Paddle and Hike Kayak Tour!! 2025 Holiday Sale! 50% Off!

$99.50


2025 Holiday Sale: 50% Off Tickets!

Experience the excitement of kayaking Pictured Rocks by taking advantage of our 2025 Holiday Sale!

Get 2 tickets for the price of 1.

Limited time offer—secure your tickets today!

Vouchers make great gifts!  Purchase the Tour Today and Schedule the Dates Later, Good for 5 years! 

 

The Complete Pictured Rocks Experience covering a distance of roughly 11 miles with a one hour lunch break along the way. A lunch consisting of turkey, roast beef, ham or veggie wrap, fruit, and cookie is included. Bring your own beverages. You will see Falcon Cove, Bridal Veil Falls, sea caves, beautiful color stained rocks in the Painted Coves, Kissing Rock, a ship wreck, Lovers Leap Arch, Caves of the Bloody Chiefs, Rainbow Cave, Indian Head, Grand Portal Arch, Battleship Row, the Flower Vase, Chapel Beach and Chapel Rock. From Chapel Beach your guide will hike with you for about 3 miles along the Chapel River to our shuttle that takes you back to your vehicle. This trip is for people in moderately good physical condition and the hike is over level terrain. The kayaks are left on the beach and are retrieved by our kayak barge.  ALL KAYAK TOURS CHECK-IN 30 MINUTES PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED TRIP TIME. TRIP TIMES ARE ESTIMATES DEPENDENT ON WEATHER AND GROUP SIZE.

 

 

A lunch consisting of turkey, chicken, ham or veggie wrap, fruit, chips and granola bar is included. Bring your own water or drink. 

Book online or call us at 906-387-1695

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Taste of the Rocks

Kayaking the shoreline along Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore is an experience that you will not want to miss. This is arguably the most beautiful shoreline in the United States, with crystal clear water in the largest freshwater lake in the world. Sandstone cliffs of beautiful reddish and orange hues rise vertically out of the shoreline nearly 200 ft. Ride the swells as you can hear the waves crashing into these rocks which carved beautiful caves, arches, and other natural formations that early explorers used for landmarks over 200 years ago. Paddle the same water as the Voyageurs, trappers, geologists, and Native Americans did as a resident population slowly came to the Upper Peninsula during the fur trading and exploration eras.



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