Search myodfw.com
Sportsman's Warehouse 9401 SE 82nd Ave, Portland, 97086
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Cabela's - 7555 SW Nyberg St, Tualatin, 97062
Cabela's - 7555 SW Nyberg St, Tualatin, 97062
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service - 7450 NE Avery St. Newport, OR 97365
The North Nehalem Fish Hatchery was originally constructed in 1966. The hatchery replaced the Foley Creek Hatchery which was constructed in 1926. The facility is used for adult collection, spawning, egg incubation and rearing of fall Chinook, coho, winter steelhead and rainbow trout.
The Klamath Fish Hatchery was originally constructed in 1929. Many improvements have been made since original construction. The hatchery produces legal and trophy sized rainbow trout, fingerling rainbow trout, brown trout, and cutthroat trout for release throughout the Klamath Basin, Deschutes Basin, Umpqua Basin and the southeast part of the state. The hatchery assist with remote egg takes for wild rainbow and brown trout at Crane Prairie and Wickiup Reservoirs.
Alsea Hatchery was constructed in 1936 and is operated with state funds. Many improvements have been made to the hatchery since original construction. The hatchery produces both winter steelhead and rainbow trout. The facility is used for adult collection, spawning, egg incubation and rearing of winter steelhead, and egg incubation and rearing of rainbow trout.
The Bureau of Land Management maintains a series of pastures along Oregon Highway 38 that are a year-round residence for a herd of 60-100 Roosevelt elk. Elk are visible almost every day of the year!
Features: Color varies, but walleye are generally dark olive-brown on top grading to almost white below. Walleye have two well-separated dorsal fins; the first fin has a large black spot at its rear base. The opaque eyes, giving the fish its common name, and canine teeth are other prominent features. Habitat: Walleye are found in the Columbia, Willamette and Snake rivers. In the Willamette River, the walleye fishery is generally limited to the section downstream from Willamette Falls at Oregon City, although a few have been documented as far upstream as Dexter Dam. Walleye prefer large, clean and cold or
Bonneville Hatchery was constructed in 1909. In 1957, the facility was remodeled and expanded as part of the Columbia River Fisheries Development Program (Mitchell Act)—a program to enhance declining fish runs in the Columbia River Basin. The hatchery underwent another renovation in 1974 as part of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' (USACE) mitigation of fish losses from the construction of the John Day Dam. In 1998, construction was completed on the Captive Broodstock Facility for the Grande Ronde Basin spring Chinook supplementation program.
Cabela's - 7555 SW Nyberg St, Tualatin, 97062
Cabela's - 7555 SW Nyberg St, Tualatin, 97062
Conference room at Thompson's Sanitary Service, 7450 NE Avery St, Newport, 97365
Sportsman's Warehouse 9401 SE 82nd Ave, Portland, 97086