Watchable Wildlife Sites
More than a gathering spot for raptors, the NCA hosts one of the nation's largest concentrations of badgers, and is one of the few places in Idaho to see black-throated sparrows. Approximately 260 wildlife species inhabit the area, including 45 mammals, 165 birds, 8 amphibians, 16 reptiles, and 25 fish. This variety of species prompted the entire NCA to be designated as a Watchable Wildlife area. Although Dedication Point and the Snake River Canyon are the most popular areas for viewing wildlife, there are three additional recognized Watchable Wildlife sites within the NCA: the Ted Trueblood Wildlife Area, C.J. Strike Wildlife Management Area, and Bruneau Dunes State Park.
Need help identifying a specific raptor? Check the Raptor Identification Guide for birds commonly seen in the NCA. Also our "Where Are The Birds" flyer will show you which birds to expect to see at different times of the year.
Dedication Point
Look for side-blotched, western fence and sagebrush lizards, gopher snakes, scorpions, ground squirrels, cottontail and black-tailed jackrabbits in the sagebrush, winterfat and cheatgrass habitat surrounding Dedication Point. From the canyon rim overlook, 400 feet above the Snake River, watch for seasonal raptors, including golden eagle, red-tailed and Swainson's hawks, American kestrel, prairie falcon, osprey, and turkey vulture. Also look for canyon and rock wrens, Say's phoebe, cliff and violet-green swallows, white-throated swifts, common ravens and rock doves. Sage and Brewer's sparrows and western meadowlarks can also be seen in the shrubs along the trail. Facilities include vehicle parking, two vault toilets, interpretive kiosk and trail signs, and a short gravel trail that leads to the overlook. More details on Dedication Point.
Ted Trueblood Wildlife Area
Called the "duck ponds" for many years, this area covers nearly 300 acres of public land upon which three ponds were constructed in 1969. The name of the area was changed in 1987 in memory of Ted Trueblood, an avid hunter, conservationist, public land advocate and renowned outdoor writer who made his home in Idaho.
Summer visitors might see American white pelicans, white-faced ibis, cinnamon teal, black-necked stilts, American avocets, Caspian terns, yellow-breasted chats and lazuli buntings. Winter visitors could observe bald eagles, trumpeter swans and rough-legged hawks. Spring visitors may see migrating osprey, marbled godwits, Franklin's gulls, Bonaparte's gulls, black terns, Lewis' woodpeckers, solitary vireos, Nashville warblers, western tanagers, black-headed grosbeaks and green-tailed towhees.
All three ponds are located west of Highway 67 just north of Grand View, Idaho. Ponds 1 and 2 are accessible from a parking area one mile north of the Grand View bridge over the Snake River. Pond 3 can be reached from Shaw Lane, another half mile north from the parking area. Part of the area is closed to foot traffic during the waterfowl breeding season. Closure dates are posted. More details and photographs of the Truebloodon area.