The Missouri River 340 (MR340) is a 340-mile nonstop paddle race across the state of Missouri, from Kansas City to St. Charles. It began in 2006 with just 10 finishing boats. Today, more than 400 boats line up at Kaw Point – kayaks, surfskis, canoes, pedal boats, outriggers, stand-up paddleboards, voyager and dragon boats, and rowing shells.
Since that inaugural year, I’ve completed the MR340 thirteen times- always solo, and most often unsupported. My downriver experience also includes an unofficial run during flood-stage conditions, when the race was postponed. Over the years, I’ve raced in a range of boats: kayaks and canoes, SUPs, and an expedition canoe.
I keep coming back to this river. Different years, different conditions. At age 70, the race still teaches me something new. This post brings together my blog articles and videos into one place:
- what the race feels like
- how to train
- what actually matters during those long hours on the river
What the MR340 Feels Like
Before strategy, before numbers – this is the race – 2025 POV footage aboard my Sea Wind canoe.
- 2025 Start of Solo Boats. Kaw Point – the confluence of Kaw and Missouri River before the race. Start. Boats are spreading out during first hour of paddling under Kansas City bridges.
- Day 1 highlights from 2025 MR340 – my favorite mixed tandem, Dragon boat, SUP paddlers, passing Waverly checkpoint and arriving at Hills Island.
- Peaceful paddling on the Missouri River. Sunset below Hills Island. While the race is known for its intensity, heat, and mental challenges, most of the time it’s simply this: steady strokes, flowing water, and long, peaceful miles.
- Morning paddling on the Missouri River – 2nd day near Lisbon Bottoms below Glasgow.
- Foggy morning near Mokane. Paddling in fog on the Missouri River isn’t exactly relaxing. It’s stressful. You’re on high alert watching and listening for obstacles, buoys, debris, and river traffic.
More Than a Race
The MR340 is not just a physical challenge. It’s a decision-making process stretched over 2–4 days. You manage:
- effort
- nutrition
- sleep (or lack of it)
- changing river conditions
- your own thoughts
Some of my deeper reflections:
- Mental Resilience & Realistic Optimism in Long-Distance Paddle Racing
- Lao Tzu and the art of endurance paddling – MR340 training
- Resolutions vs goals vs intentions. Real world example: MR340 race.
- Create your own path: inspiration from winter paddling and rowing
- Missouri River 340 – Race Dynamics of a Recreational Racer
This race rewards consistency more than intensity, and clarity more than ambition.
Training for MR340 (and What Actually Matters)
Training for a 340-mile race sounds complicated. In reality, it’s often imperfect. Some years I trained well. Some years I didn’t, but I always keep an active lifestyle with a variety of outdoor and fitness activities.
Relevant reflections:
- How I Did (Not) Train for the 2025 MR340 Race
- Are you training for Missouri River 340? It’s more than a race. It’s a journey of self discovery.
- Rowing or paddling Missouri River 340 race?
- Aging, rowing, and the endurance river race
What matters most:
- time on the water
- efficient technique
- comfort in your boat
- ability to keep going when things feel off
Especially with age, consistency and recovery matter more than heroic sessions.
How the Race Actually Unfolds
The MR340 is not raced at a constant pace. It’s a sequence of adjustments. Wind and weather changes everything. Current helps. Fatigue builds slowly, then suddenly.
Some practical insights:
- How fast did I paddle in the 2025 MR340? Sea Wind canoe story in numbers.
- My experience with Sea Wind canoe – 6 finishes in the same boat
- Do you have to paddle 340 miles to complete the MR340?
- Hand protection and maintenance during long-distance paddle race
- Self shuttle by Amtrak during MR340
- Flooding and Missouri River 340 race
- Pros and cons of open ear bone-conducting headphones for paddle racing
Key variables:
- pacing vs drifting
- checkpoint strategy
- night paddling decisions
- boat efficiency
Forward progress is the only metric that counts.
Lessons from 13+ MR340 Races
Over time, patterns emerge. Not rules, but reliable principles.
- Rhythm beats intensity
- Mood follows action
- Eat early, drink consistently
- Small problems become big problems if ignored
- Night changes perception—be ready for it
- Stay adaptable: the river always wins
- Forward progress is enough
More detailed reflections:
- 13 MR340 races later: what I’ve learned at age 70
- 15 Tips for Mental Resilience & Realistic Optimism
- Finishing the Missouri River 340 Race solo and self-supported?
- Lao Tzu and the art of endurance paddling
- MR340 race – my 14 journeys down the Missouri River
- My experience in three famous ultra marathon paddling races
- How to choose a boat for an ultra marathon race?
The biggest lesson: You are not racing the river. You are working with it – and with yourself.
The People and the History
The MR340 has evolved over the years, but its core remains the same. From early races with a handful of finishers to a diverse field of paddlers.
Some stories from early years worth exploring:
- Missouri River 340 Race – 3 year perspective: Bryan Hopkins, West Hansen, Chuck and Di McHenry, Christina Glauner, Katie Pfefferkorn
- 10 finishers paddled across Missouri in the 2006 race
- Sprint to the finish of the 2006 MR340
- Solo stand-up paddlers in MR340
Different boats. Different strategies. Same river.
Watch More: Full MR340 Playlist
If you want to see more of the river and the race:
From quiet moments to race intensity, these videos show what words cannot fully describe. You can also explore MR340 archive on this blog.
Final Thought
You don’t have to paddle 340 miles to learn something from this race.
Start where you are. One hour. One session. One stretch of water. Keep moving.
Because in the end – progress on the river, like in life, is built one stroke at a time.

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