Lostine

Williamson Campground to Pole Bridge

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DifficultyIV-V
Length3.6 mi
Avg Gradientn/a
Reach Info Last UpdatedJuly 6, 2020

River Description

This is a great road access run in the Wallowa Mountain Range.  Just below the placid put in near Williamson Campground the stream starts dropping away through ever-steepening boulder gardens.

Watch for wood, and also Tailspin, the first big rapid.  Tailspin occurs on a sharp right bend, and if you are boating aggresively might find yourself reading and running this fun and long rapid.  You will know Tailspin is approaching when the barrage of read and run that starts near the beginning eases to class II for a short bit.  If you are looking carefully downstream, you may see the river bend right ahead of you with high granite cliffs downstream on river left.  Eddy out early on the right amongst the branches, the eddy situation is poor.

More read and run boulder gardens continue to a bend to the right at Condemnation Corner, again if you are boating aggresively you might be running this shorter, but steeper and sometimes portaged rapid blind.

Yet more fun boulder gardens continue to the Pole Bridge Gorge, a series of fun bedrock rapids ending just above the bridge.  There is a fun ledge, then a log jam that can be ducked if levels are not too high (1,000 cfs is too high).  Then the final twisting rapid, it's best to scout this last rapid from the take out before running shuttle, as its not practical to scout from the river.

The Lostine runs from snowmelt, so sunny skies make it easy to motivate for a second lap before heading to Terminal Gravity in the town with the same name as the river.

Lostine River gauge

500-600 is a good first time flow, 350 is runnable but lesser quality, and 800 is getting high while 900 is a hard cut off even if you know the run due to the log jam duck in the Last Delight Gorge.


River Features

Put In

Distance: 0 mi

Take Out

Distance: 3.5 mi
Take Out

MD
Mareike Delley

Jul 14, 2021


Cyrille and I paddled the Lostine on June 29th at around 450-550 cfs (it had quite the diurnal I think). We put in at Tailspin, at the campground from the comment below. There was a log at the end of tailspin that went almost entirely across the river (a very small passage on the left...). Later, the river splits in two channels, both are blocked by wood. The big log jam in the gorge that people ducked under is not there anymore.

Jacob Cruser
Jacob Cruser

Jul 5, 2018


June 27, 2018 we ran the Lostine at 450 cfs. This felt like a friendly, enjoyable flow. There was a fair bit of wood in the warm up stretch, but there is a way to miss most of it.

If I went back with the current wood configuration, I would park at the unmarked campsite here: 45.359022,-117.419909

From there a short nose of land leads down to tailspin, putting in halfway down this rapid misses the majority (but not all) of the wood portages.

Jacob Cruser
Jacob Cruser

Apr 5, 2018


Last Delight Gorge, 500 cfs

Jacob Cruser
Jacob Cruser

Apr 5, 2018


Ty Overeem pushes through a hole near the bottom of a long and fun boulder garden on the Lostine.

Jacob Cruser
Jacob Cruser

Apr 5, 2018


The log jam at 500 cfs, it gets pretty tight under there as flows get on towards 800-900 cfs.