Six Rivers National Forest Map

Six Rivers NF Map

6 Rivers, California

6 River CaliforniaNFS – USDA – U.S. Forest Service

Six Rivers National Forest Map, NorCal Redwoods, Klamath River, Hoopa, Eel River, Ruth Reservoir, Mad River, South Fork Trinity

Six Rivers National Forest Map. Humboldt, Mad River, Smith River, Eureka, North Coastal Redwoods
Six Rivers Forest

camp mapUSDA MAP Ranger Map – NFS issued map. GPS: Longitude & Latitude; Rivers, Creeks, Peaks, Elevations, 4WD & every dirt BackRoad, Equestrian Areas, all Campgrounds, Hiking Trails & BackPacking Trailheads.

Areas include: Northern California, Siskiyou County, Humbolt County, Del Norte County, North Coastal Redwoods, Eureka, Bridgeville, Willow Creek, Orleans, McKinleyville, Lower Trinity, Trinity Alps, Mad River Ridge, Smith River, Siskiyou Wilderness, Lonesome Ridge, Somes Bar, Forest Glen, Big Flat, Oregon border. Map Size: 31″x 45″ overall 4″x9″ folded; Printed on paper in 2014. ISBN# (unknown)

SAD BUT TRUE: When DanaMite found that the ISBN number for this SixRivers National Forest map was the exact same number – already assigned and printed – on the South Warner Wilderness Map, I knew the gov had grown way too big.

river map

Six Rivers National Forest

nearby towns:

6 rivers map

Books and Maps for Oregon

see also –
Trinity Alps Wilderness Map
Redwoods Map
Rogue River Map


Marble Mountain Wilderness Map

Marble Mountain / Russian Wilderness Map

Marble Mountain Wilderness MapMarble Mountain Wilderness Map USDA

Marble Mountain Wilderness Map

Klamath River / Marble Mountains / Russian Wilderness
Marble Mountain Wilderness

Klamath National Forest

Marble Mountain Wilderness Map

OLDER VERSION

Yreka, Happy Camp, Klamath River, Salmon River, Scott River, Fort Jones, Orleans, Cuddihy Lake, Upper Albert Lake, Russian Wilderness.

Perfect for a day hike reference or extended backpacking adventures. 1″ & 2″ to mile; Waterproof plastic map paper. This map can usually be found at local Ranger Stations. ISBN# 9781593514204

NorCal:
best guide book for wild

Cliff Lake Backpacking Trip, Marble Mountain Wilderness, California, Aug 2007

horse trail mapsThe Marble Mountain  Wilderness is an area of high divides, deep canyons and perennial mountain streams provides habitat for a wide variety of plant and animal life. With more than 7,000 feet of vertical relief, soils from several rock types, and abundant rain and snowfall, the diversity of ecosystems is unequaled anywhere else in the country.

fishing mapWith 89 lakes and two major Wild and Scenic river systems – Wooley Creek and the North Fork Salmon River, as well as 32 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail, there are many recreation opportunities. Elevations range from 400 to 8,299 feet; the wilderness has highly variable terrain with low-elevation canyons and high ridges such as the 22-mile-long English Peak ridge.

Popular activities include fishing, backpacking, mountaineering, rock climbing, and cross-country skiing.

camp map

There are also numerous caves within this wilderness, accessible to prepared spelunkers. They all feature stalactites and other flowstone formations, and are accessible mostly by vertical drops. Due to the hidden nature of most of the cave mouths, caving is not regulated, though the Forest Service and National Speleological Society request only experienced cavers attempt to access these dangerous caves. Signs at the trail heads that access the Marble Rim warn of white nose syndrome. One of the deepest caves in the continental US is located in the wilderness, Bigfoot Cave.

Sky High Basin 05

Summit Lake


PCT Map #6 Cascades

PCT Map 6 California Cascades

PCT 6

Pacific Crest Trail
Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail
PCT – Hiking Map 6

Lassen to Klamath

Northern California Cascade Mountains: North Lassen, Hat Creek, westward over to Burney Falls, Castle Crags Wilderness, Scott Mountains, Klamath River, Seide Valley, South Cascade Range, Happy Camp Hikes, Forks of the Salmon River, California Highway 3, Etna, Greenview, Callahan, Cecilville, Dunsmuir, Burney Falls, Hat Creek Fishing California. Large fold out map, durable waterproof paper w/ sturdy cardboard cover. USDA National Forest Map. ISBN# 9781593519186

USDA PCT Map 6

The Cascade Range or Cascades is a major mountain range of western North America, extending from southern British Columbia through Washington and Oregon to Northern California. It includes both non-volcanic mountains, such as the North Cascades, and the notable volcanoes known as the High Cascades.

