Trout Creek | |
Map: | Trout Creek Watershed.png |
Map Size: | 300 |
Pushpin Map: | USA Oregon |
Pushpin Map Size: | 300 |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of the mouth of Trout Creek in Oregon |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | United States |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | Oregon |
Subdivision Type4: | Counties |
Subdivision Name4: | Crook, Jefferson, and Wasco |
Length: | 51miles[1] |
Source1: | Ochoco Mountains |
Source1 Location: | northeast of Prineville, Crook County, Oregon |
Source1 Coordinates: | 44.5117°N -120.5556°W[2] |
Source1 Elevation: | 5593feet[3] |
Mouth: | Deschutes River |
Mouth Location: | at the Jefferson/Wasco county line, Oregon |
Mouth Coordinates: | 44.8214°N -121.0886°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 1283feet |
Basin Size: | 692sqmi[4] |
Trout Creek is a 510NaN0 long tributary of the Deschutes River in the U.S. state of Oregon. It drains approximately 692mi2 of Crook, Jefferson, and Wasco counties. Arising in the Ochoco Mountains, it flows north and then west to its confluence with the Deschutes River.
Trout Creek's headwaters are in the western Ochoco Mountains, northeast of Prineville. It flows north, gathering minor tributaries such as Auger Creek and Amity Creek. The creek turns northwest and then west near the ghost town of Ashwood, straddling the Jefferson/Wasco county line. It receives Antelope Creek on the right bank. Highway 97 crosses the creek near Willowdale. Several miles downstream, Trout Creek receives Hay and Mud Springs creeks on the left bank.[5] It then flows into the Deschutes River 87miles above its confluence with the Columbia River.[4]
Trout Creek drains 692mi2 of central Oregon.[4] Elevations range from 5940feet near the creek's headwaters to 1283feet at its mouth.[2] [4] The average precipitation in the watershed ranges from 8to in the lower regions to 28inches in the mountains. Eighty-eight percent of the watershed is privately owned, while the remaining twelve percent is owned by the United States Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and United States Department of Agriculture. Eighty-six percent is rangeland, twelve percent is forested, two percent is used for agriculture, and less than one percent is urban or rural.[4]
Humans first arrived in the Trout Creek area around 10,000 years ago. A pit-house discovered near Willowdale dates back at least 5,000 years. The first European Americans to arrive in the area were fur traders in the 1820s, including a group led by Peter Skene Ogden. The first settlers arrived in the 1860s. In 1896 and 1897, gold and silver were discovered. The Ashwood post office opened in 1898, and it quickly expanded as silver and cinnabar mines operated in the area. Many homesteaders arrived in the area in the early 1910s, and cinnabar production peaked in the 1960s. After major floods in 1964, the United States Army Corps of Engineers straightened portions of Trout Creek, creating berms that have obstructed some of the creek's smaller tributaries.[4]