Matthew Burdine briefly pursued a career in finance on Wall Street after he got his masterโs degree in business from the University of Mississippi at Oxford.
But, โI decided, โNah,โโ Burdine says.
Instead, he became a โriver man.โ
Burdine, 37, now gives professionally guided canoe trips with his Mississippi River Expeditions, guiding people down the Mississippi River in multi-person Voyageur canoes. Throughout the year, he offers a range of trips on the river. People camp on islands, sleep outside, and cook meals over a fire.
Born in the Mississippi Delta, Burdine grew up on Lake Ferguson in Greenville, Mississippi. His father, Hank Burdine, is now an author and Delta Magazine writer as well as a levee board commissioner in the Mississippi Delta.
When Burdine was 9, he moved with his family to Colorado, where he fell in love with the mountains.

While working on his masterโs degree, he heard a presentation given by John Ruskey, owner of Quapaw Canoe Company in Clarksdale, Mississippi. โHe builds these huge cypress canoes and takes people out on the river on multi-day trips,โ Burdine says. โSleeping under the stars on islands. Being in the river world.โ
That clicked.
While still in graduate school, Burdine met Ruskey. He was completely hooked when he saw one of Ruskeyโs 30-foot canoes parked in front of his Clarksdale shop. โI was like, โMan, what am I doing? I want to do what this guy does. I want to share with people this type of passion and attitude toward this huge wilderness.โ
โUp until a couple of hundred years ago, the main way to travel was by canoe. It wasnโt just on the Mississippi River, but all the tributaries.โ
After his brush with the finance world, Burdine moved back to Colorado. โI started living in the back country, spending time in the mountains,โ he says.

He also stopped shaving and he let his hair grow out.
โI gave myself a five-year walkabout to live off the grid, live differently โ and try to learn everything I didnโt learn in business school.
โOver the course of living in the mountains and spending time on the river, I became a white water river guide on the Arkansas River in Buena Vista, Colorado, and a ski instructor in the winter in Vail, Colorado. At the five-year mark, I found myself in a 16-foot canoe at the head waters of the Mississippi River with 2,400 miles in front of me to the Gulf of Mexico, and no time limit.โ
His mother, Sallie Astor Burdine, died from breast cancer in 2003. So, in addition to the trip being his own โspiritual odyssey,โ Burdine partnered with the Breast Cancer Research Foundation in New York to raise money with his river trip, which he called โA Million Strokes for a Cure.โ
Burdine began the trip in fall 2015 and ended it in the spring of 2016. โI took my sweet time down the river. Thatโs where the magic is,โ he says. โI was photo-journaling so people would have their own river trip through my pictures. All the while raising money for breast cancer research in honor of my mother.โ
He always โfelt safe in a canoe,โ even though he knew โhow big water movesโ and โall the different levels of the Mississippi River. Every year it fluctuates 10, 20, 30, 40 feet, depending on where you are on the water.โ


When he pulled into the Gulf of Mexico after six months, Burdine had โan amazing feeling of internal calm. I was ready for anything at that moment.
โOnce you reach a goal in life, you just start moving on a course,โ he says. โSometimes life can take you in ways you never imagine.โ
In fall 2020, Burdine began thinking about starting a sailing career. โI was getting ready to move to the Virgin Islands and start sailing. After a decade in the mountains, it was time for something different.โ
But โit was the islands of the Mississippi River, not the islands of the Caribbean, that were calling.โ
While visiting his family farm in Lake Washington during the ice storm of 2021, Burdine called Ruskey. โI said, โIf you need help guiding on the Mississippi River, Iโll be around.โ He basically said, โYeah, you can help me guide, but maybe itโs time for someone to start thinking about opening their own operation in Memphis.โ

