Thousand Springs State Park is a public recreation and nature preservation area consisting of multiple units â Billingsley Creek, Earl M. Hardy Box Canyon Springs Nature Preserve, Malad Gorge, Niagara Springs, and Ritter Island â in Gooding County, Idaho.
The state park was created in 2005, when four existing state parks in the Hagerman Valley were merged into a single entity, with an additional unit subsequently added to the complex.
This former ranch was purchased by the state in 2001. One feature is the homesite of western author Vardis Fisher. Billingsley Creek Unit totals .
This box canyon has walls. At its head is the eleventh-largest spring in North America, gushing per minute. There is a waterfall. The property was developed by the Nature Conservancy which purchased the site in 1999, then completed its transfer to the state in 2016.
Malad Gorge is a canyon formed by the Malad River, downstream from a waterfall. This day-use unit is off Interstate 84 and offers hiking and picnicking. A section of the Oregon Trail is visible. Rock pigeons, red-tailed hawks and golden eagles nest in the canyon. Yellow-bellied marmots are found on the canyon floor.
Proclaimed a National Natural Landmark, this area borders the Snake River and features sheer basalt cliffs high. There are in two parcels, acquired in 1971 and 1976.
This unit lies along the Snake River between two large springs.