








Bicycling the Lewis & Clark Trail
Bicycling the Lewis & Clark Trail by Michael McCoy
This travel guide is beyond valuable for the bicyclist or any traveler between St. Louis and Portland, Oregon. Maps, pictures, stories, descriptions of the landscapes, and mileage logs clearly outline sites and amenities along the way.
For instance, the author recommends campgrounds along the route, such as the Lewis and Clark State Park campground at Epping, North Dakota, just east of Williston, situated on the Missouri River. “To find it, leave the route at Mile 74.0 below and zip 3 miles down a little badlands canyon full of cows, grove of timber, and grasses and shrubs. With its prolific wetland lying at the base of protective hillsides, the park is right on the water’s edge when Lake Sakakawea is at full pool.” The book predates the Bakken oil boom by a few years, so the landscape has surely changed. Did you know that you can “zip” on a bicycle?
Paperback, First Edition 2003 - Like new
Bicycling the Lewis & Clark Trail by Michael McCoy
This travel guide is beyond valuable for the bicyclist or any traveler between St. Louis and Portland, Oregon. Maps, pictures, stories, descriptions of the landscapes, and mileage logs clearly outline sites and amenities along the way.
For instance, the author recommends campgrounds along the route, such as the Lewis and Clark State Park campground at Epping, North Dakota, just east of Williston, situated on the Missouri River. “To find it, leave the route at Mile 74.0 below and zip 3 miles down a little badlands canyon full of cows, grove of timber, and grasses and shrubs. With its prolific wetland lying at the base of protective hillsides, the park is right on the water’s edge when Lake Sakakawea is at full pool.” The book predates the Bakken oil boom by a few years, so the landscape has surely changed. Did you know that you can “zip” on a bicycle?
Paperback, First Edition 2003 - Like new
Bicycling the Lewis & Clark Trail by Michael McCoy
This travel guide is beyond valuable for the bicyclist or any traveler between St. Louis and Portland, Oregon. Maps, pictures, stories, descriptions of the landscapes, and mileage logs clearly outline sites and amenities along the way.
For instance, the author recommends campgrounds along the route, such as the Lewis and Clark State Park campground at Epping, North Dakota, just east of Williston, situated on the Missouri River. “To find it, leave the route at Mile 74.0 below and zip 3 miles down a little badlands canyon full of cows, grove of timber, and grasses and shrubs. With its prolific wetland lying at the base of protective hillsides, the park is right on the water’s edge when Lake Sakakawea is at full pool.” The book predates the Bakken oil boom by a few years, so the landscape has surely changed. Did you know that you can “zip” on a bicycle?
Paperback, First Edition 2003 - Like new