News

A group of several dozen Indigenous youth from across the Klamath Basin recently emerged victorious after a monthlong journey paddling the Klamath River.
The saga of the Klamath provokes a more fundamental, yet often ignored, set of questions: What is a river for? Irrigation?
On June 11, 2025 a team of Indigenous teenagers from the tribes of the Klamath Basin began a historic first descent of the undammed Klamath River. The 310-mile route winds through southern Oregon and ...
A development called Sea Country, near the neighborhood that was recently ordered to evacuate during a wildfire, is close to ...
As the growing tide of travelers strains housing, water and hot spots, protests and measures to lessen the effects of ...
Klamath Falls sits at the crossroads of Oregon’s most dramatic landscapes, where volcanic mountains meet expansive wetlands and high desert plateaus, creating a haven of tranquility that feels worlds ...
The 300-mile journey is a celebration of the river returning to its free-flowing state after being dammed.
A 50-year-old California man swept away while swimming in the Klamath River on May 29 has been found dead after an intensive, weeklong search.
In 2024, the Klamath River’s fight for survival reached a historic milestone with the largest dam removal in U.S. history. The victory marked the beginning of the river’s restoration.
The Klamath once teemed with salmon, but the dams, built between 1918 and 1964 without consulting the tribes, blocked the fish from critical spawning habitat on the upper river and its tributaries.
The Klamath was once the third most productive river for salmon on the west coast of the United States. Its migratory fish were the primary food—and central to the culture—of the Karuk, Yurok ...