Sex, booze and boats 
St. Louis Post Dispatch
  Akers, MO
  It's Saturday afternoon on the Current River, and the Flying W is living up to 
its name.
Daring jumpers soar feet-first from two bluffs at the popular gathering spot, 
splashing down just a few feet from passing canoes.
On the opposite gravel bar, a chorus of tipsy floaters whoop, holler and drink. 
One man dips his water cannon in the river to douse passing paddlers.
It's the kind of loud party scene Dave Schrader would just as soon avoid on his 
float trips. For Schrader, 42, of Salem, Mo., the Current River has grown too 
popular on summer Saturdays and holidays between Memorial Day and Labor Day. 
Too many people. Too much noise. And too much rowdiness.
"Mainly," Schrader says while paddling with his family, "what I think a lot of 
it is, is rude behavior. A lot of these people come down here just to blow off 
some steam. You know, they get loud, do their own thing. That's fine, as long 
as they're not rude about it."
On just about any summer Saturday afternoon, stretches of the Current River and 
many other Ozark streams become bustling party zones for sunbaked floaters who 
flock to the cool, clear waters for the quintessential Missouri getaway.
Those good times too often involve underage drinking; women exposing their 
breasts for Mardi Gras beads; and language that would make a sailor blush, 
according to top officials at the Ozark National Scenic Riverways, the Missouri 
State Water Patrol and the state's Department of Conservation.
"It's a serious problem," said Col. Rad Talburt, chief of the Water Patrol. "On 
the weekends, you aren't going to enjoy the river unless you are a partier and 
that's what you do."
Because families with young children, church groups and others use the same 
glassy streams, the pockets of rowdy behavior are rubbing some people the wrong 
way, Talburt said. Nearby property owners have complained about trespassing and 
other problems.
Some locals are amused. Others accuse visitors from St. Louis and Southern 
Illinois of engaging in behavior they'd never dare back home.
Park Superintendent Noel Poe said he began hearing complaints about the Current 
and Jacks Fork rivers shortly after he arrived in October 2002.
The Park Service has been urged to ban alcohol from the rivers, but instead has 
focused on controlling flagrant abuse. Poe said that could mean prohibiting 
so-called "beer bongs" - a plastic hose attached to a funnel - and regulating 
cooler sizes.
Bill Terry, supervisory ranger for the park's north district, said officials 
are taking a zero-tolerance stance against many forms of rowdiness, from vulgar 
language to underage drinking to the colorful beads that contribute to what he 
calls the "Mardi Gras syndrome."
Rangers wrote 1,336 citations and made 23 arrests in 2005, compared with 472 
tickets and 12 arrests in 2000.
"The numbers are going up, because we are putting all the manpower to it," 
Terry said. "And I know our people are convinced that's the secret. We just 
have to keep the pressure on."
Talburt, of the Water Patrol, said the Current and Jacks Fork are among the 
most heavily patrolled rivers in the state. National Park Service officials say 
that because of added vigilance, complaints have dropped dramatically over 
three years.
Within the Ozark National Scenic Riverways, the Park Service can write a 
disorderly conduct citation to a woman who exposes her breasts. The Water 
Patrol cannot; Talburt said there is talk of seeking legislation on it next 
year.
McDonald County, in southwest Missouri, passed a local measure last year 
forbidding women from showing their breasts along the Elk River and its 
tributaries.
The Missouri Department of Conservation plans to study behavior on a stretch of 
the Current River between Akers Ferry and Cedargrove next summer, said Tom 
Treiman, a natural resource economist based in Columbia, Mo. The survey will 
try to gauge river use and attitudes about behavior, and seek remedies to 
problems.
"Part of the issue here is, exactly how would you define an obnoxious floater?" 
Treiman said. "It is in the mind of the beholder."
Mostly G-rated
During five weekends this summer, the Post-Dispatch visited popular stretches 
of the Current River and Huzzah Creek where it meets the Meramec River near 
Steelville, Mo., for a firsthand look.
If the forested rivers were a movie, the vast majority would have been suited 
to general audiences: majestic bluffs, icy springs and countless acres of lush 
forest. But it could shift to PG-rated - even an R rating in a couple instances 
- because of loud, salty language and partial nudity along the river where 
drinking was heaviest.
Anticipating heavy crowds on the Current and Jacks Fork rivers, the Water 
Patrol stepped up its presence the weekend after the Fourth of July. Park 
Service rangers did, too.
The 10 Water Patrol officers wrote 66 citations over those two days, Talburt 
said. The Park Service logged three arrests and wrote 77 citations. The most 
common offenses were possession of a controlled substance; minors in possession 
of alcohol;, and possession of glass bottles.
Travis Cripps, 22, of Salem, Ill., comes to the Current River every year and 
said he couldn't recall seeing so many officers. Wearing a mullet wig and Mardi 
Gras beads, Cripps said police leave people alone unless "you're blatantly 
being an idiot."
"I'll tell you what," he said, "in all honesty, we have a group of 22 guys. I 
wouldn't say we're behaving ourselves, but we're not doing anything that's 
wrong. We're having a good time."
Further downstream, Jeff Loraine, 35, had a verbal confrontation with a lone 
canoeist who had lobbed an obscenity toward him and his family. Loraine, his 
wife, Ann, and two children pulled their canoe and kayaks off the river to cool 
off and let the mouthy floater pass.
"Most of the people I float with in the 20 years I have been coming down here 
have not been like that," said Loraine, of Wentzville. "I have never seen that 
type of behavior."
