Pueblo & Trout Creek Mountains
The Pueblo and Trout Creek Mountains provide significant habitat diversity. Their watersheds include aspen woodlands, grasslands, creeks, wet meadows, and sagebrush-steppe. Many mountain creeks drain to Oregon’s driest spot—the Alvord Basin—providing critical water to a desert landscape that supports plants and animals unique to this portion of the Great Basin. This dramatic conservation area spans nearly 800 square miles and provides climate-resilient habitat connectivity between more than one million acres of wildlife habitat.
ODLT established one of the largest conservation projects in Oregon by purchasing the 16,645-acre Trout Creek Ranch in the Pueblo and Trout Creek Mountains. This property includes livestock grazing permits on nearly 500,000 acres of public land and helps connect several established conservation areas, including national wildlife refuges and a wilderness area.
ODLT is now on the verge of acquiring Disaster Peak Ranch, which lies adjacent to Trout Creek Ranch. Combining the two efforts will expand the total project size to nearly 600,000 acres and continue to grow one of the largest conservation projects in all of Oregon.
These lands are part of the rich heritage of the Northern Paiutes, support a local ranching community, and are valued by the public for recreation—including access to the Oregon Desert Trail. While our project goal is to conserve and restore critical habitat, we will only achieve this goal by supporting the unique cultural and economic values of this area.
Conservation Projects in Pueblo & Trout Creek Mountains
Pueblo Mountains
This region has the second highest summit in southeastern Oregon and provides climate resilient connectivity between more than 1 million acres of wildlife habitat in the Great Basin.
ExploreTrout Creek Mountains
Named for the meandering creek within the mountains, this area has more than 75 miles of streams, as well as springs, that provide critical water for sensitive plants and animals of the high desert.
ExploreTrout Creek Ranch Headquarters
This working ranch and associated wet meadows make up the base area of the 16,645 acre property that lies between the Pueblo and Trout Creek Mountains.
ExploreTogether, we can conserve
disaster peak ranch
This 2,690-acre property in remote southeast Oregon grows conservation and restoration opportunities across a vast landscape. Its creeks and uplands support threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout, greater sage-grouse, and many other sensitive species. It also includes inholdings within proposed Wilderness areas and livestock grazing permits on more than 55,000 acres of surrounding public lands. Please lend your support and spread the word to others who can help us make this effort a reality by the end of 2025!