Magic Valley

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Magic Valley 22 (! Mackay r Jim McClure-Jerry (! iv e 75 e R Sawtooth "! Hemingway-Boulders Peak Wilderness Idaho Fishing Seasons &Rules2019-2021 idfg.idaho.gov s i Wilderness "!2 1 o Wilderness Jerome (! B r k F o e R !( k h o i s iv e r e t B Atlanta e !( MAGIC VALLEY k r r X o r Y F r C Howe o l e REGIONAL d Mile 136.2 Bridge l C i N d i a (North Fork r M y OFFICE T k R ££93 Idaho k Big Wood River) ! r o ( o d t F o National m Baker Sun as o S k E W Laboratory g Lake e ig Arco Arrowrock i e Valley B (! ^ Trinity ngs r £ _ R B i £ !( v r C 20 Reservoir i e B Lakes r p S a Featherville X r rm Y ££ a u 93 C Mile 122.2 ££ W g 26 Lucky e h £ r £26 s Bridge C e W Peak i v r Be a i l o National Forest ££ l 20 Reservoir o "!75 B w C S r Little Wood o Anderson Ranch e Glendale Rd e Reservoir u k Bridge X Reservoir Y t Craters h (Dam) Hot Springs Carey of the Moon F o r k Fairfield X Little Camas Y (! Landing Lake Reservoir ££93 Wilderness X Y (! ££20 Magic s C Silver Creek Carey CYN D I C OU LTE R ID F G/I FW IS 2 0 1 9 a m a r e e k Reservoir C (separate map) (Dam) X Y Ri ch f Maps for general ie l d reference only. nal ! C a Taylor "Bear Tracks" ( X Y Magic Valley Mountain Williams Recreation Area "!67 Home "!46 (! e r Grand W iv Richfield (! View §84 Glenns i g o od Rive R Craters of the Moon ¦¨ B r American C J Strike Ferry L d National Monument (! ittl e o o Falls "!78 Reservoir Bliss ! W and Preserve (! ( £2 6 (! Reservoir (! Bruneau Dunes Shoshone !( k e Gooding Bruneau State Park S n a Hagerman "!24 (! "!75 (! (!Wendell Jerome (! American (! Minidoka Hagerman Area Lake r Falls (separate map) Walcott Minidoka e Fort Hal l R i N W R v "!5 1 v e Devils Corral Creek i Reservation r e R ££30 Vineyard Creek (! k Rockland a (! Buhl !( ¦¨§86 r n e S (! r Twin ¨¦§84 v a S i e l Burley m Falls Rock ££ R v o 30 n C W r i e t a F e r National f k m R a l C a Forest l £ £ r C s 93 eda ee u r R k J C C Sublett a r a r !( e National Reservoir e e r e b k Sublett e Forest n i d Cedar Creek k u (Roseworth) g !( r e Reservoir Rogerson National Forest Creek Rd B e R - Thre National ge d i i Forest rb v Ja 0 10 20 e Sixmile r MILES Duck Val ley Salmon (Gunnel) Reservation ¯ Reservoir !( Falls Creek Murphy Hot Springs Reservoir NN EE VV AA DD AA UU TT AA HH (! r To R i e To Boise d v Gooding M a l a ¨¦§84 0 1 2 .30 ¯ MILES "!46 (Dam) E 2500 S (JUSTICE GRADE) LOWER XY SALMON Billingsley ) Creek FALLS D WMA R RESERVOIR B E & i I ll S S State H 5 1 Hagerman Wildlife Management Area in To 2 0 g C 9 5 Park 2 0 ![ Wildlife and Bird Viewing Areas Hagerman s T l E E e I Fishing Section Location Points Magic Valley XY y R ( kj Fishing Dock !( !i S Private Land E 2700 S T U P P E R G R A D E 0 Hagerman XY Bass West 00 3 2 Ponds E ( E 2 7 0 0 S ) Highway 1 C E Goose Pond r A n d e r s o n Pond 1 N e 0 kj a e kj t Bell Rapids 0 'l e k e 2 !i r k XY 2 Hatchery F i Access Area 1 ¯ sh H C XY R a 3 kj Riley diversion i y tc l e h E 2900 S e r V A D E R G R A D E 0 0.1 0.2 Creek y Rd XY Rest ![ HAGERMAN STATE M MILE !b P o n d s Pond a g ( E 2 9 0 0 S ) kj !i FISH HATCHERY ic !_ !? S Idaho Fishing Seasons &Rules2019-2021 idfg.idaho.gov Area 4 p r kj Settling Pond ings Rd !i !b!_ Hagerman ![ 2 !i S !i !b Local Paved Roads !i 1 kj WMA 1 Oster !i !_ 0 !i XY State Fish Hatchery Rd !_ (separate map) 0 3 (Dam) 0 !i 4 WMA Access Roads 5 UPPER E Riley 6 WMA Foot path 30 Cree k Lakes SALMON FALLS . Falls XY C Y N D I C O U L T E R ID F G / I F W IS 2 0 1 9 RESERVOIR Upper Owsley Salmon Falls Bridge ir Dam XY pp o U er Salm rv XY on e a k e r Fal es S n e l s R i v B e l l R R a p i d s R d Maps for general To Buhl reference only. Box Canyon Creek B O B B A R T O N H W Y k e e r C Empire Rapids Ponds s l ( Clear Lakes Grade ) Niagara Springs l a WMA F n S n a k e o STOP AQUATIC .3 0 R i v e ?! m r ™ l HITCHHIKERS! 