|
Click
button for more

Pacific
Northwest
List with us
Where to
stay and
what to do in
Salmon,
Idaho
VISITOR
INFORMATION
ACCOMMODATIONS
ACTIVITIES
More
Central Idaho
Challis
Bellevue
Hailey
Ketchum
Salmon
Stanley
Sun
Valley More
Idaho
Central
Eastern
North
North Central
South Central
Southeast
Southwest |

Salmon, the seat of Lemhi County, calls itself the "Whitewater Capital
of the World", and it is the region’s major gateway to mountains,
mountain lakes and streams, rivers and national forests. There are many
guides and outfitters with various specialties including hunting, fishing,
rafting and horse-packing who can take you into the back country. As its
name suggests, the town of Salmon lies in a prime wild-river fishing region.
Dubbed the "River of No Return" by Lewis & Clark, the Salmon
River is one of the few un-dammed rivers left in North America. From June to
September, Chinook salmon spawn in the gravel beds of the river in
tremendous numbers, although numbers have been declining in recent years. As
well as salmon, the rivers have good stocks of rainbow trout and steelhead.
Winter visitors enjoy snowmobiling and cross-country skiing, with forest
trails all around town.
History
Salmon got its start as a point where men and supplies were ferried across
the Salmon River, in order to get to the gold fields of Leesburg, 16 miles
to the west. Soon after the height of the mining "boom" in 1867,
Colonel George L. Shoup, a prominent businessman and future state governor,
instigated laying out the town site. Chinese miners were prominent, and the
town had its own "Chinatown". Many of the miners returned to
Salmon and the surrounding valleys, took up land, and began ranching. Lumber
also became an important industry, and the town of Salmon continued its
growth and development. Salmon has kept some of its flavor as a frontier
town of the West. |

Go Northwest Bookstore
Best selection of books on the Northwest.
Click here!

Adventure
Guide to Idaho
by Genevieve Rowles
February 1998, Hunter
Publishing, Paperback, 400 pages, (guidebook)
An introduction tells you about the state's history, geography, its people and the
wildlife you might encounter. Covers ski areas, river running, hiking, gold panning,
excursions and activities with kids, sightseeing, plus the best places to eat and bed down
for the night.
Order
now...
We appreciate your orders. They help keep
Go Northwest online.
|