OREGON CITY — Several hundred people turned out along the Willamette River on Thursday to celebrate a fish often misunderstood for its style but long revered for its substance.
Pacific lamprey, a jawless fish that looks like an eel, spend years in the Willamette and Columbia River basins before journeying to sea and back to spawn before dying. It is a First Food for many Northwest tribes, including the Yakama Nation who hosted its fifth annual Willamette Falls Lamprey Celebration at Clackamette Park.
The day before, more than two dozen tribal members went to the falls to harvest several dozen lamprey, most of which they brought to the Yakama Valley to share with members. A couple dozen others were sent to Bonneville Dam to ease their journey and be released closer to their spawning grounds without the challenge of the Columbia River dams.
Members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation, including Tribal leader Jeremy Takala, harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Dave’y Lumley, a fish biologist andmembers of the Yakama Nation harvests Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Young members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Clint Takala, 11, of the Yakama Nation, harvests Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation harvest Pacific lamprey at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Pacific lamprey caught by Yakama Nation tribal members at Wilumpt, or Willamette Falls, near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
More than 60 years ago, roughly 400,000 adult lamprey were regularly recorded at Bonneville Dam, according to the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. Nowadays it’s less than 20,000, and scientists estimate that lamprey today have lost up to 70% of their historic distribution range throughout the Columbia Basin. The number of lamprey passing Lower Granite Dam—the last dam on the mainstem of the Columbia River before reaching Idaho—has been in the double digits, according to the commission.
Willamette Falls is among the few remaining sites in the Columbia Basin where tribes can still harvest lamprey. Members of the Yakama, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Nez Perce and Warm Springs tribes are allowed to access the base of the falls and hand harvest the fish, which use their mouths to suck on rocks and pull their bodies upstream and up enormous heights, including the falls.
Willamette Falls on the Willamette River near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Heron rest at Willamette Falls on the Willamette River near Oregon City on June 24, 2026. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Donella Miller, a project manager at Yakama Nation Fisheries, characterized it as more of a salvage than a harvest, because many of the lamprey attempting to make it over the falls and to their historic spawning grounds in Willamette River tributaries will not survive.
This is part of the reason that the Yakama Nation Fisheries bring some of the lamprey they catch past the dams and near the tributaries. Lamprey aren’t like salmon in that they return to the exact place they were born to spawn, but they do rely on the scent of their kin to make sure they don’t pass by a perfectly good spot for their last act.
“When we get lamprey into a stream that doesn’t have a lot of lamprey in it, it adds all those pheromones back in,” said Dave’y Lumley, a fish biologist at Yakama Nation Fisheries. “So when they are traveling upstream, they can smell it and know that it is a good spawning ground.”
Dozens of people lined up to ask Lumley and colleagues questions and to hold lamprey, including the opportunity to have it suck on them for a moment. The fish quickly release when they realize they’re inhaling not mossy rock, but human skin. Packed boats took attendees up river to see the falls.
Rosie Johnson (left) and John Auneki (right) prepare lamprey for drying at the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration in Oregon City on June 25, 2026. Johnson, 60, is a member of the Warm Springs and Wasco tribes, and has been harvesting lamprey on the Willamette River since she was 7, she said. Auneki, 17 and a member of the Yakama Nation, was part of a group that harvested dozens of lamprey at Willamette Falls the day before. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Volunteers serve salmon, lamprey and sides to hundreds of attendees at the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation and Northwest tribes perform a dance at the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Yakama Nation Fisheries staff encouraged attendees of the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration to try touching the eel-like fish. The event held along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026 brought out hundreds of people. Pacific lamprey are an ancient and culturally significant species for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
A child eyes a Pacific lamprey in a tank at the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration. The event held along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026 brought out hundreds of people. Pacific lamprey are an ancient and culturally significant species for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Yakama Nation Fisheries staff show off a lamprey spine to young attendees at the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration. The event held along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026 brought out hundreds of people. Pacific lamprey are an ancient and culturally significant species for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Yakama Nation Fisheries staff encouraged attendees of the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration to try touching the eel-like fish. The event held along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026 brought out hundreds of people. Pacific lamprey are an ancient and culturally significant species for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
The 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration held along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026 brought out hundreds of people. Pacific lamprey are an ancient and culturally significant species for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Members of the Yakama Nation and other Northwest tribes came dressed in traditional regalia for the 5th annual Yakama Nation Lamprey Celebration along the Willamette River in Oregon City on June 25, 2026. The lamprey are an ancient and culturally significantspecies for many Northwest tribes. (Photo by Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)
And by 1 p.m. the lines stretched for yards to try grilled lamprey, salmon and sides, all donated by the Yakama Nation. Lamprey have been called the “bacon cheeseburger of the aquatic world,” because though they are not large, they have for thousands of years provided people with abundant calories, fats and nutrients on par with bigger salmon.
Rosie Johnson, 60 and a member of the Warm Springs and Wasco tribes, has been fishing for lamprey at Willamette Falls since she was 7, she said. At a demonstration table, she taught John Auneki, 17 and a member of the Yakama Nation, to clean and prepare lamprey to be dried. Auneki was part of the lamprey harvest the day before, his second ever, but Johnson was teaching him for the first time to prepare the fish.
The event included dances and speakers, including Yakama tribal leader Jeremy Takala and Oregon Senate President Rob Wagner, D-Lake Oswego. Former Gov. Kate Brown, who today is president of the Willamette Falls Trust, also attended.
The trust is a nonprofit network of more than 60 organizations and foundations trying to “rewild” the area around Willamette Falls and replace the Willamette Falls Paper Company and 40 acres near a Portland General Electric hydroelectric plant that crowd the falls.
The Oregon Legislature in 2025 approved a $45 million investment in the project, and Brown has said she’s secured roughly $30 million in private funding, two-thirds of which would come from former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and his wife. She said the next step is to get Portland General Electric to reach an agreement on turning over its acreage beneath and adjacent to the paper company, an area called Moore’s Island, “over the next six months to a year.”
“The plan, should we be successful, is to restore the landscape, reconnect Oregonians to the river and renew indigenous connections to the site,” she said.
This story was originally produced by Oregon Capital Chronicle, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network which includes Washington State Standard, and is supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity.
Washington State Standard is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Washington State Standard maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Bill Lucia for questions: [email protected].