Section 1: The Bruneau River [Map]
As the spring melt drains off of the northern Nevada steppe, the Bruneau River's alter-ego emerges, transforming the waterway from a sleepy winter trickle into roaring class 3 rapids. The Idaho Traverse team will time the start of the expedition with the tail of the Bruneau's flow, allowing the team to swiftly paddle the first 60 miles through desert canyons.
· Mode of travel: packraft
· Distance: 70 miles
· Time: 2 days
· Type of terrain: boxed canyons, class 3 wilderness river
· Average distance traveled per day: 30-40 miles
· Elevation profile: 5,500’ to 3,000’ = net -2,500 feet
Section 2: Snake River Plains [Map]
As the canyon widens and the river loses its momentum, we will trade our paddles for pedals and cycle 115 miles on our cyclocross bikes from the Bruneau to Featherville at the base of the foothills of the Sawtooth National Wilderness.
· Mode of travel: cyclocross bike
· Distance: 115 miles
· Time: 1 day
· Type of terrain: 2WD roads, 4WD dirt roads, single-track trail
· Elevation profile: +8,400, -4,350' = net + 4000 feet
Section 3: The Sawtooth Wilderness [Map]
Though not as high as its sister ranges the Pioneers, Boulders and Whiteclouds, the Sawtooths were chiseled by glaciers into jagged horns that prominently rip across the Stanley basin skyline, giving the range its name. Only 20 miles wide and 40 miles long, the Sawtooths pack a punch with 33 peaks over 10,000 feet and more than 200 alpine lakes, strong evidence of Idaho's rich glacial history. We will fastpack this spectacular country in two days to the headwaters of the Middle Fork of the Salmon River.
· Mode of travel: foot
· Distance: 50 miles
· Time: 2 days
· Type of terrain: single-track wilderness trail
· Elevation profile: +9,450, -9,530 = net - 80 feet
Section 4: The Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness [Map]
As we exit the Sawtooths and cross Highway 21, we'll transition into the nation's most extensive roadless area, The Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. Because it is off limits to vehicles and bikes, the fastest way through this land is to navigate the 100-plus miles of class 3 waters to the Salmon River by packraft. We will cross the Salmon, hike up and over to the headwaters of the Selway — touted as America's most pristine wilderness river experience — and paddle another 100 miles to Highway 12 for the final transition.
· Mode of travel: packraft and fastpack
· Distance: ~250 miles
· Time: 6 days
· Type of terrain: Class 3-4 wilderness river
· Elevation profile: +23,331’, -26,747’ = net -3,500'
Section 5: The Idaho Panhandle [Map a][Map b]
Where the Selway spills into the Clearwater, the team will leave the river system and join the official Idaho Centennial Trail by backcountry mountain biking. For the final leg of the traverse, we will ride the spine of the Bitterroot Range, straddling the Idaho/Montana border north to the Canadian line and completing the trip at the headwaters of the Upper Priest River. This leg will require that the team travels monster miles with ambitious climbs over unmarked and infrequently maintained trails.
· Mode of travel: mountain bike
· Distance: ~350 miles
· Time: 4 days
· Type of terrain: bushwhack, unmaintained trails, single-track, 4WD dirt road
· Elevation profile: +31,700, -31,892
Total: Nevada to Canada [Map Overview]
· Distance: ~840 miles; 465 miles by bike, 295 miles by raft, 80 miles on foot
· Days: 15
· Total elevation gain: ~72,500 feet
· Number of roads crossed: 6