Bruneau River
About
Between the Nevada border and its confluence with the Snake, the Bruneau cuts through 800-foot rhyolite canyon walls in what may be Idaho's most remote whitewater corridor. The main canyon run covers 30 miles of Class III-IV water from Indian Hot Springs downstream, with the deepest section visible from Bruneau Canyon overlook dropping through 10 miles of vertical geology. At 280 CFS average, the river runs best between 300-1500 CFS on USGS gauge 13168500. Above 1000 CFS the technical boulder gardens become pushy hydraulics; below 250 CFS requires constant boat dragging. The Bruneau-Jarbidge Rivers Wilderness Study Area protects the corridor, and BLM has deemed it eligible for Wild & Scenic designation. Bruneau River Guides runs commercial trips through the canyon system, necessary given the roadless access and multi-day commitment required. Spring snowmelt from the Jarbidge Mountains drives most of the annual flow, with hot springs adding thermal inputs along the 40-mile run through Elko County.
River conditions are community-verified. CFS ranges, difficulty ratings, and access points may not reflect every flow level or seasonal change. Always check current conditions, scout unfamiliar rapids, and paddle within your skill level.