Apparently, this area sees lots of photographers pulled over on the side of the road, doing their thing. This is about 31 miles south of the end of the byway at Jordan Valley, OR.įrom the campground, the route runs close to the rim of the North Fork Canyon and offers some incredible views of the Owyhee Mountains rising in the background above that canyon dropping below. Passing by some fantastical rock shapes and over deep canyons you'll eventually come to the (primitive) North Fork Campground on the North Fork of the Owyhee River. A lot of folks think this area is what the West is supposed to look like and if you're one of those, you're in for a treat. The steep, stark Owyhee Mountains rise to the north and in between are huge areas of scrub, sagebrush and wildflowers. This is a large area of desert with steep red-rock walls rising above streambeds cut deep into the ground. Settled in the 1880's Turmes Ranch was once upon a time a traveler's way station, back when this area was being scoured by gold and silver prospectors.īeyond Turmes Ranch, you'll be heading up Shoofly Canyon and into the real Owyhee Uplands. About 8 miles south of Grand View you'll come to the abandoned Turmes Ranch. Starting from Grand View on the Snake River, you're going to be driving BLM gravel road the whole way. But if you're willing to dare it, this is some gorgeous countryside that you just might have all to yourself. This is also high desert: barren, dry and easily made impassable by a bit of moisture. Since then, the countryside has been eroded into some great canyons, big mountains and a few odd shapes. Most of this countryside was formed and shaped by volcanic forces that began about 17 million years ago and ended about 2 million years ago. As dry and barren as it might look to the casual observer, there are more than 180 species of birds and mammals that call the Uplands home. Some areas also sport juniper woodlands with some grizzled and twisted veterans up to 500 years old. The Owyhee Uplands are one of the last remaining large examples of a steppe-sagebrush ecosystem in North America. There are pullouts, interpretive panels and kiosks in a couple places. Other than that, there are no amentities or services along the entire route. There is also a developed picnic area at Poison Creek. There is one developed campground about 30 miles east of Jordan Valley, Oregon, at the North Fork Recreation Site. The Owyhee Uplands Back Country Byway is primarily a Bureau of Land Management route. The best times to travel: early summer and fall. Depending on how recent and how severe rainfall might be, the road can be impassable at almost any time of year. The route is usually impassable from late October through early May because of snow. Most of the road is gravel and about 1.5 lanes wide at best. In between there are lots of sights, lots of wildlife and some good camping but not much else: deep river canyons, dry mountains, desert areas, small riparian zones, abandoned mining settlements. The eastern end of the byway is at Grand View, the western end at Jordan Valley, Oregon, about 103 miles away, not "as the crow flies" but as this gravel road makes its way around the southern end of the Owyhee Mountains. The Owyhee Uplands Back Country Byway is one of those roads you want to drive in the summer, with a full gas tank and extra food and water. An oolite above Shoofly Canyon along the Owyhee Uplands Back Country Byway
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