RIVER OF THE MONTH
30 YEARS
Salmon River
A crown jewel among all western rivers, the Salmon River tumbles wild and clear from the mountainous heart of Idaho to the Snake River, near the Oregon border. Undammed for 425-miles (except for a small weir in its headwaters), the “River of no Return” flows through the most remote country in the Lower 48. On the main-stem, 125 miles are designated wild and scenic, and 104 miles are designated on the Middle Fork.
Why It Matters
BARRIE KOVISH
TOM AND PAT LEESON DIANE HIGDEM
In the West, the Salmon River stands in a class of its own when it comes to free-flowing length, native fish and vast roadless reaches. The revered Middle Fork, its main tributary, is the wildest and remotest river in the contiguous U.S. With plentiful cold-mountain water sources, it is one of the region’s most important climate refuges for imperiled fish and wildlife. The smaller South Fork is also a critical refuge for cold-water fish.
Fish
The Salmon River system has the best steelhead and Chinook habitat in the entire Columbia basin. These fish migrate farther and spawn at higher elevations than nearly any other anadromous runs on Earth, overcoming eight dams along their arduous, 900-mile journey. The Salmon is a stronghold for bull trout and home to westslope cutthroat trout, rainbow trout and mountain whitefish. DAVE JENSEN
Wildlife
With areas seldom touched by humans, the Salmon River basin provides outstanding habitat for wildlife, including black bear, bighorn sheep, mountain lion, elk, gray wolf, Canada lynx, sage grouse, moose, deer and wolverine. And you have to count orcas on any list of Salmon River wildlife; they depend so heavily on salmon that their very survival hinges on plentiful runs of Salmon/Snake River Chinook.