From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Castle Crags Wilderness is a 12,232-acre
(49.50 km2)[1] wilderness area located 40 miles north of
Redding,
California within the Shasta-Trinity National
Forest. The US Congress passsd the California Wilderness
Act in 1984 which set aside the wilderness. Elevations range
from 2,500 feet to 7,300 feet due to the wilderness area's location
in the Trinity Mountains which are part of the Klamath
Mountains in the Klamath geological province of northwestern
California.
The prominent spires in the southeast that make up the Castle Crags are the
main attraction and are similar to the granitic rock landscape in
parts of Yosemite National Park. In the
northern portion of the wilderness, the landscape is more like the
Klamath Mountains with glacial erosion, several cirques, and abundant rainfall with a high,
east-trending divide. The area is bounded on the east by the Sacramento
River, in the north by the South Fork Sacramento River and in
the south by the canyon of Castle Creek and the boundary of Castle
Crags State Park.
One roadless area of 1,732 acres
(7.01 km2) borders on the northwest and contains
the largest glacial cirque, Castle Lake, which is near where the Modoc War's 1855 Battle of
Castle Crags took place. Now a historical landmark (California
Historical Landmark No.16), the battle was fought on a ridge saddle
between the lake and what is known as Battle Rock.[2].
The Wintu Indians who
inhabited the area called the crags the Abode of the Devil and the
Spanish explorers called it Castle del Diablo (Castle of the
Devil.)[3]
There are mineral springs at the base of the crags which were
used by the early fur traders, and after the Southern Pacific
Railroad was completed into the area, health resorts sprang up as
well. The railroad touted the beauty of the West to increase
ridership, improve the West's image, and hopefully, sell some of
its land holdings. Sunset was a publication started in
1898 by the passenger department of the Southern Pacific Railroad
Company that described various places in the West and was named
after its Sunset Limited railroad line which went from New Orleans
to San Francisco. The magazine's description of Castle Crags is the
typical, flowery writing style of that era:
These are peaks of a spur of the Trinity range, that rise
abruptly in towers and pinnacles, splintered and riven in all
manner of fantastic shapes. With every slight change in the
position of the beholder they seem to march and countermarch,
advance and recede, until one is ready to believe them moving.[4]
The advent of logging and mining brought even more people to the
area with some mining continuing until the 1950s.
In 1933, concerned citizens successfully worked to protect the area
and were able to acquire much of the land that became the state
park. President Reagan signed into law the California Wilderness
Act in 1984 that protected another 10,500 acres
(42 km2) and was added to the National Wilderness
Preservation System. [5]
Flora and
fauna
Endemic Castle Crags harebell.
The ivesia plant.
Note the granite ledge in background.
The wilderness contains more than 300 species of wildflowers,
including the Castle Crags harebell and the Castle Crags ivesia, both endemic,[6] as well
as tiger lily, monkey flower, and Indian rhubarb. Drier locations
have yarrow, aster and buckwheat. Forested areas have incense cedar,
white fir, Ponderosa pine, several types of oaks with Pacific dogwood and maple in riparian
zones. Meadows and brushlands have various kinds of manzanita along with
huckleberry oak, chaparral and mountain whitethorn. Poison oak is common, as are rattlesnakes—dictating caution when hiking
the trails.
Black
bears, coyotes, bobcats and mountain lions are some of the larger predators
in this diverse habitat of bare granite, steep slopes, meadows and
mountain streams.
Recreation
The state park extends 480 acres (1.9 km2)
inside the wilderness and has five of the nine trailheads. The Pacific
Crest Trail (PCT) traverses the wilderness for 19 miles with
several spur trails connecting from the park to the PCT. The Castle
Dome Trail is a strenuous hiking trail into the crags proper and
passes near Indian Springs, a natural hillside spring with views of the crags.
The trail ends after 2.7 miles at a notch just west of Castle Dome
(4,829 ft[7]), the
southernmost of the crags, providing an unobstructed view of Mount Shasta and the
spires, buttresses, sheer cliffs and domes of the Castle Crags.
Rock climbing opportunities range from Class 5 to Class 5.13a in
difficulty, and although the granite rocks are massive, some areas
are unstable because of exfoliation
(flaking layers of loose rock).
The Forest Service encourages the use of Leave No Trace
principles of outdoor travel to minimize impact to the
environment.
Notes
- ^
10,500 acres (42 km2) wilderness plus
1,732 acres (7.01 km2) roadless area
- ^
Battle of Castle Crags from a
booklet by Miller, Joaquin 1837–1913 The Battle of Castle
CragsFirst published as a pamphlet, circa 1894, issued as a
promotional booklet for the Tavern of Castle Crags (see Blanck,
Jacob., 'Bibliography of American Literature,' #13837)
- ^
Dottie Smith, special to the
Record-Searchlight, Online Edition series: "Travelin' in
Time" Thurs., March 20, 2008 retrieved 12-5-2008
- ^
Sunset, Southern Pacific RR Co. 1898 p.22 (Google Books,
accessed Dec.10, 2008
- ^
Castle Crags Wilderness Area, USFS pdf, p. 1
- ^
Shasta-Trinity NF's "Sensitive and endemic plants "
- ^
http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1661782
United States Geological Survey Feature Detail Report
References
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Protected Areas of
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Valley · Oceano
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Wells · Prairie City
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Hill · Decker
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Dutch
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Elk Creek
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Fay
Slough · Feather
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Creek · Fremont
Weir · Grass
Lake · Gray
Lodge · Green
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Island · Hallelujah
Junction · Heenan
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Indian
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Berryessa · Lake Earl ·
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Sonoma · Little Panoche
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Lower Sherman
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Slough · Marble
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Merrill's
Landing · Miner
Slough · Monache
Meadows · Morro Bay ·
Moss
Landing · Mouth of Cottonwood
Creek · Napa-Sonoma
Marshes · North
Grasslands · O'Neill
Forebay · Oroville ·
Petaluma
Marsh · Pickel
Meadow · Pine
Creek · Point
Edith · Putah
Creek · Rector
Reservoir · Red Lake ·
Rhode
Island · Sacramento
River · San Felipe
Valley · San
Jacinto · San Luis
Obispo · San Luis
Reservoir · San Pablo
Bay · Santa
Rosa · Shasta
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Antelope · Smithneck
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Surprise
Valley · Sutter
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Truckee
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Basin · Volta ·
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Reserves |
Albany
Mudflats · Alkali
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Atascadero Creek
Marsh · Bair
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Lake · Batiquitos
Lagoon · Blue Sky ·
Boden
Canyon · