Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

PLEASE NOTE: We are in the process of updating the links to the forest web pages. Please check with the local forest for the most up-to-date status of each recreational area. Your national forests and grasslands are 193 million acres of vast, scenic beauty waiting for you to discover. Over 3 million acres of land located in 22 National Recreation Areas managed by the Forest Service is preserved for recreational activities like hiking, boating, fishing and swimming, while highlighting natural, cultural and scenic resources. Visitors who choose to recreate on these public lands find 164,000 miles of trails, over 30,000 recreation sites, over 5,000 miles of streams and 3 million acres of lakes, 127 alpine ski areas, 338,000 heritage sites, and specially designated sites that include 37 million acres of designated wilderness areas, 130 wild and scenic rivers, 15 monuments, and one preserve. And remember, “It’s All Yours.” Displaying 17151 - 17200 of 17653

Wild Plum PCT Trailhead

This tralhead gives you access to the Wild Plum PCT Access Trail, which is 1.7 miles long and takes you to the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT). The trail is open for the following uses: Hiking

Wild River / Basin Trailhead

The Wild River and Basin Trails can be used to access the vast and scenic Wild River Wilderness and surrounding mountain ranges. There is a vault toilet at the trailhead. Both the Wild River Road and Route 113 are gated closed in the winter.

Wild River Campground

Wild River Campground will be closed for the season due to storm damage. Visitors can enjoy a variety of recreation opportunities around the campground, including fishing in the Wild River, strolling along the easy grade of the Wild River Trail, or exploring the rugged Wild River Wilderness.

Wild Rivers Coast Scenic Bikeway

A Wild and Scenic river, lush cranberry bogs, towering basalt sea stacks and vast ocean views await riders on the Wild Rivers Coast Scenic Bikeway. Designated in 2015, this Scenic Bikeway is one of the most incredible ways to experience the rugged beauty of the scenic Oregon coastline and the lush inland forests! The 60-mile ride…

Wild Rivers Ranger District

Wild Rivers Ranger District has offices in two locations, one in Grants Pass and one in Cave Junction. 2164 N.E. Spalding Avenue Grants Pass, OR 97526 Telephone: (541) 471-6500TTY: (866) 510 6861 26568 Redwood Highway Cave Junction, OR 97523 Telephone: (541) 592-4000TTY: (541) 592-4011

Wild Rogue Wilderness

The United States Congress designated the Wild Rogue Wilderness in 1978 and it now maintains 36,453 acres. Surrounding the Wild and Scenic Rogue River, the rugged canyon landscape of the Wild Rogue Wilderness provides watershed protection for the Wild portion of the river. The area is characterized by steep terrain of near vertical cliffs, razor-sharp ridges and cascading mountain creeks. Look for diverse flora and…

Wild Rose Day Use / Picnic Site

Closed due to proximity to Retreat Fire This day use area next to the Tieton River on Highway 12 offers vault toilets and picnic tables.

Wild Sky Wilderness

Wild Sky Wilderness is the newest addition to a 2.6 million acre wilderness complex that straddles the rugged Cascade Range from Canada to Snoqualmie Pass.  From the North Fork Skykomish River near the town of Index, the terrain rises from about 600 feet above sea level to over 6,000 feet on Gunn Peak. Annual precipitation is between 150 to 200 inches, most of it coming as snow. Runoff feeds streams that drop…

Wildbunch Trailhead (#7) Trailhead

Wildbunch Trailhead (#7) Trailhead

Wildcat #640

The Wildcat Trail #640 begins off Highway 141 in Unaweep Canyon and climbs atop the Uncompahgre Plateau to its junction with Thimble Point Road, FSR #417.  It is used as a cutoff route between the two roads.  From the upper trailhead, the first mile of trail is a two-track which travels across relatively flat terrain through ponderosa pine and aspen. The trail then becomes a foot trail which travels for 1.…

Wildcat Campground and Day Use Area

This quiet and cool forested campground is one of the more popular fee campgrounds on the Ochoco National Forest because it is relatively close to town, yet provides an escape from the intense desert heat in the summer months.   It is located near Mill Creek Wilderness and gives campers opportunities to see old growth dependent species, such as the pileated woodpecker, and hike the Twin Pillars non-motorized…

Wildcat Creek Campground #1 Lower

CLOSED TO MOTORIZED VEHICLE DUE TO ROAD HAZARDS. No safe access by vehicle to the campgrounds.Wildcat 1 Campground is closed, no camping, no trash.Wildcat Road has sustained 4 slides in recent years (with the first slide happening in 2019). Due to the risk of additional slides, the road has been closed in the interest of public safety. Funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s…

Wildcat Creek Campground #2 Upper

Wildcat Road has sustained 4 slides in recent years (with the first slide happening in 2019). Due to the risk of additional slides, the road has been closed in the interest of public safety. Funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Emergency Relief on Federally Owned Roads program has been submitted for all 4 slides. Since then, slide 1 has been repaired with slides 2-4 remaining. It is our goal to have…

Wildcat Creek Road Corridor

West Wildcat Road has received damage from storms and is not open for use at this time.West Wildcat Road is currently closed due to needed road repairs in new sites.Wildcat Creek Campground #1 Lower

Wildcat Hollow

Welcome to the Wildcat Hollow Hiking Trail. This trail offers two options; a 17.2 mile loop of scenic trail along ridge-tops and stream bottoms, and a short 5-mile loop for day hikes. Both trails will lead through tall pine forests, open meadows, quiet streams, rock outcroppings, and down old roads overlooking miles of beautiful landscape. You will also pass some of our land management activities. Wildflowers…

Wildcat Lake

Click here for a printable Enoree District fishing opportunities guide.

