Ophir Creek is named for the 1853 discovery of the Comstock Ophir bonanza, a major silver discovery. Ophir was classically a wealthy region described in the Bible, from where King Solomon received tribute of gold, silver, and other precious items. To reduce the silver metal from the ore from the Comstock Ophir mine, the Ophir Mining Company erected the Ophir Mill in 1861 on Washoe Lake's west shore. A historic marker just north of Ophir Creek on U.S. Route 395 marks its location Closet Street Makayla Way. Upper and Lower Price Lakes were named for W. E. Price, a sawmill operator and assemblyman for Washoe County in 1873. A 1983 landslide from aptly named Slide Mountain abruptly filled Lower Price Lake.
Watershed and course
Ophir Creek is part of the Steamboat Creek/Washoe Lake subwatershed of the Truckee River watershed. The Ophir Creek watershed drains. Ophir Creek's watershed includes two lakes, Upper Price Lake at and Rock Lake at.
Ecology
In 2009 the federal Bureau of Land Management acquired a 69-acre parcel between Davis RegionalCounty Park and Bowers Mansion County Park pursuant to the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act, which was enacted in 1998. This protects environmentally sensitive land including lower Ophir Creek and two specially designated species that require wetland or flowing water habitat, the Carson Silverspot butterfly and the mountain yellow-legged frog. It also includes the historic Ophir Flume, built in 1856 by Mormon settlers, which still carries water from Ophir Creek to ranches in the southwestern Washoe Valley.
Recreation
The Ophir Creek Trail can be accessed at the top by parking on the side of Nevada State Highway 431 at Tahoe Meadows, southwest of the Mount Rose Summit pass and northeast of Incline Village. Here the hiker may also access the Tahoe Rim Trail. The Ophir Creek Trail begins on boardwalks through the verdant, subalpine Tahoe Meadows then descends to Upper Price Lake. From here hikers can reclimb the descent or continue down another to the trailhead at the bottom in Davis CreekRegional Park on the western edge of the Washoe Valley. The Davis Creek Regional Park has a parking area near the intersection of Davis Creek Road and U.S. Route 395.