John Day River, Oregon
Fossil Beds Country — Wild Redband rainbow in eastern Oregon's most remote canyon
The John Day River of eastern Oregon is one of the longest free-flowing rivers in the Pacific Northwest — a Wild and Scenic designated river flowing 284 miles through the high desert of central and eastern Oregon without a single dam on its main stem. The river cuts through the John Day Fossil Beds — one of the world's most significant paleontological sites, where 40 million years of mammal evolution are exposed in the Painted Hills and Sheep Rock formations — creating a fishing environment of extraordinary geological and natural significance.
Wild Redband Rainbow Trout dominate the John Day — the interior rainbow subspecies adapted to the high desert's wide temperature swings and alkaline waters. These fish grow slowly but can reach impressive size in the productive canyon sections, with fish averaging 12–16 inches in the most productive water. The John Day's wild fish have never seen a hatchery truck and their evolutionary adaption to this specific environment makes them uniquely suited to the river's demanding conditions.
The steelhead fishery — once spectacular — has declined significantly due to lower Columbia River returns, but wild steelhead still enter the river in spring, providing a fragile but genuine fishing opportunity for dedicated anglers. The return of the John Day's steelhead to historical levels is a long-term conservation goal that advocates have pursued for decades.
The Section Creek to Clarno section — the most celebrated fishing water — flows through a spectacular canyon accessible primarily by multi-day raft or drift boat float. Road access is limited to put-in and take-out points, but the primitive campsites along the canyon floor and the opportunity to fish completely undisturbed water for days at a time creates one of Oregon's finest wilderness float fishing experiences.
Service Creek — Float Put-In
Primary launch for multi-day John Day canyon floats. Highway access in Service Creek. Float to Clarno (70+ miles) or shorter sections.
Spray — Highway Access
Limited highway access near Spray. Good spring and fall wade fishing where the highway crosses the river.
Clarno — Take-Out
Take-out and access for canyon floats. Clarno unit of the fossil beds nearby. Good canyon access for short day hikes to the river.
Redband Rainbow
Wild interior rainbow adapted to eastern Oregon's high-desert conditions. Averaging 12–16 inches in canyon sections. Aggressive attractor dry fly feeders in summer.
Steelhead
Wild spring-run fish in reduced but recovering numbers. March through May. Check ODFW for current season status — runs vary dramatically year to year.
Smallmouth Bass
Present in lower, warmer sections. Good sport on poppers and streamers in summer. Non-native but provides additional fishing opportunity.
A multi-day float through the John Day canyon is one of Oregon's great wilderness adventures — the fossil beds, canyon walls, and wild fish create an experience of rare depth.
The Painted Hills unit of the John Day Fossil Beds is 30 minutes from the river — one of Oregon's most spectacular natural wonders and worth the side trip.
Redband rainbow fishing peaks in May and June before summer temperatures push fish to deeper, cooler holding water.
The John Day has suffered from drought and water use in recent decades — fishing responsibly means catch and release for all wild fish during this vulnerable period.
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River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.
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