The Cascades are part of the Pacific Ocean’s Ring of Fire, the ring of volcanoes and associated mountains around the Pacific Ocean. All of the eruptions in the contiguous United States over the last 200 years have been from Cascade volcanoes. The two most recent were Lassen Peak from 1914 to 1921 and a major eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. Minor eruptions of Mount St. Helens have also occurred since, most recently from 2004 to 2008.

Forests of large, coniferous trees (western red cedars, Douglas-firs, western hemlocks, firs, pines, spruces, and others) dominate most of the Cascade Range. Cool, wet winters and warm, dry summers favor evergreen species, whereas mild temperatures and rich soils promote fast and prolonged growth.

As a traveler passes through the Cascade Range, the climate first gets colder, then warmer and drier east of the crest. Most of the Cascades’ lower and middle elevations are covered in coniferous forest; the higher altitudes have extensive meadows as well as alpine tundra and glaciers. The southern part of the Cascades are within the California Floristic Province, an area of high biodiversity.

Black bears, coyotes, bobcats, cougars, beavers, deer, elk, moose, mountain goats and a few wolf packs returning from Canada live in the Cascades. There have been unconfirmed sightings of Bigfoot known locally by the Native American name of Sasquatch. Fewer than 50 grizzly bears reside in the Cascades of Canada and Washington.

nearby towns –

klamath

HAPPY CAMP, the main attraction

see also –

Klamath National Forest Map
Klamath Forest Atlas
Red Buttes Wilderness Map
Rogue River National Forest Map
PCT Map #7 Southern Oregon 

Klamath Books

Klamath River, Klamath Forest, Klamath Tribes

Klamath Books

Klamath Books

Klamath Books

Klamath Books


Klamath Books

Klamath Books

The Klamath Mountains are a rugged and lightly populated mountain range in northwestern California and southwestern Oregon in the western United States. As a mountain system within both the greater Pacific Coast Ranges and the California Coast Ranges, the Klamath Mountains have a varied geology, with substantial areas of serpentinite and marble, and a climate characterized by moderately cold winters with very heavy snowfall and warm, very dry summers with limited rainfall, especially in the south. As a consequence of the geology and soil types, the mountains harbor several endemic or near-endemic trees, forming one of the largest collections of conifers in the world.

The mountains are also home to a diverse array of fish and animal species, including black bears, large cats, owls, eagles, and several species of Pacific salmon. Millions of acres in the mountains are managed by the United States Forest Service. The northernmost and largest sub-range of the Klamath Mountains are the Siskiyou Mountains.

There are extensive hiking trail systems, recreation areas, and campgrounds both primitive and developed in the Klamaths. A 211-mile stretch of the Pacific Crest Trail passes through these mountains as well. This section of the PCT is known locally as “The Big Bend” and is the transition from the California Floristic Province to the Cascades.

The Bigfoot Trail is a 400-mile trail through the Klamath Mountains from the Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel Wilderness to Crescent City, California.

These mountains harbor rich biodiversity, with several distinct plant communities, including temperate rain forests, moist inland forests, oak forests and savannas, high elevation forests, and alpine grasslands. These communities form the Klamath Mountains ecoregion. One of the principal plant communities in the Klamath Mountains is Mediterranean California Lower Montane Black Oak-Conifer Forest.

The ecoregion includes several endemic or near-endemic species, such as Port Orford cedar or Lawson’s cypress, foxtail pine, and Brewer’s spruce, forming one of the largest collections of different conifers in the world. The flowering plant Kalmiopsis leachiana, also endemic to the Klamaths, is limited to the Siskiyou sub-range in Oregon.

Typical species of the Trinity Alps region include Douglas fir, ponderosa pine, red fir, white fir, black oak, canyon live oak, Pacific madrone, bigleaf maple, California Buckeye, incense cedar, and Jeffrey pine. California’s northernmost stand of gray pine is found here along the South Fork of the Salmon River.

see also –

Klamath National Forest Map
Klamath Forest Atlas
Marble Mountains Wilderness Map  
Oregon Dunes Map
Red Buttes Wilderness Map 
Rogue River National Forest Map