Reading the Creek
before the sun does

Priya Nair
Lapidary hobbyist · Spokane, WA
47.6601° N, 117.4260° W
February 20, 2026
The Palouse River gives up its agates only at certain water levels — too high and they're buried in silt, too low and the exposed gravel has already been picked clean by every other rockhound who woke up early that week. I've learned to watch the USGS gauge at Hooper and drive out when it drops below 3.2 feet.
The best material is always under the cut banks where the current slows and drops its cargo. Carnelian-banded fortification agates, some with plume inclusions, all worn smooth by the river's long patience. I fill a five-gallon bucket and spend the drive home listening to them knock together in the dark.

↑ Fortification Agate — Palouse River, WA
"The river doesn't give anything up easily. But when it does, it gives you something it's been shaping for twelve thousand years."
— Priya Nair

















