The 1990 Land and Management Plan of the Winema National Forest stated about this section of the river:
No action has yet been taken to place the gorge under the provisions of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, however.
The gorge is just a short distance east of U.S. Highway 97. It is not commonly visited as it is accessed only by primitive roads. Railroad tracks run just to the east, giving AMmtrak passengers occasional views of the gorge.
Wildlife includes beaver, otters, kingfishers, yellow warblers; sometimes prairie falcons may nest on the cliffs. Flora includes willows, ponderosa pines, aspen, firs, chokecherry and elderberries. During the winter the river may run brown with tannins from the upstream Klamath Marsh; later in the summer the stream is mainly fed by springs along the canyon walls and the water becomes clear.