46 a "! Prevent the transport of nuisance species. Niagara Springs S 23 To and Hatchery Clean all recreational equipment. Buhl www.ProtectYourWaters.net When you leave a body of water: • Remove any visible mud, plants, fish or animals before transporting equipment. • Eliminate water from equipment before transporting. • Clean and dry anything that comes into contact with water (boats, trailers, equipment, clothing, dogs, etc.). • Never release plants, fish or animals into a body of water unless they came out of that body of water. MAGIC VALLEY REGION General Fishing Season for the Magic Valley Region All Waters Open All Year Except as modified in the Magic Valley Region Special Rule Waters on Pages 25- 27. Fishing is not allowed within the posted upstream and downstream boundary of any fish weir or trap. Daily Bag Limits for the Magic Valley Region The following daily bag limits apply to all waters of the Magic Valley Region except as modified in Magic Valley Region Special Rule Waters on Pages 25-28. The possession limit is 3-times the daily bag limit after the second day of the season. Bass (Largemouth and Smallmouth) Trout includes Brown Trout, Lake Trout, Golden Trout, Arctic • Bass limit is 6, both species combined Grayling, Cutthroat Trout, Rainbow Trout, land-locked • None under 12 inches Chinook and Coho Salmon, trout hybrids (e.g. Tiger Trout) Brook Trout • Trout limit is 6, all species combined • Brook Trout limit is 25 • In rivers and streams, only 2 of the 6 trout may be Cutthroat Trout • Harvest allowed during any open season unless otherwise noted under Special Rules – if gear or bait restrictions Does not include Bull Trout and Brook Trout which are are listed, they must be followed when fishing for Brook listed separately Trout Walleye Bull Trout • Walleye limit is 6 • Bull Trout limit is 0, catch-and-release Whitefish • Whitefish limit is 25 Kokanee • Kokanee limit is 6 • Harvest allowed during any open season unless otherwise Sturgeon noted under Special Rules – if gear or bait restrictions are • Sturgeon limit is 0, catch-and-release listed, they must be followed when fishing for whitefish Magic Valley Protected Nongame Fish • Sturgeon must not be removed from the water and must includes Norhern Leatherside be released upon landing Chub, Shoshone Sculpin, Wood River Sculpin, and Bluehead Sucker (also know as Green Sucker) • Barbless hooks are required, • May not be harvested or possessed • Use of a sliding swivel device to secure a weight, and a All Other Fish Species includes bullfrogs and crayfish lighter test line to secure weight to sliding swivel device, • No bag, size or possession limit see Page 54 for details Tiger Muskie Check for potential fish consumption advisories. See • Tiger Muskie limit is 2, none under 40 inches Page 67. Special Rule Waters for the Magic Valley Region (See Pages 25-28 for details) Anderson Ranch Reservoir Empire Rapids Ponds Salmon Falls Creek Reservoir Baker Lake (Clear Lakes Grade-Niagra Springs WMA) Silver Creek Bell Rapids (See Snake River) Sixmile Reservoir (Gunnel) Silver Creek tributaries Big Wood River Hagerman Wildlife Management Area Snake River Big Wood River tributaries Jarbidge River and tributaries South Fork Boise River (upstream of Magic Reservoir) Little Wood River (see Boise River, South Fork) Billingsley Creek Magic Reservoir Sublett Reservoir Boise River, South Fork Malad River Sublett Reservoir tributaries (upstream of Anderson Ranch Dam) Niagara Springs Creek Trinity Lakes Box Canyon Creek Niagara Springs Wildlife Management Vineyard Creek Bruneau Dunes State Park Area Willow Creek Carey Lake Riley Creek (see Hagerman Wildlife (tributary to Camas Creek) Devils Corral Creek Management Area) 24 Idaho Fishing Seasons & Rules 2019-2021 idfg.idaho.gov Special Rule Waters for the Magic Valley Region For waters not listed below, see Page 24 for fishing seasons, bag and possession limits, and rules that apply to all waters within the Magic Valley Region.
