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500–1,200 ft · MO🚗 Directions
Rich bottomland hardwoods along the Missouri River corridor. Cottonwood, elm, and ash dominate floodplains. Dead and dying elms are morel magnets. Easy access from Columbia and Jefferson City. Morels emerge early here due to low elevation and river-warmed soils.
Updated Apr 19, 6:14 PM MT
Precip 7d
0.00"
Precip 14d
0.00"
Soil Temp
53°F
SWE
Snow Water Equivalent — how much water is in the snowpack vs. normal. Declining SWE means snowmelt is adding moisture to the soil.Log your find on iNaturalist to help the community and get expert ID assistance. Photos, location, and habitat notes all help with identification.
Mark Twain National Forest
Mark Twain National Forest
⚠ Road Access Notice
Always verify road access is public before following GPS directions to mountain areas. Many forest roads are seasonal, gated, or require 4WD. Dispersed camping follows USFS/BLM rules (typically 14-day limit). Check ranger district offices for current road and campground conditions.
0%
Drought
None
Snowmelt
complete
All conditions met
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
All conditions met
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)
soil temp marginal (53°F vs 55°F min)