Palouse (Washington)

The Palouse is a region that covers parts of southeastern Washington and north-central Idaho, with some definitions also including parts of northeastern Oregon.

This page only covers the Washington portion of the Palouse region. For pages that cover other parts of the Palouse, see North Central Idaho and Eastern Oregon.

Cities

 * — largest city in eastern Washington, second largest in the state and third-largest in the Pacific Northwest Region; county seat of Spokane County and home to Gonzaga University and Whitworth University
 * a separate suburban city east of Spokane.
 * — home of Eastern Washington University


 * — county seat of Whitman County
 * — largest city in Whitman County and home of Washington State University


 * — county seat of Columbia County
 * — county seat of Garfield County
 * — county seat of Asotin County

Other destinations

 * - Since time immemorial, the Nimiipuu or Nez Perce have lived among the rivers, canyons and prairies of the inland northwest
 * — Once thriving, now a ghost town. It was built by the McGregor Company based on the sheep-raising industry. In Whitman County, on the Palouse River just south of Highway 26, between Washtucna and Pampa.

Understand
For our purposes, the Palouse consists of Spokane, Whitman, Columbia, Garfield, and Asotin counties. Portions of adjacent North Central Idaho are often included in the broader region.

By plane
Spokane International Airport, located in the region, offers air service to some cities in the western US: see the Spokane article for details. Other airports with commercial air service near this region include Walla Walla, Pasco and Pullman. The nearest major international airports are Seattle-Tacoma International Airport or Portland International Airport, but they are 5-6 hours away by car. A connecting flight is recommended.

By train
Amtrak's Empire Builder stops at Spokane: this is the only train service to this region.

By car
Major east-west routes through this region are I-90 through Spokane and US-12 through the southern areas. US-195 is a major north-south route:
 * I-90.svg US 395.svg I-90 and US-395 run concurrently from Spokane to Ritzville. US Hwy 395 goes from Ritzville to Tri-cities and serves as the 'western edge' of Palouse country through Othello.
 * US 12.svg US-12 serves as the main east-west highway between Walla Walla to Lewiston, Idaho. It goes through Starbuck, Dayton and Pomeroy in southeastern Washington.
 * US 195.svg US-95 serves as the main north-south highway through the Palouse country. It runs from I-90 west of Spokane and winds its way down towards Lewiston, Idaho.
 * OR 3.svg to WA-129.svg OR-3 begins in Enterprise, Oregon. It winds it way through the Wenaha National Forest to Asotin, south of Lewiston, as WA-129.
 * WA-26.svg & WA-272.svg WA-26 begins from Exit 137 of I-90, west of the Columbia River, west of Ellensburg, to Colfax via Othello. Travelers coming from Seattle to WSU in Pullman (or anywhere in Whitman County) typically come through this way as a short cut. WA-272 continues east from Colfax to the town of Palouse near the Idaho border.

See

 * The Snake River Canyon carries the Snake River through the Palouse from Lewiston, Idaho, through an arc northwest then southwest, and finally empties it into the Columbia River at Burbank, near Pasco. The most popular site is just SW of Pullman near Lower Granite Dam. However, you cannot follow the river by car any further downstream. Due to the extensive backtracking that would be required, most people are only able to view one section of the canyon per road trip.

Coffee
Coffee is hugely popular all across the Pacific Northwest including the Palouse area. Look for small road side espresso stands even in small towns.

Beer
Like the rest of Washington State, microbreweries and beer in general is hugely popular, and the area has many to offer for beer enthusiasts. Some brews can only be found in local stores or bars (some notable brewers don't even bottle their product). Ask your servers for local beer recommendations and search out regional microbrews in stores.

Go next

 * Walla Walla Often thought of as part of the Palouse region. However, the western boundary of the county is on the Columbia River.