Recommended publications
  • Geomorphic Assessment Report Big Wood River Blaine County, Idaho
    GEOMORPHIC ASSESSMENT REPORT BIG WOOD RIVER BLAINE COUNTY, IDAHO Prepared For Trout Unlimited 300 North Main Street, Hailey, Idah, 83333 Prepared By P. O. Box 8578, 140 E. Broadway, Suite 23, Jackson, Wyoming 83002 October 30, 2015 CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction ................................................................................................................1 2.0 Project Area and Approach ........................................................................................1 3.0 Phase 1: Watershed Assessment ...............................................................................1 3.1 Study Area Sub-Catchments ..........................................................................2 3.2 Geology ..........................................................................................................2 3.2 Roads..............................................................................................................2 3.3 Land Slope .....................................................................................................3 3.4 Soils................................................................................................................3 3.5 Land Cover .....................................................................................................3 3.6 Tributary Catchment Analysis .......................................................................5 3.7 Fire .................................................................................................................5 3.8 Anthropogenic
    [Show full text]
  • Idaho Water Supply Outlook Report April 1, 2018
    Natural Resources Conservation Service Idaho Water Supply Outlook Report April 1, 2018 April 1, 2018 Idaho Snow Survey Summary The West is different than the Midwest and East because approximately 75% of our annual precipitation falls as snow in the West during our non-growing season, this is why we measure the western mountain snowpack. Snow gradually melts in the spring and early summer feeding streams that fill rivers and reservoirs. The April 1 snow survey is the most important survey because this is typically when the seasonal snowpack reaches its peak snow water equivalent. These first of month surveys provide a more comprehensive inventory of the mountain snowpack and includes information from over 120 SNOTEL sites in our region and over 100 manually measured snow courses. These snow courses are measured timely at the end of the month by more than 40 trained snow surveyors (Thank you!). Continue reading the Water Supply Outlook Report to find out if we have reached normal peak snow water equivalent amounts, and how snow and water supply outlooks vary across Idaho this year. Water Supply Outlook Report Federal - State – Private Cooperative Snow Surveys For more water supply and resource management information: Contact: Your local county Natural Resources Conservation Service Office Internet Web Address: http://www.id.nrcs.usda.gov/snow/ Natural Resources Conservation Service Snow Surveys 9173 West Barnes Drive, Suite C Boise, Idaho 83709-1574 (208) 378-5700 ext. 5 To join a free email subscription list contact us by email at: [email protected] How forecasts are made Most of the annual streamflow in the western United States originates as snowfall that has accumulated in the mountains during the winter and early spring.
