Although praised as the largest undammed river in the Lower 48, Ryan Abrahamsen discovered that’s not an entirely accurate description of the 690-mile-long Yellowstone River.
“That’s kind of a misnomer,” he said.
As his crew floated the Yellowstone from Livingston to its confluence with the Missouri River in North Dakota, a distance of almost 500 river miles, they had to navigate over several irrigation diversion dams.
“You still paddle over them, kind of, but they’re a hazard,” he said. “There’s a massive one at Intake.”
The entire time the boat and crew are negotiating the dam’s rapids, a high-definition camera mounted atop a 10-foot-long telescoping pole attached to the craft shot 360-degree video of their trip, similar to Google Street View.
“The people we hire are professional rafting guides, so they’re used to going through rapids,” Abrahamsen said.
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The section of river is just one of several rivers and trails Abrahamsen’s business Terrain360 is mapping along the