Wildcat Lake

A wayside stop along SR 40, Wildcat Lake shimmers in the middle of the Big Scrub. Launch your boat and head out on the lake for a morning of fishing, nature viewing or just a quiet cruise around the lake. Boating A boat ramp is provided for you to launch and explore the lake, or head out for a day of fishing. Launch your canoe or kayak to explore the far reaches and shallow rim of this shimmering lake in the…

Wildcat Mountain Ski Resort

For the most vertical value in the White Mountains, ski or ride Wildcat Mountain. With breathtaking views of Mt. Washington from its 4,000 foot summit, Wildcat Mountain is Pinkham Notch’s premier winter and big mountain playground. Wildcat Mountain offers families world class New Hampshire skiing, riding, and active summer recreation on over 950 acres located 100% within the White Mountain National Forest. Located…

Wildcat North Trailhead

This trailhead is located slightly uphill from Whistler Campground and provides access to Wildcat Trail (#833) in the northeastern region of…

Wildcat Road OHV Access Day Use Area

Wildcat Road OHV Access Day Use Area

Wildcat South Trailhead

This trailhead is located in at the northern edge of White Rock Campground, and provides access to the southeastern portion of Mill Creek Wilderness via…

Wilder

This body of water is part of the Duchesne drainage.

Wilder Gulch TH #75

This is a pleasant 3½ mile hike from the parking lot at Vail Pass to the top of Ptarmigan Pass. There are potential opportunities for viewing a variety of wildlife and wildflowers. The trail ascends gently while it passes in and out of coniferous forests and meadows. At the end of the Wilder Gulch trail you will come to a 4WD road that you can follow up to Ptarmigan Pass. Ptarmigan Pass offers fantastic views of the…

Wilderness

The Shoshone National Forest encompasses all or parts of five designated wilderness areas and three mountain ranges. These areas are wild and untamed. Day hikers, backpackers, horsepackers, anglers, photographers, and others can enjoy pristine lakes, tumbling waterfalls, slopes awash in wildflowers, glacier-carved valleys, and a plethora of wildlife. The North Absaroka (pronounced ab-ZORE-kuh) Wilderness and the…

Wilderness Areas

The seven wilderness areas offer primitive backcountry recreation in non-motorized areas of the forest. Totaling about 10% of the forest, or 30,000 acres, the wildernesses contain some of the most beautiful but rugged and remote areas of the forest. No permits are required to enter or camp in designated wilderness, but there are special restriction for these areas (see below). Obtaining detailed trail maps is highly…

Wilderness Areas

Inyo National Forest contains approximately one million acres of wilderness, in nine wilderness areas. Wilderness areas include the Hoover,  Ansel Adams, Owens…

Wilderness Areas

For information about Wilderness on the Bridger-Teton National Forest, click here!

Wilderness areas

Wilderness is defined as a portion of land set aside by the 1964 Congressional Wilderness Act that will remain unspoiled for future generations. The Wilderness Act gave the U.S. Forest Service a mandate to manage these special lands so they would be "an enduring resource," one that would remain "unimpaired for future use and enjoyment as wilderness." In contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate…

Wilderness Areas

With the passage of the Wilderness Act in 1964, Congress created the National Wilderness Preservation System. Wilderness areas are managed to preserve their natural conditions and wild character for present and future generations. They possess outstanding ecological, geological, scientific, educational, scenic, or…

Wilderness areas

The 1964 Wilderness act defines Wilderness as "an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain ... an area protected and managed so as to preserve its natural conditions." Wilderness helps protect critical habitats for a variety of species, as well as important natural resources, such as clean water. Wilderness also provides unique…

Wilderness Areas

The Pike-San Isabel National Forests & Cimarron and Comanche National Grasslands is home to nine congressionally designated wilderness areas with over 385,000 acres of untrammeled opportunities for challenge, solitude, tranquility and personal growth. Wilderness areas provide critical habitat for a multitude of species and help to protect important natural resources, such as clean water. There are …

Wilderness areas

One of our nation's greatest treasures is the National Wilderness Preservation System established by the Wilderness Act of 1964 which gives Congress the ability to designate a portion of our public lands as Wilderness areas. These special areas are lands to be protected and preserved in…