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Environmental Assessment for the Little Wood River Irrigation District Pressurized Pipeline Irrigation Delivery System
    Draft Environmental Assessment for the Little Wood River Irrigation District Pressurized Pipeline Irrigation Delivery System U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Pacific Northwest Region Snake River Area March 2010 The mission of the Department of the Interior is to protect and provide access to our Nation’s natural and cultural heritage and honor our trust responsibilities to tribes. The mission of the Bureau of Reclamation is to manage, develop, and protect water and related resources in an environmentally and economically sound manner in the interest of the American public. Draft Environmental Assessment for the Little Wood River Irrigation District Pressurized Pipeline Irrigation Delivery System U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Pacific Northwest Region Snake River Area March 2010 Draft Environmental Assessment Little Wood River Irrigation District Pressurized Pipeline Project Acronyms and Abbreviations BLM U.S. Bureau of Land Management BPC Bonneville Pacific Corporation cfs cubic feet per second DEQ Idaho Department of Environmental Quality DPS Distinct Population Segment EA environmental assessment EIS environmental impact statement EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency FONSI Finding of No Significant Impact IDFG Idaho Department of Fish and Game IDWR Idaho Department of Water Resources kWh kilowatt-hours LWRID Little Wood River Irrigation District NEPA National Environmental Policy Act NHPA National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 NRCS Natural Resources Conservation Service NRHP National Register of Historic Places PEM palustrine emergent PSS palustrine scrub-shrub Reclamation U.S. Bureau of Reclamation RPW Relatively Permanent Water SCI Soil Condition Index SHPO State Historic Preservation Office SISL Surface Irrigation Soil Loss Model TMDL Total Daily Maximum Load TNW Traditional Navigable Water USDA U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Aquatic Biological Communities and Associated Habitats at Selected Sites in the Big Wood River Watershed, South-Central Idaho, 2014
    Prepared in cooperation with Blaine County, Trout Unlimited, The Nature Conservancy, and the Wood River Land Trust Aquatic Biological Communities and Associated Habitats at Selected Sites in the Big Wood River Watershed, South-Central Idaho, 2014 Scientific Investigations Report 2016–5128 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover: Big Wood River at Hailey, Idaho, looking downstream from the Bow Bridge with a scientist taking an invertebrate sample. Photograph by Dorene MacCoy, U.S. Geological Survey, September 17, 2014. Aquatic Biological Communities and Associated Habitats at Selected Sites in the Big Wood River Watershed, South-Central Idaho, 2014 By Dorene E. MacCoy and Terry M. Short Prepared in cooperation with Blaine County, Trout Unlimited, The Nature Conservancy, and the Wood River Land Trust Scientific Investigations Report 2016–5128 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior SALLY JEWELL, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Suzette M. Kimball, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2016 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment—visit http://www.usgs.gov or call 1–888–ASK–USGS. For an overview of USGS information products, including maps, imagery, and publications, visit http://store.usgs.gov. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this information product, for the most part, is in the public domain, it also may contain copyrighted materials as noted in the text.
