Boise
Area Info
Boise
sits in southwestern Idaho, at the point where desert meets
mountain range and rural past meets high-tech future. Although
the population of Idaho's capital city is 160,000 and growing,
the City of Trees remains essentially uncomplicated.

Boise is a city
for outdoorsy, active people who respect old-fashioned values
and like to have fun. Residents fish in the Boise River
as it flows through downtown, catching healthy rainbow trout.
They run along the Boise River Greenbelt during their lunch
hours. They jump into their cars for the short drive to
skiing at Bogus Basin, whitewater rafting on nearby rivers
or water skiing at Lucky Peak Reservoir.
Boiseans also
love their parks, especially the series of large riverside
parks named after grand ladies in the city's history --
Julia Davis, Ann Morrison and Kathryn Albertson. Boise has
nine acres of parks for every 1,000 residents, almost twice
the national average.
When Boise residents
aren't participating in such activities, they're watching
sports. Boise State University football is highly popular,
but residents also support professional baseball, basketball
and hockey teams.
City residents
are proud of the fact that boots and jeans are acceptable
attire at virtually any establishment in the city -- but
they're equally proud of the wide variety of cultural performances
and attractions available.
Perhaps best of
all, Boise still is a city where business can be conducted
with a handshake and residents can know their neighbors.
A distinct character distinguishes each neighborhood - Northwest
Boise, North Boise (commonly called the North End), Northeast
Boise, the West Boise Bench, Central Boise Bench, Southeast
Boise, Southwest Boise and Garden City.

Outlying Communities
within the Treasure Valley
Treasure Valley. The name hints of fields rich with agricultural
crops ready to harvest. It suggests endless days of golden
sunshine in a valley protected from the winds of the desert
plateau. It implies a family way of life to be protected
and cherished.
One finds all of these treasures
in the valley that stretches west from Boise, Idaho, across
the rich agricultural lands of southwestern Idaho and eastern
Oregon.
Bounded by the Boise Range
on the north and east and the Owyhee Mountains on the south,
the valley was known as the Lower Snake River Valley or
the Boise River Valley until 1959. That's when a marketing
whiz named Pete Olesen, president of the valley's association
of local Chambers of Commerce, dubbed it the Treasure Valley.
Olesen said the name reflected the treasure chest of resources
and opportunities in the region.
The name was appropriate, and
it stuck.
Today, the valley is home to
more than half a million people. They live in the major
cities: Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and Caldwell, all in Idaho.
They live in the small towns that dot the valley -- from
Ontario, Oregon, through towns such as Fruitland, Middleton,
Star, Eagle and Kuna in Idaho. And they live outside the
cities and towns, on the ranches and farms of one of the
richest agricultural areas in the world.
Residents of Treasure Valley
would give many different reasons for the valley's nickname.
It might be the agricultural riches. It might be the weather.
It might be the valuable high-tech industry, or the numerous
outdoor activities, the cultural events, the plentiful sports
franchises or perhaps it would be the strong values by which
many valley residents live.
For these and many other reasons,
the Treasure Valley is aptly named!