As a girl, Dawn Buehler loved floating the Kansas River as it passed her family’s farm. As an adult, she’s floated all the major rivers of the Ozarks. Last summer she floated and camped along rivers in Washington and Montana. She hopes to keep floating new rivers. Some of the rivers she’d most like to float are just an hour or two from her home in rural Douglas County, and include the Elk, Marais des Cygnes and Verdigris. All begin amid the grand grasslands of the Flint Hills and eventually flow through prime forests near the Kansas border. But those rivers, plus dozens of other streams in Kansas, are off-limits to Buehler because of Kansas’ restrictive river and stream access laws. “Southeast Kansas has some of the most beautiful rivers nobody will ever see,” said Buehler. “It also adds to the frustration knowing that as soon as our rivers pass into other states (Missouri and Oklahoma), they can be enjoyed.” Indeed, nearly every state has more liberal river access laws than Kansas. Some professional estimates place Kansas within the bottom 10% when it comes to river access. Those more open-minded states are becoming even more accommodating to America’s growing interest in paddling. 
Read more: KLC Journal