Oregon Outback
Oregon Outback is an unofficial term generally used to reference the high desert Basin and Range country of the central southern portion of the U.S. state of Oregon and covers most of Lake County, Klamath County, Malheur County, and Harney County.
The term is also used for a dark-sky preserve established in 2024 by DarkSky International.
Climate
The region is arid with an average of about ten inches of annual rainfall, though some mountain areas may receive as much as thirty inches, mostly in the form of winter snow and summer thunderstorms. Winters are cold and windy with periodic snowfalls; spring brings warm days and cold nights with snow possible into late April. Summer is warm with cool nights and occasional thunderstorms, with fall bringing crisp weather that can be interrupted by snow as soon as late October.Topography
The region is a high desert plateau averaging roughly in elevation, periodically broken by sometimes massive fault-block mountains.Notable fault blocks in the region are Abert Rim, Winter Ridge, Diablo Rim, Fish Creek Rim, Hart Mountain, and Poker Jim Ridge. Large lakes abound throughout the region as the streams of the Great Basin have no outlet to the sea and empty themselves on the basin floor. The Warner Lakes are the largest cluster of these shallow basin lakes. The lakes contain fish, notably crappie in the Warner Lakes, and host numerous bird species.