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Snake River-Mormon Basin Back Country Byway
Nat'l Recreation Area

Snake River-Mormon Basin Back Country Byway

United States

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Managed by Bureau of Land Management

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We display cached information from agency feeds. Hours, fees, permits, closures, fire restrictions, and conditions change without notice. Outdoors is not the permitting authority. Confirm current conditions for this park using the links above before you go — you are responsible for compliance. Last verified by us: May 20, 2026. Spot an error in our data?

About

Imported description
Explore the rangelands and immerse yourself in the pastoral settings of eastern Oregon’s Baker and Malheur counties along the 150-mile Snake River-Mormon Basin Back Country Byway. This byway offers a variety of bucolic rural and backcountry traveling options for your high-clearance two-wheel drive vehicle.The area's high relief is on display in steep canyons, prominent cliffs and massive rock outcrops. The Snake River Canyon high above Brownlee Reservoir has striking color variations included in large basaltic rock outcrops above the Snake River Road, until this road reaches the reservoir, where metamorphic/sedimentary rock is dominant down to the historic hamlet of Huntington. One also sees high, velvety light green hills with many wildflowers in the spring. A wide variety of other natural scenery includes sagebrush plateaus, lush riparian vegetation along waterways. Historic wagon roads traverse the area; ranching, mining, logging, and homesteading occurred throughout the area in the late 1800s.Know Before You GoThe byway includes a variety of remote paved, gravel and earthen surface roads so care should be taken in planning your travels after weather events or during the winter season.Recreation opportunities along the byway include cite the play area at Virtue Flats OHV area, fishing, boating, swimming, and water-skiing in the Brownlee Reservoir, wildflowers photography in the Snake River Breaks, horseback riding in Rye Valley, and rafting on the Powder River.On Bureau of Land Management and private lands near the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, the visible wagon ruts of the Oregon Trail are being protected and preserved for future generations. Please be respectful of private property as you venture along the byway.Allow for at least five hours of driving time, not including any stops.Point of InterestThe Snake River canyons and draws were great hiding places for outlaws, especially on the wilder Idaho side. They could cross the Snake River by rowboat and hide in a cabin in an Idaho canyon, away from the Oregon lawmen. Moonshiners were undisturbed; the locals did not consider it or bootlegging a criminal offense. Counterfeiting also occurred in the canyon draws.

Source: recreation.gov

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Hunting in this park

This park overlaps hunting unit

During hunting seasons, wear blaze orange and check regulations — see the Oregon hunting page

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