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Boise River

Boise River

FieldValue
nameBoise River
imageTubers Float the Boise River.JPG
image_captionFloating on the river through Boise in 2004
image_size300
mapFile:Boise River watershed.jpg
map_size300
map_captionBoise River watershed (Interactive map)
pushpin_map_size300
pushpin_map_captionBoise River's mouth in Idaho
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1United States
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Idaho
subdivision_type3County
length102 mi
discharge1_locationParma, about 3.8 mi from the mouth
discharge1_min66 cuft/s
discharge1_avg1587 cuft/s
discharge1_max9140 cuft/s
source1Sawtooth Range
source1_locationIdaho
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation3497 ft
mouthSnake River
mouth_locationIdaho
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation2100 ft
basin_size4100 sqmi

The Boise River is a 102 mi tributary of the Snake River in the Northwestern United States. It drains a rugged portion of the Sawtooth Range in southwestern Idaho northeast of Boise, as well as part of the western Snake River Plain. The watershed encompasses approximately 4100 sqmi of highly diverse habitats, including alpine canyons, forest, rangeland, agricultural lands, and urban areas.

Description

The Boise River rises in three separate forks in the Sawtooth Range at elevations exceeding 10000 ft, and is formed by the confluence of its North and Middle forks. The North Fork, 50 mi long, rises in the Sawtooth Wilderness Area, along the Boise–Elmore county line, 60 mi northeast of Boise. It flows generally southwest through the remote mountains in the Boise National Forest. The Middle Fork, approximately 52 mi in length, rises within 12 mi of the North Fork in the southern Sawtooth Wilderness Area in northeastern Elmore County. It flows west-southwest near the town of Atlanta, joining the North Fork to form the Boise River, approximately 15 mi southeast of Idaho City. The main stream flows southwest into Arrowrock Reservoir, joining the South Fork from the Anderson Ranch Dam.

Boise

The 101 mi South Fork rises in northern Camas County in the Smoky Mountains and Soldier Mountains of the Sawtooth National Forest north of Fairfield, 65 mi east of Boise. It flows generally southwest, descending through a basalt canyon to fill the Anderson Ranch Reservoir, then turns northwest in central Elmore County. It joins the main stream as the southern arm of Arrowrock Reservoir, 20 mi east of Boise.

Boise River

Downstream from its confluence with the South Fork, the river flows generally west, adds the major tributary of Mores Creek along Highway 21, and passes through Lucky Peak Dam to emerge from the foothills southeast of Boise. It passes over several irrigation diversion dams above the city, the first and largest is the century-old Boise River Diversion Dam for the concrete New York Canal, which terminates at Lake Lowell (a.k.a. Deer Flat Reservoir) southwest of Nampa in Canyon County. The next diversion is for the Ridenbaugh Canal (1878) at Eckert Diversion Dam, immediately above Barber Park, five miles (8 km) from downtown Boise. Wooded through the city, the river is lined by an extensive recreational greenbelt. It flows west across the western end of the Snake River Plain in the Treasure Valley and becomes a braided stream with a wide floodplain as it crosses northern Canyon County to the Snake River. At an approximate elevation of 2100 ft, it enters the Snake River, the Idaho-Oregon border, west of Parma and three miles (5 km) south of Nyssa, Oregon.

Boise Irrigation Project, 1910<br>Photo by [[Walter Lubken]].

History

The river was called "Reed's River" in the early 19th century, named after Pacific Fur Company employee John Reed, who explored parts of the river throughout 1813 and 1814. The river is diverted to canals for irrigation on the plain west of what is now Boise. The dams that form the mountain reservoirs were constructed as part of the Bureau of Reclamation's "Boise Project" to provide agricultural irrigation, hydroelectricity, drinking water, and flood control to Boise and the Treasure Valley.

The major projects' initial completion dates were:

  • 1909 – Boise River Diversion Dam & New York Canal
  • 1915 – Arrowrock Dam
  • 1950 – Anderson Ranch Dam - (S. Fork)
  • 1955 – Lucky Peak Dam - (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)

The Boise River was proposed for 50 years for a dam at Twin Springs, culminating in a 1966 Project Travois proposal, which would have used nuclear explosives to either create large amounts of rockfill aggregate for dam construction, or to induce a landslide that would have much the same effect. Project Travois was a component of Project Plowshare. The project was abandoned in 1968 after concerns were raised about radiological contamination, and the seismic safety of downstream dams.

Recreation

The river is a popular destination for floating, specifically on the Boise greenbelt. Tubers and floaters launch at Barber Park and land at Ann Morrison Park, between major irrigation diversion dams. Several minor diversion weirs are passed as well as several bridges on the 6 mi trip. Water skiing is popular above the dam at the Lucky Peak Reservoir.

On the lower (warmwater) course of the river, low summer flows and poorer water quality from agricultural runoff limit fishery production. This section of river supports a fair fishery for largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, and channel catfish. Upstream from Star, the river is a coldwater stream and supports a greater variety of fish. The most prevalent species on this section is mountain whitefish, as well as hatchery-reared rainbow trout, wild rainbow trout, and fingerling brown trout. Upstream from Lucky Peak and Arrowrock reservoirs, the river and its tributaries contain excellent populations of wild rainbow trout, mountain whitefish, and bull trout. This is especially true immediately downstream from the outflow of Anderson Ranch reservoir, where the South Fork takes on the characteristics of a classic "tailwater" for over 5 mi from the put-in below the dam to Cow Creek Bridge.

Fishing

The Boise River is also popular for fishing, mostly for rainbow trout and, in the winter, steelhead. Spin-fishermen use roostertail spinners and bait such as worms and Powerbait, while fly fishermen use a variety of flies mimicking the abundant aquatic and terrestrial insects present in the watershed, as well as streamers.

References

References

  1. {{cite gnis
  2. "The National Map".
  3. "Boise River Diversion Dam".
  4. (April 1, 2012). "Lifeblood of the Treasure Valley". Idaho Press-Tribune.
  5. "Reference Series, #171: Early irrigation canals, pre-project ventures". Idaho State Historical Society.
  6. "Map: Floater rest stops". City of Boise.
  7. "USBR - Boise Project".
  8. (2011-09-01). "The Off-Site Plowshare and Vela Uniform Programs: Assessing Potential Environmental Liabilities through an Examination of Proposed Nuclear Projects,High Explosive Experiments, and High Explosive Construction Activities".
  9. Yoman, John. (May 1970). "Symposium on Engineering with Nuclear Explosives".
  10. "Barber Park: Float the river". Ada County.
  11. "Float the Boise River". City of Boise.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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