

Family Whitewater
Easy Scenic Floats
Wine Floats
Group Reservations
Team Building Trips
Bird Watching Floats
Private Upgrades

Family Whitewater
Easy Scenic Floats
Wine Floats
Group Reservations
Team Building Trips
Bird Watching Floats
Private Upgrades
Family Whitewater
Easy Scenic Floats
Group Reservations
Private Upgrades

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Pangaea Picked
"Top 16 Outfitters"
by NW Travel!
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Click
here for to meet your Guides!
The Story of David, Brooke and Leave Boring Behind!
It started as a bike trip across
the country. Brooke and David Lawrence had
been guiding for several years on the Clark
Fork River near Missoula,
Montana. During their
last summer guiding before they left on their
4,000 mile ride across America, they decided
they wanted to create a special company that
would reflect the integrity of their ideals:
pride, respect, love, understanding and action.
On their bike trip
along the Transamerica
Trail, Brooke and
David solidified their commitment to achieving
their dream. After completing the ride,
they completed the deal and bought Pangaea
Expeditions.
Pangaea River Rafting
started as Pangaea Expeditions in 1989 by
two women who wanted to create an outdoor
adventure company that offered rafting trips
to the general public but a company that
would also provide unique trips specifically
for women. After 13 years, varying degrees
of success and multiple owners, Pangaea Expeditions
was bought by two young men from Missoula,
Montana. They resurrected the company from
the brink of extinction, improving location,
gear and marketing systems. In two years,
the strain of partnership forced the partners
to sell in 2004. That’s when
they got a call from two Transamerica cyclist,
Brooke and David.
In two years the
company grew 100%. Brooke and David got
married by the river; Brooke actually arrived
at the alter on a raft. Although the young
couple had no formal business training,
they recognized that the industry had changed
from its informal beginnings of cut-off
jeans, word of mouth advertising and party-hard
mentality. They understood rafting was
a small part of a larger, sophisticated,
economic industry changing the west, tourism.
In order to position
themselves in a new paradigm of economic
development and tourism, Brooke and David
created a series of new programs, trips that
would reach a broader demographic of clients.
In addition to their bread-and-butter whitewater trips, Brooke and David created River
Wine Floats, GPS Geocaching Trips, a team
building program called W.E.T. (Working Efficiently
Together), Bird
Watching Floats and specialty
tours for conventions and special events.
Brooke and David in just a few years combined
the play of work with a successful business
model… Leave Boring
Behind!

DAVID & BROOKE LAWRENCE
Owners
Although Brooke and David would
meet for the first time guiding a snowshoe
trip for Spokane
Parks and Recreation many
years later, they were both born minutes from
each other in Virginia. What seemed like coincidence,
was more like fate.
David Lawrence, an English
literature major from Chesapeake, Virginia
moved to Winthrop, Washington when he was twenty-two.
He was introduced to a new industry he had
never heard of, outdoor recreation. David learned
the ropes of safety, programming and customer
service at the four star, four diamond resort
Sun
Mountain Lodge.
He moved to Spokane to get
his masters and teaching certificate. There
he met Brooke Baunsgard, the Virginia native
raised in Bellevue, Washington. Brooke was
also attending Eastern
Washington University as a health and nutrition student, working
for both the E.P.I.C. outdoor program and the
Spokane
Parks and Recreation department.
During the summer of 2002,
Brooke and David paddled, hiked and played
on the rivers and trails of Washington, Idaho
and Montana. When school was done in the fall,
Brooke and David bought an old air force school
bus that they converted into their new home.
Brooke sold her car to pay for the remodel,
and by December they were living in Winthrop,
Washington teaching cross-country skiing and
living in their new home, Edna.
They learned a lot about each
other living without running water or electricity
in the small space of a school bus, but not
as much as they would learn during 2003. During
that time, the couple hiked the entire length
of the Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada,
2,560 miles. On that trip they made a special
commitment to themselves, any dream they could
dream, they would do. So, they biked across
the country, bought a rafting company, got
married and hiked 386 miles through Virginia
along the Appalachian Trail.
Today they split
time between the Methow Valley of Washington
teaching cross country skiing and the summers
in Montana running Pangaea River Rafting.
They still live in Edna, their school bus.
They also conduct team building programs
and give special lectures and slide shows
to schools and clubs about achieving your
dreams, how to hike ("No Blisters, No Hunger-Camping
and Hiking Made Easy) and slide shows about
biking and hiking long distances.
- Passes through three states (California, Oregon and Washington)
- Climbs nearly 60 major mountain passes
- Descends into 19 major canyons and
- Ambles past more than 1,000 lakes and tarns.
The PCT traverses…
- 3 national monuments
- 7 national parks
- 24 national forests and
- 33 federally mandated wildernesses
But did you know that…
- It was recently pointed out that fewer people have thru-hiked the PCT than have climbed Mt. Everest! Could it be that a thru-hike is tougher than climbing the tallest mountain on Earth?
- The PCT crosses the world-famous San Andreas Fault three times!
- The PCT passes the three deepest lakes in the nation; Lake Tahoe (1,645 feet), Crater Lake (1,932 feet) and Lake Chelan (1,149)
- In California, hikers and riders on the PCT often must cover 20 to 30 miles of trail between water sources. The longest waterless stretch on the trail is 35.5 miles, north of Tehachapi Pass)
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