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$80 for an 80-Mile Afternoon Whitewater Excursion for Two Adults from Jerry's Rogue Jets ($140 Value)

Jerry's Rogue Jets
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80-mile, 5.5-hour tour careens over the Old Diggins and Wildcat rapids

Contrary to popular belief, boats are actually much safer than cars, which inexplicably sink every time you drive them on water. Take a proper water road ride with this Groupon.

The Deal

    $80 for an afternoon 80-mile Whitewater Excursion for two adults (a $140 value). This option is valid for any of the 2:15 p.m. tours from August 25 to August 30.

    While each 5.5-hour tour includes a 90-minute dinner break at one of three lodges upriver, meals are not included in this Groupon.

Need to know info

Promotional value expires Aug 30, 2013. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Limit 1 per visit. Reservation required. Must sign waiver. Must use promotional value in 1 visit. Valid only from 8/25-8/30/13. Meal cost not included. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Jerry's Rogue Jets

Jerry's Rogue Jets does not take river tours lightly. The company employs a staff of Coast Guard-certified jet-boat pilots who navigate tours through the federally protected Rogue River Canyon. The route includes a turbulent, 12-mile stretch that the company has exclusive commercial access to. Each of the company's voyages takes place on a boat custom made by Wayne Adams, a direct descendant of the Adams family that homesteaded the canyon in the 19th century. Once they board the boats, passengers embark on one of three round-trip tours that aim to integrate adventure, nature, and comical, unscripted narration.

The calmer 64-mile Historic Mail Route follows a path that Jerry's mail boats still use to deliver mail each day. The 80-mile Whitewater Excursion and 104-mile Wilderness Whitewater adventures extend into more tumultuous waters. All of the tours—which throughout the years have attracted guests such as Jimmy Carter, Meryl Streep, and Clark Gable—include a 90-minute meal stop where passengers can purchase food to keep from filing their teeth until they are sharp enough to eat river rocks.

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