Primary Navigation

About Klamath National Forest
Park Overview 
Highlights 
Camping 
Fishing 
Hiking & Walking 
Backpacking 
Horseback Riding 
Search
Y! Travel The web
Local Maps
 Map

Driving Directions

Related Information
  Destination Guide
•  California
  Hotels
•  California Hotels
•  Local Hotels
  Interest Guides
•  Northern California Ski Resorts
•  Southern California Ski Resorts

Tools
Yahoo! Weather  Yahoo! Weather
Yahoo! Maps  Yahoo! Maps

Klamath National Forest Highlights Content provided by   Gorp

Bike to Carter Meadows
Carter Meadows is one of the most pleasant areas in the Klamath National Forest - - rugged mountains, great scenery, meandering creeks, open meadows. Think cool, quiet, and sublimely beautiful. From its beginning at a ridge-top trailhead on the Scott River-Salmon River divide, the route drops through the trees for a mile of single-track down to the meadow. For an alternative route through the lower meadows, be on the lookout for an old put to bed road across the creek from the trailhead at Trail Gulch. It offers a little more challenge and a lot more solitude -- a real treat for the seasoned rider.

Bird the Flyway
Butte Valley is a high desert valley that birds adore, especially raptors. On the drive in, look for various species perched on irrigation equipment. Then turn into the Butte Valley Wildlife Area on Meiss Lake Road for some get-out-of-the-car viewing. But it's to the wetter Klamath Basin to which birds (and birders) flock. It's right on the Pacific flyway. Depending on the time of year, you might encounter large flocks of geese, tundra swans, American widgeons, hooded mergansers, and perhaps trumpeter swans. As far as raptors, in winter be on the lookout for bald eagles, hawks, and owls.

Fish a Stocked Cirque
Depending who's counting, the Marble Mountain Wilderness has 80 to 100 alpine cirque lakes. Many of these lakes are stocked annually with trout, making this a backpacking angler's dream destination. You can get a list of stocked lakes from the forest. Brush up your map-reading and bushwhacking skills and find an off-trail lake for complete solitude and outstanding fishing.

Gain Views of Mount Shasta
The Pacific Crest Trail crosses the Oregon-California border in the Klamath National Forest. And what a crossing it is! The stretch from Mount Ashland campground to Grouse Gap shelter is one of the prettiest around. The hiker is treated for much of the way with stirring views of Mount Shasta. The scenery immediately around you is wonderfully diverse: peaceful mountain meadows, craggy rocks, dense Douglas fir, and madrone forests. This area does double-duty in winter as a cross-country ski destination.

Raft the Salmon River
The forest's namesake, the Klamath River, is justifiably famous. It flows wild and fancy- free for almost 190 miles from its source to the ocean. But if you're itching for a river off the beaten track, try the Salmon River, one of the Klamath's tributaries. The river starts you off gently, with five miles of Class II whitewater. From there, it's let 'er rip. The whitewater class amps up to IV and V, a constant string of thrills. The most common put-in is in the town of Forks of the Salmon.

Next: Camping
E
mail this page  Email this page
Copyright © 2009 GORP. All rights reserved.