Deschutes River, Oregon
Maupin Country — Oregon's most famous trout river and world-class summer steelhead
The Deschutes River of central Oregon is one of the iconic Western fly fishing rivers — a powerful, spring-fed desert river that cuts a dramatic canyon through volcanic high desert from its headwaters in the Cascade Mountains to its confluence with the Columbia River. The Deschutes is famous for two things above all others: its extraordinary population of native "redside" rainbow trout (a distinctly colored strain of wild rainbows endemic to the Columbia Basin), and its summer steelhead that draw two-handed rod enthusiasts from across the globe.
The Maupin section — the most accessible and most celebrated — runs from the town of Maupin downstream to Trout Creek, approximately 25 miles of canyon river accessible by road and trail. The redside rainbows here average 14–18 inches and fight with a ferocity disproportionate to their size in the Deschutes' powerful current. These are not educated, selective tailwater trout — they are aggressive, wild fish that will crash a well-placed Elk Hair Caddis or Golden Stone with conviction.
The Salmonfly hatch is the Deschutes' most anticipated event, occurring in late April through May when the river's enormous Pteronarcys stoneflies emerge from the basalt ledges. The hatch draws fly fishers from across the Pacific Northwest who chase it upstream from the Columbia confluence as temperatures warm. The combination of massive stoneflies, aggressive redsides, and the canyon setting makes this one of the most spectacular fly fishing events in the American West.
Summer steelhead — wild B-run fish entering the river from the Columbia — begin appearing in mid-July and provide exceptional swinging opportunity through October. The Deschutes' summer steelhead are among the finest wild steelhead fishing remaining in the Pacific Northwest.
Maupin — Primary Access Hub
The town of Maupin is the gateway to the best Deschutes fishing. River access from bridges, city park, and numerous pullouts along both banks above and below town.
Harpham Flat — Upper Campground Access
Campground-based access to excellent mid-river sections. No road access downstream — hike, raft, or float to reach the best sections below Harpham.
Trout Creek — Lower Section
Launch and access point for the lower canyon. Float-in camping available along trail-accessible water. Excellent steelhead water in the lower canyon.
Redside Rainbow Trout
The Deschutes' signature fish — wild, endemic rainbows with brilliant red stripes and extraordinary fighting ability. Averaging 14–18 inches. Aggressive dry fly feeders during Salmonfly and Caddis hatches.
Summer Steelhead
Wild B-run steelhead entering from the Columbia mid-July through October. Averaging 6–10 pounds. Swung fly fishing on the famous canyon pools is the traditional approach.
Bull Trout
Present but protected. Immediately release any bull trout encountered. Critical that fish are not disturbed during spawn in fall.
The Salmonfly hatch on the Deschutes begins at the Columbia confluence in late April and moves upstream at roughly 5 miles per day. Track it with local Maupin fly shop reports.
Redsides are not selective — aggressive presentation on attractor patterns works far better here than on the technical tailwaters of Utah and Colorado.
Summer steelhead fishing requires early morning effort — fish the first two hours of light before boat traffic begins. The canyon pools fish best in low-light conditions.
Rattlesnakes are common along the Deschutes canyon in summer. Watch your step on rocky banks, especially in warm weather.
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River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.
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