    [Show full text]
  • Evaluation of Streamflow Records in Big Wood River Basin, Idaho
    GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR 192 , EVALUATION OF STREAMFLOW RECORDS IN BIG WOOD RIVER BASIN, IDAHO By R. P. Jones UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. Oscar L. Chapman, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY W. E. Wrather, Director GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR .129 EVALUATION OF STREAMFLOW RECORDS IN BIG WOOD RIVER BASIN, IDAHO ByR P.Jones Washington, D. C., 1962 Free on application to the Geological Survey, Washington 26, D. C. CONTENTS Page Page Abstract................................. 1 Syllabus of gaging-station records--Cont. Introduction............................. 1 Gaging-station records--Continued. Purpose and Scope ••••••••••.• . • • • . • . • • 1 Big Wood River--Continued. Acknowledgments........................ 1 Big Wood River above North Gooding Physical features of the basin........... 2 Canal, near Shoshone .....•••..•••. 33 Utilization of water in the basin........ 3 Big Wood River below North Gooding Water resources data for Big Wood River Canal, near Shoshone •..•...••.••.• 35 basin in Idaho. • . • . • • • . 5 Big Wood River near Shoshone .••...•.• 36 Streamflow records. • . • • • • • . • • . 5 Big Wood River above Thorn Creek, Storage reservoirs. • . • . • . • • • . ·5 near Gooding...................... 37 Adequacy of data •...•..•..••......•.... 12 Big Wood (Malade) River at Gooding Syllabus of gaging-station records •••.... 15 (Toponis). • . • • . • . • . • . • . • 38 Explanation of data.................... 15 Dry Creek near Blanche ...•..•....•. 39 Gaging-station records ........••....... 16 Little Wood River: Big Wood River
    [Show full text]
  • Snake River Flow Augmentation Impact Analysis Appendix
    SNAKE RIVER FLOW AUGMENTATION IMPACT ANALYSIS APPENDIX Prepared for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Walla Walla District’s Lower Snake River Juvenile Salmon Migration Feasibility Study and Environmental Impact Statement United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Pacific Northwest Region Boise, Idaho February 1999 Acronyms and Abbreviations (Includes some common acronyms and abbreviations that may not appear in this document) 1427i A scenario in this analysis that provides up to 1,427,000 acre-feet of flow augmentation with large drawdown of Reclamation reservoirs. 1427r A scenario in this analysis that provides up to 1,427,000 acre-feet of flow augmentation with reservoir elevations maintained near current levels. BA Biological assessment BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis (U.S. Department of Commerce) BETTER Box Exchange Transport Temperature Ecology Reservoir (a water quality model) BIA Bureau of Indian Affairs BID Burley Irrigation District BIOP Biological opinion BLM Bureau of Land Management B.P. Before present BPA Bonneville Power Administration CES Conservation Extension Service cfs Cubic feet per second Corps U.S. Army Corps of Engineers CRFMP Columbia River Fish Mitigation Program CRP Conservation Reserve Program CVPIA Central Valley Project Improvement Act CWA Clean Water Act DO Dissolved Oxygen Acronyms and Abbreviations (Includes some common acronyms and abbreviations that may not appear in this document) DREW Drawdown Regional Economic Workgroup DDT Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane EIS Environmental Impact Statement EP Effective Precipitation EPA Environmental Protection Agency ESA Endangered Species Act ETAW Evapotranspiration of Applied Water FCRPS Federal Columbia River Power System FERC Federal Energy Regulatory Commission FIRE Finance, investment, and real estate HCNRA Hells Canyon National Recreation Area HUC Hydrologic unit code I.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Open File #625 1962 62-0120 Prepared Partly in Cooperation With
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY QUATERNARY GEOLOGY OF THE BELLEVUE AREA IN BLAINE AND CAMAS COUNTIES, IDAHO by Dwight Lyman Schmidt Open File #625 1962 62-0120 Prepared partly in cooperation with the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission This report is preliminary and has not been edited for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey standards. Some of the nomenclature used in this report does not conform with that in use by the Survey. QOATKRHARY OBOLOOY OF THE BELU5VOE AREA IV BIAIHE AHD GAMAS COOTTEBS, IDAHO by Didjht L. Sehsddt ABSTRACT The Bellevue area covers about 350 square miles of a foothill belt between the Rocky Mountains to the north and the Snake River Plains to the south* Complexly deforaed inpure ouartzites and llBestones of the Mlssissippian Mllllgen and Pennsylvanian*Pendan Wood River fbraations vere intruded by large bodies of quartz diorlte and granodiorite along regional structures trending northwesterly; the intrusions are part of the Cretaceous Idaho batholith* Xrosional rennants of the Ghallis vol- canies, doodnantly latitie to andesitie in composition and early(r) to Kiddle Tertiary in age* rest unconfbraably on the older rocks* A sequence of Pliocene rhyolitic ash flow and basaltic lava flows uneonfbrsably overlies the Coallis and older rocks and is in turn unconfbraably overlain by oliviaa basalt of late Pliocene or early Quaternary age* The sain Talleys of the area, partly erosional and partly structural in origin, are underlain by late Quaternary olirLne basalt flows (Snake River basalt)
