RIVER OF THE MONTH
Deschutes River The Deschutes is one of Oregon’s most beloved rivers, cherished for its outstanding boating, legendary trout and steelhead fishing and epic scenery along its entire 252-mile journey from the high Cascades to the Columbia. It’s the centerpiece of the high-desert city of Bend and receives the Metolius and Crooked rivers just above Pelton Round Butte Dam Complex. Below the dam, it’s known as the Lower Deschutes, a 100-mile wild and scenic stretch that is critical to salmon and steelhead and widely loved for its outstanding recreation.
Why It Matters
PAT CLAYTON
MICK THOMPSON
From its headwaters at Little Lava Lake to its confluence with the Columbia River, the Deschutes is one of the West Coast’s most important rivers for native red-band rainbow trout, summer steelhead and fall chinook. Its insect populations, including its famed salmonfly hatch, are practically unmatched in the West, which is what makes it such an incredible producer of fish. Maintaining its fragile ecosystem, which is threatened by dams and warming water, is one of Oregon’s top environmental priorities.
Fish
ALISON WICKS
The Deschutes continues to support runs of summer steelhead, spring and fall Chinook, redband rainbow trout (pictured), bull trout and mountain whitefish, despite impacts from the Pelton Round Butte Dam Complex. Kokanee salmon are also found above the dams. Sherars Falls is still an active Native American dip netting site for salmon and steelhead.
Wildlife
With habitats ranging from high mountain lakes to arid canyonlands, the Deschutes basin is home to diverse wildlife, including elk, deer, pronghorn, black bear, mink, otter, bobcat, beaver and more than 100 bird species. The latter included ferruginous hawk, loggerhead shrike, olive-sided flycatcher, burrowing owl and the little canyon wren (pictured), whose lilting song is the sound of the Deschutes.