Sherar's Falls, is a small waterfall along the Deschutes River shortly before emptying into the Columbia River. It is a place considered a sacred fishing ground by local native tribes. It is located just north of the city of Maupin on Oregon Route 216 at Sherar's Bridge in Wasco County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. It totals 15 feet (4.6 metres) fall in a single drop and is the last waterfall along the Deschutes River before the Columbia River.[1] The waterfall is rated as a class 6 whitewater and has an administrative closure to boaters because of the danger.[2] It was named after Joseph Sherar, a 19th-century wagon road builder.

Sherar's Falls
Sherars Falls and fishing structures
Sherars Falls is located in the United States
Sherars Falls
Map
LocationRogue-Umpqua Divide Wilderness
Coordinates45°15′26″N 121°02′22″W / 45.257092744°N 121.03939758°W / 45.257092744; -121.03939758
Elevation701 ft (214 m)
Total height15 ft (4.6 m)
Number of drops1
Average
flow rate
4,000 cu ft/s (110 m3/s)

Location edit

Sherars Falls is located in Tygh Valley and is crossed upstream by notorious Sherars Bridge for Barlow Road. The road is historically the place where wagon trains crossed the Deschutes River at and proceeded west in order to bypass The Dalles.

Fishing edit

The waters of Sherars Falls are located in the heart of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. The waterfall and its surroundings are a well-known location for Tribal fishing for salmon and steelhead for subsistence purposes using the traditional dip-nets technique. This method has been used by tribes to fish in the particularly rough waters of waterfalls and rapids. The setting around the waterfall makes it a prime location to use dip-net fishing.[3] Many fishermen reach from surrounding boulders although several platforms have been erected by the local tribe members. Only tribal members are permitted to fish on and around these structures by federal permit issued to the Warm Springs Reservation.[4]

Regulations edit

Fishing for salmon, steelhead and Lamprey eel is regulated by the tribal council. Fishing is allowed 24 hours a day and is monitored by the Fish and Wildlife Committee. Marked spring Chinook, marked and unmarked fall Chinook, and coho as well as marked steelhead may be kept after being fished. On the other hand, regulations require all un-marked spring Chinook and steelhead, and sockeye to be released year round. Lamprey harvest at Sherars Falls is allowed when lamprey arrive from June through the end of August using hands or hand-powered tools such as dip nets or gaffs. Freezer harvest will end after 750 eels are caught.[5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Sherars Falls". Northwest Waterfall Survey. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  2. ^ Oregonian/OregonLive, Terry Richard (2015, January 9). Sherars Falls ups summer flow with white, wild, wintery Deschutes River maelstrom. Oregonlive.
  3. ^ Lower Deschutes River Management Plan: Environmental Impact Statement. (1993). United States: (n.p.).
  4. ^ Friedman, R., Friedman, R. (1990). In Search of Western Oregon. United States: Caxton Printers.
  5. ^ Fishery regulations for 2022. (2022, April 18). Spilyay Tymoo.