KRIS Shasta River Tour

General Introduction

The Shasta River Basin embraces an 800 square mile area of Siskiyou County in the north central part of California. Mount Shasta dominates the landscape, towering over 14,000 feet to the south. Melting snow from Mount Shasta does not contribute significantly to surface flows in the upper Shasta River because run-off sinks into the porous volcanic slopes and reappears from springs on the Shasta Valley floor.


The upper Shasta River, above Dwinell Dam

The headwaters of the Shasta River are near Mount Eddy and the upper river above Dwinell Reservoir is swift and falls in elevation rapidly. Before the dam was built, these stretches of the river were prime spawning habitat for salmon and steelhead. The river below Dwinell Dam is much slower, and meanders along the Shasta Valley floor, which is 30 miles across at its widest. Springs in this reach add to flows and provide much needed cool water for juvenile salmon and steelhead in summer.

The Klamath mountains, to the west, strip most of the moisture from ocean air currents as they move eastward. The Shasta Valley itself receives only 11-17 inches of rain annually (and even less in some areas). Because so little rain falls in the Shasta Valley during the growing season, ranchers rely heavily on streamflows and ground water to irrigate crops and to water their livestock.


The mid-section of the Shasta River is low gradient, and flows through agricultural land.

The economy of the Shasta Valley, like that of Siskiyou County generally, relies on ranching, farming, tourism and timber harvesting. Sport fishing opportunities still draw visitors to Siskiyou County because of numerous mountain lakes and productive streams. Although fishing opportunities along the Shasta River are limited, the river produces salmon and steelhead that support fisheries in the Klamath River and in the ocean.

The lower portion of the Shasta River flows through a deep, narrow gorge. This picture shows the parched, shrubby watershed. The Shasta River joins the Klamath about three miles north of this site. The gorge is a key location for chinook salmon spawning in fall and winter, but stream temperatures in summer are too warm for adult or juvenile salmonids.

Location Map (77K)

Shasta River Guided Tour Contents

Fisheries Introduction / Species & Ranges / Life Cycle / Habitats / Monitoring /
Population Trends
Water Quality Introduction / Water Temperature / Dissolved Oxygen
Geology Introduction / The Cascade and Klamath Provinces
Hydrology Introduction
Economics Introduction
Restoration Introduction / Fencing Riparian Areas / Replanting Trees In the Riparian Zone / Water Use


KRIS Klamath Resource Information System