    [Show full text]
  • Big Wood River
    Big Wood River General Information The Big Wood River flows out of the southern portion of the Sawtooth National Recreation Area in central Idaho. The study reach is about a 1,200 ft length of river about 1.5 miles upstream from the discontinued Geological Survey (USGS) gage 13135500 (Big Wood River near Ketchum) in the Sawtooth National Forest. The site is approximately 9 miles upstream of Ketchum, Idaho near the Wood River campground on land administered by the Forest Service. The elevation of the site is about 6,380 ft and the drainage area is 137.5 mi2 (above the USGS gage). The geology of the watershed is predominantly mixed volcanic. Figure 1. Big Wood River at bridge sampling location. In 1999 and 2000 personnel of Utah State University measured sediment transport and instantaneous streamflow at this site (Figure 1). Additional information collected at this site include a survey of the stream reach, pebble counts of the substrate surface and core samples of the substrate subsurface material. Streamflow records for complete water years are available for this site 1949 through 1971. The minimum and maximum daily mean discharge for the period of record are 15 ft3/s and 1,510 ft3/s, respectively. Estimated average annual streamflow 3 3 (Qa) is 167 ft /s and the estimated 1.5 year return interval discharge (Q1.5) is 772 ft /s. The maximum discharge recorded was 1,690 ft3/s on May 24, 1967. Cross-Section Figure 2 shows the cross-section at the sediment transport measurement site at the bridge shown in Figure 1.
    [Show full text]
  • An Assessment of NRCS Seasonal Streamflow Forecast Performance in Idaho
    An assessment of NRCS seasonal streamflow forecast performance in Idaho Christina Andry A report prepared in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science Earth and Space Sciences: Applied Geosciences University of Washington March 2018 Project mentor: Danny Tappa, USDA NRCS Snow Survey Reading committee: Juliet Crider Nicoleta Cristea MESSAGe Technical Report Number: 062 Executive Summary This report summarizes recent NRCS seasonal streamflow forecast performance in Idaho. Considering only April 1st forecasts for the April-July period, I first attempted to quantify forecast performance from a users’ perspective, using three simple statistical parameters: (1) the standard error derived from each forecast equation, (2) the percent error of the median forecast in relation to the observed flow, and (3) a count of how frequently the observed streamflow volume fell outside the forecasted range of values. Regional differences in these forecast error metrics were apparent, with points in northern basins showing lower standard errors and percent errors but higher out-of-range counts, and points in southern basins showing higher standard errors and percent errors and generally lower out-of-range counts. The high out-of-range counts across the state in certain years can be attributed to extreme spring weather events that could not be predicted using the current statistical forecast techniques. Future weather remains the largest source of uncertainty in seasonal streamflow forecasts. I then used the Nash-Sutcliffe skill score (NS), which accounts for the annual variability of observed streamflow and allows for direct comparison of forecast skill between basins with highly-variable streamflow and basins with more annual consistency in streamflow volumes.
    [Show full text]
  • 23. BIG WOOD RIVER DRAINAGE A. Overview the Wood River Basin
    23. BIG WOOD RIVER DRAINAGE A. Overview The Wood River basin has a drainage area of over 2,990 square miles. Major drainages in the Wood River system are the Big Wood and Little Wood rivers. At its lower end, the Big Wood River is also known as Malad River. Flows from the Wood River drainage are controlled for irrigation and flood control by four major reservoirs: Magic, Little Wood River, Fish Creek and Mormon. Approximately 144,000 acres are irrigated from reservoir storage and other diversions. Hydroelectric power facilities are currently in operation at Magic Dam, Little Wood River Dam, the confluence of the Big Wood and Little Wood rivers, the Little Wood near Shoshone, Malad River upstream of the Malad George State Park, and the Malad River dams. This drainage contains the most productive trout streams, lake and reservoir habitat in south central Idaho. Nearly all the major rivers, streams, lakes, reservoirs and ponds are suitable for trout. Rainbow trout are the most important game fish species in the drainage, but the lower Little Wood River and Silver Creek support excellent brown trout populations, and portions of the drainage sustain high populations of brook trout. Brown trout have established wild populations in the Big Wood River in the section from the backwaters of Magic Reservoir to about Stanton Crossing, and significant and steadily increasing numbers of brown trout are now found in the reservoir. The trout fisheries in the reservoirs are largely dependent on annual plantings of hatchery fish, although Magic and Little Wood River reservoirs do contain some wild trout.
