Название: Trinity Alps & Vicinity: Including Whiskeytown, Russian Wilderness, and Castle Crags Areas
Автор: Mike White
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях
isbn: 9780899978109
isbn:
Hikers can follow several guidelines for the preservation and health of the backcountry. A simple list of widely accepted wilderness practices follows:
• Don’t leave food or scented items in your vehicle. Bears have been known to break into cars in search of food.
• Pack out your trash, including aluminum foil, which does not burn completely.
• Start campfires only in existing fire rings. Keep fires small, and use only downed wood. Make sure that fires burn completely out before leaving the area.
Never feed or approach deer.
Photo: Luther Linkhart
• Wash dishes and bathe far away from lakes and streams—at least 200 feet from any water source. Use only biodegradable soap.
• Use only existing campsites whenever possible. If you must develop a new site, establish camps at inconspicuous sites away from the trail and remove all traces of your presence upon leaving. Camp only on mineral soil, not vegetation. Don’t build improvements such as fireplaces, rock walls, ditches, etc. Camp at least 200 feet from water.
• Filter, boil, or purify all drinking water.
• Don’t cut switchbacks, and avoid walking on meadows and wet areas when possible. Stay on the trail.
• Preserve the serenity of the backcountry. Avoid making loud noises.
• Keep group size to a minimum: 10 people is the limit in the Trinity Alps and Castle Crags, 25 in the Russian Wilderness.
• Yield the right-of-way to equestrians. Step well off the trail on the downhill side. Yield the right-of-way to uphill hikers.
• Leave the wilderness as you found it, or better than you found it, if possible.
chapter 1
Trips in Whiskeytown
National Recreation Area
In July 2018, the Carr Fire devastated Whiskeytown National Recreation Area. For the latest information on recovery and closings/reopenings, call 530-242-3400 or visit nps.gov/whis.
Although the Whiskeytown Unit of Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area, also known by the more streamlined name of Whiskeytown National Recreation Area (NRA), is best known for holding a good-sized artificial lake where Sacramento Valley residents can beat the scorching summer heat, the area offers fine hiking, especially in spring, when wildflowers cover the slopes, streams are full, and a trio of scenic waterfalls peaks. This chapter has four day hikes: a splendid 6.5-mile loop trip to the summit of view-packed, 2,616-foot-high Kanaka Peak, and three short out-and-back romps to waterfalls. While spring is best for the falls and the beautiful flowers, hiking here in the fall, when daytime temperatures have abated and autumn colors reach their peak, can be pleasant as well. Summer visitors should hike in the morning or in the evening, when the temperatures are more tolerable.
The NRA status of Whiskeytown requires hikers to purchase permits to park at trailheads; they can be obtained at the visitor center near Whiskeytown Dam, on Kennedy Memorial Drive off CA 299. America the Beautiful pass holders may park in Whiskeytown at no additional charge.
In addition to hiking and water sports, the Whiskeytown Unit offers activities well suited to recreationists of all ages. Picnic areas at Brandy Creek, Oak Bottom, Whiskey Creek, and Crystal Creek Falls are fine spots to share a meal. Three sandy beaches on Whiskeytown Lake offer swimming and sunbathing. Developed campgrounds include Oak Bottom Campground and Brandy Creek RV Campground, and there are a few primitive campgrounds above the reservoir. With a valid California license, anglers can ply the waters of Whiskeytown Lake year-round and the surrounding streams late April–mid-November for a half-dozen varieties of fish. Visitors can even pan for gold as a ranger-led activity.
Trips from CA 299
CA 299 provides the principal route to connections to trailheads in Whiskeytown NRA. An 8-mile drive west from downtown Redding leads through the historic mining town of Shasta to the visitor center at the east end of Whiskeytown Lake, a 3,500-acre reservoir created by the namesake earthen dam in 1963. Boating (no personal watercraft), water-skiing, swimming, fishing, camping, picnicking, and hiking are popular activities. From the network of 70 miles of trail, four day hikes are highlighted in the following section, accessible by short drives from CA 299.
HIGHLIGHTS Shasta State Historic Park, Whiskeytown Lake
KANAKA PEAK TRAILHEAD
TRIP 1 Kanaka Peak Loop
Kanaka Peak offers splendid views from Mount Shasta all the way to the Yolla Bollys.
Trip Type:
Day hike
Distance & Configuration:
6.5-mile loop
Elevation Change:
3,600' (average 544'/mile)
Difficulty:
Moderate–strenuous
Season:
Year-round; best April–early June and late September–November
Map:
USGS Igo
Management:
Whiskeytown NRA, 530-242-3400, nps.gov/whis
Nearest Campground:
Peltier Bridge
The splendid views from the summit of 2,616-foot Kanaka Peak are well worth the physical effort. Make sure you’re clad in the proper footwear and have a pair of trekking poles for the steep, ankle-twisting, knee-wrenching descent from the top of the mountain. The 6.5-mile Kanaka Peak Loop passes through a mixture of black oak woodland and mixed conifer forest, with small pockets of lush СКАЧАТЬ