The upper reaches of Coulee Creek begin in rolling agricultural land to the east of
Reardan, Washington along the far western edge of Spokane County, with ephemeral tributaries stretching west across the
Lincoln County line. Coulee Creek begins as an ephemeral stream itself, arcing to the northeast. Just west of Wood Road the creek begins to follow an easterly alignment and descends quickly into a steep, narrow valley. Approximately 2.5 miles to the east of Wood Road, Coulee Hite Road descends into the valley of the creek and follows the stream as it winds along the northern edge of Indian Prairie and southern edge of Four Mound Prairie. In this stretch, the valley of the creek falls to below 2,000 feet above sea level while the surrounding prairies to the north and south rise steeply above 2,400 feet. This forms a narrow, though deep canyon for which the creek is channeled through. Coulee Hite Road meets Seven Mile Road approximately one mile upstream of Coulee Creek's confluence with Deep Creek, just to the south of Pine Bluff, roughly three-quarters of a mile from the latter's confluence with the much larger
Spokane River. Unlike many streams, in which flow increases from upstream to downstream, Coulee Creek tends to exhibit a loss of flow as water heads downstream. Water from Coulee Creek gradually infiltrates the subsurface over the course of the stream, and by the confluence with Deep Creek the surface flow is often absent altogether. ==Human use==