Snake River
Whitewater Rafting
Snake River
whitewater rafting trips through Hells Canyon are terrific Idaho vacations.
Rafting Hells Canyon is one of the best family river trips in the West. In
Hells Canyon, the Snake River separates Idaho and Oregon by cutting America's
deepest canyon. The staggering 8,000 foot drop from He Devil Mountain to the
Snake River creates one of nature's most breathtaking gorges.
Nez Perce Indian legend claims
"Coyote" dug Hells Canyon with a big stick to protect their ancestors in
Oregon's Blue Mountains from the "seven devils" across the gorge in what is now
Idaho. Eons of uplift, erosion, and volcanic activity have created the rich
geologic mosaic found in Hells Canyon. When Lake Bonneville overflowed some
15,000 years ago, a massive Snake River flood scoured the area and shaped the
present Canyon.
The country is amazing. Rugged
walls rise from the river. Grassy hillsides are green in spring and golden in
late summer. River-polished boulders shine along the banks. Tributary grottos
are deliciously cool, and wildflowers and cacti bloom extravagantly. Ponderosa
pines are scattered throughout the landscape, and conifer forests blanket the
Canyon rims.
We explore aboriginal
sites, including pictographs, petroglyphs, rock shelters, and house pits. The
Canyon's archaeology reveals more than 7,800 years of habitation. Abandoned
homesteads reflect the recent past. Tales of the Deep Creek Massacre,
sternwheel steamers, the Nez Perce Crossing, and unsolved murders are part of
the Hells Canyon lore. At Kirkwood Bar Historic Ranch, the Forest Service has
preserved and displayed remnants of the Canyon's rich history.
Rafting the Snake is challenging
fun! Wild Sheep, Granite, Bernard, No Name, Waterspout, and Rush Creek rapids
are the most powerful whitewater in the Northwest. Between rapids, there is
time to enjoy the scenery of a magnificent canyon.
Fishing in Hells Canyon is
unique. Any cast may bring in a smallmouth bass, rainbow trout, or channel
catfish. Remarkably, all these species live in the Snake River along with
steelhead (ocean-run rainbow trout), and huge white sturgeon, which can reach
10 feet or more in length. Regulations require "catch & release" fishing
for wild steelhead and sturgeon.
Wildlife includes Rocky Mountain bighorn
sheep, mountain goat, mule deer, elk, cougar, black bear, beaver, otter, and
more. Songbirds, owls, hawks, eagles, chukar partridge, and forest grouse dot
the ecosystem.
Hells Canyon is one of the most
rugged roadless areas in the U.S. Our only contacts during the trip are hikers,
horsemen, and other river parties, including jetboats. The Snake/Hells Canyon
is protected by Congress as a "Wild & Scenic River," and is inside the
spectacular Hells Canyon National Recreation Area, Wallowa-Whitman National
Forest.
If you are interested in a combination
rafting and ranch vacation, we have teamed up with The Seven Devils
Lodge in Council, Idaho to provide you with a true western vacation
experience. Before or after your river trip, you can horseback ride,
join in wildlife photography excursions, or flyfish for trout and
bass. To visit their website, go to www.sevendevilslodge.com.
The Snake River was featured in Sunset
Magazine's Top 10 Rafting Trips - to read the article, click here.
Our Snake River trip was also featured
in National Geograhic Adventure, October 2003. Land of Extremes.
50 Places Like Nowhere Else on Earth. #9 - "North America's
deepest canyon. More V-shaped than U-shaped, Idaho's 8,043-foot-deep
Hells Canyon has long lived in the shadow of the flashier (but 2,000-foot-shallower)
Grand Canyon. The happy result: a stark, arid landscape mostly devoid
of tourist facilities, park-and-gape viewpoints, or roads of any
sort. It's a place where no bridge crosses the canyon for 106 miles
and the roiling Snake River is flanked by wilderness that sustains
black bears, bighorn sheep, and thousands of free-roaming elk. Raft
the Class IV rapids of Hells Canyon on a three-day trip with Hughes
River Expeditions."
|