Wilderness areas

One of our nation's greatest treasures is the National Wilderness Preservation System established by the Wilderness Act of 1964. Wildernesses are lands designated by Congress to be protected and preserved in their natural condition, without permanent improvements or habitation.  Please view the…

Wilderness Gateway Campground

Wilderness Gateway Campground is one of the Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forest’s premier campgrounds. Located at milepost 122.5 along the Northwest Passage Scenic Byway (US Highway 12), the campground offers 91 sites consisting of RV and tent camping, group camping, stock camping and facilities. The recreation area boasts its very own bird-watching trail, large trailhead parking for access into the Selway-…

Wilderness Lakes

The Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest contains over 340,000 acres of federally-protected Wilderness areas. Several pristine mountain lakes exist nestled high in the Sky Lakes, Red Buttes, and Kalmiopsis Wilderness areas. Most of these lakes are relatively small and unproductive, however they offer spectacular scenery, the opportunity for…

Wilderness of Rock #44

The name of this trail certainly does catch the attention of anyone scanning a trail map or thumbing through a guide book. The  Wilderness of Rocks is extremely popular and with good reason. Picturesque rock formations and a diversity of settings that range from sub-alpine to high desert to riparian zone attract so many people that this…

Wilderness on the Hiawatha

The Hiawatha National Forest is home to six designated Wilderness areas:  Big Island Lake, Delirium,…

Wilderness Ranger District

The district is located in the heart of the Gila National Forest and covers an area of 686,171 acres. The majority of the district is designated as wilderness and comprises the Gila and Aldo Leopold Wilderness areas. The wilderness features steep mountains, rough deep canyons, flat mesas, large river channels and flood plains. Higher elevations consist of a mixture of pine spruce and other mixed conifers, while…

Wilderness: Glacier View

The 3,078 acre Glacier View Wilderness is located on the west boundary of Mt. Rainer National Park. This area was added to the Wilderness system in 1984 to protect and preserve the scenic, alpine environments adjacent to the Park.  The annual snowfall can exceed 25 feet, and the snowmelt drains into the South Puyallup River, filling nine small alpine lakes in a meadowed…

Wilderness: Goat Rocks

The 108,023 acre Goat Rocks Wilderness is a part of the volcanic Cascade Mountain Range in southwestern Washington located between Mt. Rainier and Mt. Adams. The Goat Rocks are remnants of a large volcano, extinct for some two million years.  A portion of Goat Rocks Wilderness is within the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. Glaciation and erosion have…

Wilderness: Indian Heaven

The 20,784 acre Indian Heaven Wilderness is a forested high plateau, dominated by fir (Pacific silver, noble, subalpine), with numerous open meadows and more than 150 lakes. Many of the lakes are stocked with rainbow and brook trout.  Lava once flowed from the numerous volcanic cones that rise above the plateau which reach their highest point on Lemei Rock (5,927'), where a broad crater now…

Wilderness: Mt. Adams

Mt. Adams Wilderness envelops an ecologically complex landscape along the west slope of Mt. Adams and its summit. The 47,122 acres that comprise the wilderness area are a blend of dry east-side and moist west-side ecosystems, allowing diverse types of vegetation and wildlife to flourish. Several areas along the flanks of Mt. Adams have burned in wildfires over the last several decades, providing sharp contrast with…

Wilderness: Tatoosh

The 15,720 acre Tatoosh Wilderness shares a portion of Mount Rainier National Park's southern boundary. The long rugged Tatoosh Ridge runs north-south out of the park to cross the Wilderness near the middle. The top of Tatoosh Ridge (6,310 feet) provides views in all directions and is the former site of a fire lookout built in 1932. About 25 feet of…

Wilderness: Trapper Creek

The 5,963 acre Trapper Creek Wilderness protects nearly all of the Trapper Creek drainage and provides critical anadromous fish habitat in the Wind River watershed.  Streams and waterfalls are plentiful among the steep forested canyons at lower elevations. The old-growth Douglas-fir forests that comprise the heart of this Wilderness provide habitat for a variety of wildlife such as spotted owls, pileated…

Wilderness: William O. Douglas

The William O. Douglas Wilderness was designated in 1984 and encompasses 168,956 acres, most of which is a part of the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. This Wilderness is named for the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas who was noted for his concern for civil rights and environmental protection issues during his career. Douglas made his…

Wildhorse Campground

The Wildhorse campground has 13 sites in a heavily wooded setting.   There are two handpumps that provide water in the summer months, and two accessible vault toilets. Nearby areas of interest include Boulder Creek Lake, Waterfall Trail, and the head of Wildhorse canyon.

Wildhorse Campground

Six campsites on Wildhorse Lake, in a lovely riparian meadow. A trail from the campground leads into the Wilderness, into Tenmile Meadows. Another trailhead is south of the campground and leads deep into the Wilderness, all the way to Sugarloaf Butte. 

Wildhorse Canyon Area

This area includes the Wildhorse Developed campground and numerous trails in the vicinity of Wildhorse Guard Station.