    [Show full text]
  • Water Utilizatjq^ in the Snake Rivm Basin
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Harold L. Ickes, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY W. C. Mendenhall, Director Water-Supply Paper 657 WATER UTILIZATJQ^ IN THE SNAKE RIVM BASIN ""-^r B<5 °o ^ «-? %*-« ^t«4 ____ ^n -" wC> v r v*> ^ /-^ T"i --O ^ o f^* t TA ^-- ± BY ^^^ W. G. HOYT \, ^ r-^ Co WITH A PREFACE ^ -^ "^ o o. ^ HERMAN STABLER ' ^ ^ e 'r1 t<A to ^ ^ >Jt C---\ V*-O r&1 """^*_> ® p <,A -o xi CP ^3 P* O ^ y» * "^ 0V - f\ *"^ . , UNITED STATKS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON: 1935 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D.C. - - - Price $1.00 (Paper cover) CONTENTS Page Preface, by Herman Stabler._______________________________________ ix Abstract _________________________________________________________ 1 Introduction__ _ _________________________________________________ 2 Purpose and scope of report.___________________________________ 2 Cooperation and base data.____________________________________ 3 Index system.._______________________________________________ 6 General features of Snake River Basin.______________________________ 6 Location and extent.__________________________________________ 6 Geographic and topographic features.___________________________ 7 Snake River system._____-_-----_____-_________-_____-_-__-_.._ 7 Tributaries to Snake River.____________________________________ 9 Historical review-__________________________________________________ 20 Scenic and recreational features.-...________________________________ 21 Climate____________________________A____ ___________________ 23 Natural vegetation_________________-_____-____________----__-_---._
    [Show full text]
  • Hydrogeologic Framework of the Wood River Valley Aquifer System, South-Central Idaho
    Prepared in cooperation with Blaine County, City of Hailey, City of Ketchum, The Nature Conservancy, City of Sun Valley, Sun Valley Water and Sewer District, Blaine Soil Conservation District, and City of Bellevue Hydrogeologic Framework of the Wood River Valley Aquifer System, South-Central Idaho Sun Valley Ketchum Hailey Bellevue Gannett Picabo Scientific Investigations Report 2012–5053 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover: Center: Map showing estimated thickness of Quaternary sediment in the Wood River Valley aquifer system, Wood River Valley, south-central Idaho. Modified from figure 7, this report. Photographs, clockwise from upper left: Glacial deposits below Mill Lake, Prairie Creek drainage, Smoky Mountains, Idaho; view to north. These deposits probably represent morraines of the Boulder Creek advance of Pearce and others (1988). The west face of the Boulder Mountains is visible in the background. Photograph taken August 29, 2011. Pioneer Mountains from the head of Rock Roll Canyon in the Trail Creek drainage, Boulder Mountains, Idaho; view to east. Events related to the formation of the Pioneer Mountains are responsible for much of the geology of the Wood River Valley. Photograph taken August 6, 2011. Basalt of the Picabo desert southeast of Picabo, Idaho. Note hammer for scale. The Basalt of the Picabo desert and the Hay basalt form part of the Wood River Valley aquifer system. Photograph taken August 18, 2011. Quaternary alluvium exposed in a Big Wood River stream terrace south of Glendale Road. Note hammer for scale. This alluvium is representative of the sediments that constitute most of the Wood River Valley aquifer system.
    [Show full text]