of pancakes and bacon as well as fresh fruit, muffins and cereals. Lunches may be deli sandwiches packed in the morning and ready for a hike, or picnic style smoked salmon with crackers or chicken-curry wraps. Dinners include steak and Dutch oven potatoes, lasagna or grilled fish. We feature regional beef and pork and fresh locally grown greens and vegetables in our meals.
“One way to return to a lifestyle that is more organic and harmonious with the whole of nature is to get outside more often…. to let the unpredictability of wildness touch the soulful longings within yourself. Wilderness is innate to who we are. You do not have to go far to find wildness, only as far as your own beating heart and the joy you find in life.”
– Cass Adams from The Soul Unearthed