โRight then, there was a lightning bolt down my spine. Three weeks later I was driving to British Columbia to pick up the first canoe of the fleet for Mississippi River Expeditions. The wooden ones John Ruskey makes take a year or so to build, but I needed a canoe sooner than later.โ
His new canoe was built to โhandle the big waves in the Great Lakes and the big waves of the Pacific Coast. So, theyโre a super-safe craft, and a whole new way to experience river travel with a sail. Itโs the perfect, capable craft for the Mississippi River.โ
Burdine decided to base his business in Memphis. โAfter 10 years of living out in the mountains and trekking all around America, I never thought Iโd be moving back home. I wasnโt ever running away from the South, but during that time I realized that some of the biggest hearts were down here. I missed the lushness of the South.โ
He also missed the mighty Mississippi. โI love all rivers. Those river canyons in Colorado and the deserts of the West. The rivers out in Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Idaho, and California. The river canyons of the West are a vertically grand world, but on the Mississippi River, itโs a horizontally grand world. All of the old feelings I had on the wild rivers of the West, I have all of the same feelings here on the Mississippi. You donโt need rapids to enjoy a river. Itโs one of the largest rivers in the world. Once youโre out there on it in these canoes, you feel like youโve stepped into a long-lost world.โ
Being on the Mississippi River is โin our psyche because of Huckleberry Finn and Mark Twain,โ Burdine says, โbut not a lot of people get out and play on the Mississippi.โ
Of Burdine, Ruskey, whose Quapaw Canoe Company partners with Mississippi River Expeditions, says, โHis heartfelt charisma comes from a deep passion for adventure, education, and conservation of the American wilderness, of which the lower Mississippi River is the single most important natural landscape here in the center of the country.โ
With all his experience, Ruskey, adds, Burdine โbrings together the maturity and charisma and ethics and strength and grit and wherewithal in one person to overcome the challenges and obstacles heโs sure to encounter as a small businessman.
โAs a storyteller and a speaker, heโs in that salty vein of the river-rat tradition of the Mississippi River โ the keelboats, the flat boats, the explorers, and the captains of other steamboats, and the crew. He carries the tradition forward. Mike Fink and Jim Bowie were keelboatmen. Twain writes a bit about their salty characters and very colorful and passion-filled speeches and stories, which were often self-aggrandizing, but also full of self-humor.โ
During the summer, Burdine offered half-day trips because of the heat. His sunset and morning cruises took place during the coolest parts of the day. โThey became a hit,โ Burdine says.
Like all his trips, people met at the Memphis Yacht Club at Mud Island Marina. From there, they shuttled up river, where they put in at the mouth of the Wolf River. They then paddled across to Loosahatchie Bar, where they swam and explored the beaches of the island and ate Burdineโs hors dโoeuvres, which he calls โriver charcuterie.โ
In September, Burdine resumed his full-day and camping trips. They meet at the marina mid-morning for the six-hour trip. From there, they put in at Shelby Forest and canoe 17 miles back down to Memphis while stopping on islands, eating lunch, and exploring all the main and back channels.
Each canoe holds up to 14 people. Burdine will take out any size group, whether itโs one person or 30.
Burdine also does yoga and artistic retreats, friends and family groups, youth groups, and corporate retreats. These include Full Moon Floats, Creative Retreats, and Supper Club on the River.
Huger Foote, an internationally known photographer and native Memphian, has been on the river many times with Burdine. โItโs pure magic being out on those waters with Matthew,โ Foote says. โAt first, I was uneasy about being on the mighty Mississippi in a canoe. But with Matthew, I felt so confident and comfortable on the water, that fear drained away and was replaced by a sense of awe and a connection with the river. Matthewโs experience navigating rivers all over the country makes you feel secure in the canoe as a paddler at one with those swirling currents.
โAs an artist,โ Foote continues, โI found real inspiration on the sand bars. As a photographer, I found a lot of inspiring subjects. The river, every time it rises and recedes, it reveals a new landscape.โ
Burdine is ready for fall with a fleet of new canoes. โItโs an honor to be able to show people this Mississippi River wilderness,โ he says. โThis Mississippi River we all live on the side of, but rarely go into.โ
Burdine is a fan of โthis rare, unique city nestled on a bluff overlooking this iconic river. Itโs a great way to experience it and see the city from a new perspective. At sunset, the city is a glowing orange.โ
Itโs a treat โto see Downtown Memphis rising out of the trees and seeing the silver Pyramid glowing, and to be paddling under the bridge as the lights light up the Mississippi River.โ
The professionally guided canoe trips also are a way to rid peopleโs fear of the river, Burdine says. โFor thousands of years people have been telling their youth to stay away from the river. โItโs dangerous.โ In all different cultures across the world, itโs a common thing. We grow into our adult life being told to be scared of it.โ
People refer to it as โold man river,โ but, Burdine says, โI see it more as a feminine river. A great mother river. It can turn wild out here in a split second if strong winds blow. But most of the time itโs calm, flowing beauty.โ
For more information or to book trips, go to canoememphis.com or search Mississippi River Expeditions.

