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ID · Pacific Northwest

Rockhounding in Idaho

The “Gem State” lives up to its name: star garnet you can dig on public forest land, banded opal, jasper and agate across the high country — and a Forest Service area set aside just for collectors.

Signature findsStar garnet · Opal
State gemStar garnet
Don’t missEmerald Creek garnet dig
Best seasonSummer

Idaho is nicknamed the Gem State for good reason — and it holds a genuine geological rarity. Idaho and India are essentially the only two places on Earth that produce star garnet, a deep purple-red almandine that shows a four- or six-rayed star. Better still, the U.S. Forest Service runs a public area where, for a small permit, you can dig your own.

Garnet, like Idaho's star garnet
Garnet — Idaho’s star garnet is found at only a handful of places worldwide. Image: Wikimedia Commons (CC).

The geology behind the finds

Northern Idaho’s metamorphic schists grew large almandine garnets, some containing oriented rutile needles that produce the star effect when the stone is cut as a cabochon. Elsewhere, eastern Idaho’s volcanic country produced banded precious opal at Spencer, and the state’s broad spread of agate, jasper and petrified wood reflects its mix of volcanic and sedimentary terrain.

What you’ll find

Classic Idaho material

  • Star garnet — Emerald Creek (St. Maries area)
  • Opal — Spencer (fee-dig mines)
  • Jasper, agate & petrified wood
  • Quartz & fossils

Before you go

  • Emerald Creek Garnet Area (USFS) — buy a permit, dig & screen for star garnet.
  • Spencer Opal Mines — fee-dig opal.
  • Much BLM/forest ground allows personal-use collecting.
  • Read ethics & law first.

The headline Idaho experience is digging star garnet: you screen garnet-bearing gravel under Forest Service supervision and keep what you find. Spencer opal — thin bands of precious play-of-colour, often made into triplets — is the other signature, and the state’s agate and petrified wood reward general collectors across the high desert and mountains.

Precious opal, like Spencer opal from Idaho
Opal — Spencer, Idaho is a classic fee-dig precious-opal locality. Image: Wikimedia Commons (CC).

Where to go, region by region

Emerald Creek (north Idaho)

The Forest Service Emerald Creek Garnet Area, near St. Maries, is the place to dig Idaho’s star garnet — a guided, permit-based public dig where you screen gravel for the dark, star-bearing crystals.

Spencer (east Idaho)

The Spencer opal mines offer fee-dig access to banded precious opal — bring containers and follow the operator’s advice on stabilising thin seams.

When to go

Idaho rockhounding is mostly a summer activity — Emerald Creek and Spencer run defined seasons, and the mountain roads are best from late spring through early fall. Always check current opening dates before the drive.

Gear & field tips

  • For Emerald Creek: a screen and gloves; the Forest Service site provides water for washing the gravel.
  • For Spencer opal: containers and care — thin opal seams need gentle handling.
  • Carry a land map for the wider public ground, and check fire closures in late summer.

Rules & access

Idaho is welcoming: the Emerald Creek garnet area is explicitly set aside for public digging (with a permit), and much BLM and Forest Service ground allows personal-use collecting. Opal mines are fee operations. National parks and wilderness prohibit collecting. Confirm permits and read our guide to collecting ethics & the law.

Clubs & shows

Idaho clubs run summer field trips across the Gem State and can point you to lesser-known agate and jasper grounds. Browse our clubs directory.

Want a star-garnet cabochon or Spencer opal?

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Frequently asked questions

Where can I dig star garnet in Idaho?

At the Forest Service Emerald Creek Garnet Area near St. Maries — buy a permit, screen the gravel, and keep the star garnets you find.

What makes a “star” garnet?

Oriented mineral inclusions (rutile needles) inside the garnet reflect light into a four- or six-rayed star when the stone is cut as a cabochon — a rarity found mainly in Idaho and India.

Can I dig opal in Idaho?

Yes — the Spencer opal mines in eastern Idaho are fee-dig operations where you can collect banded precious opal.

SourcesUSFS (Emerald Creek) · Idaho Geological Survey · USGS · Mindat.

Informational only — confirm access and the law with the managing agency before collecting. Written by The Field & Stone Editors · Published by KEVALEX Group.

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