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Idaho Fish and Game

Fish Hatchery
Niagara Springs
Before you go

Niagara Springs Hatchery is located in the Snake River Canyon 10 miles south of Wendell, Idaho.  

Niagara Springs Hatchery is owned and financed by Idaho Power Company. The Hatchery is operated and staffed by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.  This facility has a capacity to rear nearly two million steelhead smolts annually, it is one of America’s largest privately-owned steelhead rearing facilities. In 2020, a sturgeon facility was constructed onsite to also produce 2,000 repatriated Snake River White Sturgeon to be stocked back into the middle Snake River from Shoshone Falls to Brownlee Dam.

To visit the hatchery, travel west on interstate 84 from Twin Falls, take exit 157 and head south towards the Snake River.  Follow the signs for Niagara Springs State Park into the canyon and watch for the hatchery entrance road. 

Related Location

2131 Niagara Springs Road
Wendell, ID 83355
United States

Driving Directions

From Interstate 84, take exit 157 and head south towards the Snake River.  Follow the signs for Niagara Springs State Park into the canyon and watch for the hatchery entrance road.

Overview
Quagga and Zebra Mussel
Quagga Mussel Larvae Detection on Snake River near Twin Falls

Access to the Snake River is closed due to the Idaho Department of Agriculture confirmation of the presence of quagga mussels at larval life stages in the Centennial Waterfront Park area of the Snake River. These findings mark the first time a rapid response plan has been put into action for quagga mussels in Idaho.

More information »

Location Facts

Niagara Springs Hatchery was built in 1966 as a rearing facility for steelhead.  In 2013, Idaho Power completed a two-year renovation of the hatchery. The project included construction of a 23,000-square-foot hatchery building, a modern water filtration system, an improved feeding apparatus and predator exclusion equipment.  The new hatchery building includes a visitor center. Again in 2018 the facility was renovated to provide a permanent predator exclusion structure over the outdoor raceways.  

Niagara Springs Hatchery is named after the spring that serves as its water source. The water is clean, clear and, most importantly, warmer than the water in which naturally spawned steelhead grow up. The spring water creates the ideal environment for the fish to achieve the equivalent of two years’ growth in just one year.

Each April and May, eggs from adult steelhead spawned by crews at Idaho Power hatcheries in the Snake and Salmon River basins are delivered to Niagara Springs Hatchery to begin the rearing cycle.  Fish are initially reared indoors and then finish their rearing cycle outdoors in concrete raceways.  In March, the yearling fish are hauled back to Hells Canyon, the Little Salmon River, and the Pahsimeroi River where they will begin a journey of more than 500 miles to the ocean. The spring fish haul takes about six weeks to complete.

Niagara Springs Hatchery has proven to be a tremendous asset in the rearing of steelhead. In the wild, less than 5 percent of the eggs hatch and survive to migrate to the ocean. At Niagara Springs Hatchery, more than 80 percent of the eggs received from Pahsimeroi and Oxbow hatcheries survive to make their ocean journey.

Niagara Springs Sturgeon Hatchery was constructed in 2020 with the intent to increase White sturgeon populations in the Middle Snake River.  Idaho Power Company started the program at the College of Southern Idaho Hatchery, but the program was moved to Niagara Springs once the building was complete. The facility has a looped heated water system where the water temperatures can be manipulated to increase growth and survival at critical stages within the White sturgeon life cycle.  

In May and June of each year, Idaho Power Company (IPC) sets gear within the Bliss Dam to CJ Strike Dam reach to collect eggs from naturally spawning sturgeon. IPC checks the gear on a regular basis and then delivers the sample bags to the hatchery to be sorted. The bags that contain the eggs also collect macrophytes, shells, and other debris floating down the river. The eggs are picked from the debris and then incubated and grown to approximately 0.5 pounds and 12 inches.

In April-June of each year, the Snake River White sturgeon are then stocked within the middle Snake River from Shoshone falls to Brownlee dam, with the exception the Bliss to CJ Strike reach where the eggs are collected for the program. 

Location Things to Know

Niagara Springs Hatchery is one of four hatcheries which IPC owns and IDFG staffs and operates to fulfill IPC's mitigation requirement for the IPC dams on the Snake River. The goal of Niagara Springs Hatchery is to rear 400,000 pounds of steelhead smolts annually to sustain steelhead trout runs in the Snake River below Hells Canyon Dam and the Salmon River and its tributaries.

Access Information

The hatchery is open to the public in designated areas daily from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Large group guided tours are available during normal business hours by appointment. To schedule a guided tour, please call the hatchery office at (208) 536-2283. For any questions that are not directly related to the hatchery, please call the IDFG Magic Valley Region office at (208) 324-4359. There is no charge to visit the hatchery.

Anglers can access the two-acre day-park on the eastside of Niagara Springs Creek and a small day-park on the hatchery side of Niagara Springs Creek that is owned by Idaho Power. The area directly below the falls to the fishing platform is closed to all the public and is fenced off. This area contains Bliss Rapid snails that have an ESA Status of Threatened. Activities within this section of the spring can harm the population of snails. This small park includes a restroom, picnic tables, barbecue grills and refuse containers.