Dave Schrader and his family finally found a secluded gravel bar to put down 
for the night - two hours after passing the Flying W, which is named for a 
family farm. Don't expect to see the Schraders on the river on summer Saturdays 
to come.
Other rivers the same
The rowdiness is hardly confined to one or two rivers. Talburt and others said 
it spills over to the Black, Elk, Niangua, Meramec and others in Missouri, and 
is showing up nationally.
Oklahoma is studying whether it can ban beer from the Illinois River and two of 
its tributaries. The City Council in New Braunfels, Texas, just banned beer 
bongs from the Comal and Guadalupe rivers and is considering a ban on Jell-O 
liquor shots.
"They're having these problems all over the United States," said Ed Fite, 
administrator of the Oklahoma Scenic Rivers Commission.
On the Saturday just before the Fourth of July, the stretch of the Huzzah Creek 
near the Meramec River was teeming with rafts, canoes and the occasional kayak. 
On some summer Saturdays, you could almost walk from one bank to the other 
without ever touching water, said Sgt. Jeff Bair of the Water Patrol.
It's for good reason: The last couple miles of the Huzzah and the short stretch 
of the Meramec River beyond it contain traffic from five different outfitters.
From a heavily wooded perch overlooking one of the central Missouri stream's 
popular gravel bars, Bair and other officers look for signs of illegal drug 
use, underage drinking and littering.
Bair said the Mardi Gras-style ogling and bead-throwing have led to fights. "I 
don't know how many times we have been out here and actually just seen a fight 
start right in front of us," he said.
Fuses become exceptionally short when temperatures soar.
"You know, when you put a thousand drunks on the river, there's going to be 
some mouthy ones there that say the wrong thing at the wrong time," he 
explained.
Mark Chiodini of St. Louis County pointed to one group and questioned its 
choice of water toys - a six-foot inflatable penis.
"Tell me that's appropriate," said Chiodini, who sipped a Dr Pepper along the 
banks of the Huzzah as the crowds floated past. "I have been coming down here 
for a long time. Twenty years ago, you wouldn't have seen that."
Elsewhere, small groups congregated on gravel bars to hoist the plastic funnels 
of their beer bongs skyward. One group handed out Jell-O shots to others on the 
river. To steady chants of "Jump!" and an occasional "Take your pants off!" 
young men crept up a tree before plunging into the chilly river.
Further down the river, Erin Ryan, 24, of Glasgow Village, described the float 
streams as a place to "cut loose, relax, let off some steam" but "definitely 
for mature audiences."
She said families with young children should probably steer clear of the 
Saturday scene. "Do you bring a 10-year-old to a strip club or Party Cove or a 
casino?" she said. "Why would you bring them to a place where they are going to 
see body parts?"
Like a day at the beach
Floating and paddling have gone from a sport of mostly outdoorsmen and Scout 
troops to the Midwest equivalent of a day at the beach. The number of 
outfitters has grown to about 160 statewide, says Gene Maggard, president of 
the Missouri Canoe and Floaters Association.
Missouri ranks in the top handful of states for popularity of its float 
streams, Maggard said. Others include Michigan, Florida and Pennsylvania.
About 42 million people go paddling in U.S. rivers, lakes and coastal waters 
each year, said Matt Menashes, executive director of the Professional 
Paddlesport Association. Despite the growing popularity, most sellers and 
renters of watercraft remain mom-and-pop seasonal businesses.
Missouri Tourism Director John Robinson says the state's spring-fed rivers are 
"tremendous attractions," drawing about 10 million people a year for camping, 
floating, hiking or picnicking.
Robinson said many things can dampen the public's enjoyment of Missouri's 
spectacular rivers - littering, overuse and rowdiness. Overzealous policing can 
drive people away, too, he said.
"My belief is if we don't keep those rivers in particular in as pristine a 
condition as we can, then they aren't worth coming to," he said.
Outfitters say they try to educate floaters about the laws - and the increased 
presence of law enforcers. They suggest that most of the problems are caused by 
a relative few.
Robert "Bear" Bass, owner of Ozark Outdoors, near Leasburg, began offering a 
family-friendly float trip a couple of years ago to minimize conflicts with 
partiers. Bass also encourages people to use off-peak times or weekdays to 
avoid the crowds.
He said bus drivers give floaters a rundown on the river rules, and each 
boarding pass has a written warning against littering, public nudity or 
bringing glass. He doesn't sell alcohol, shot glasses or Mardi Gras beads in 
his store. Despite some initial misgivings, Bass now credits the stepped-up 
patrols with preventing a "party cove" atmosphere.
Said Maggard, who owns Akers Ferry Canoe Rental, "We do quite a bit of briefing 
before the float actually occurs." He added, "We make trips to the campground 
and inform them. Really, we believe that it's visibility of law enforcement 
that really keeps people in line."
  [img style="FONT-SIZE: 12px" height=210 alt="" src="vny!://images.stltoday.com/stltoday/resources/floatbig729.jpg" width=315 border=0 size="1"]
A group of floaters stops July 1 along a sandbar in the Huzzah creek to see who can drink the beer the fastest from a "beer bong" Authorities are cracking down on underage drinking on Missouri's streams.
  More pics right here:
[A href="vny!://rebekahraleigh.com/slide-test/slidshow.html"]vny!://rebekahraleigh.com/slide-test/slidshow.html[/A]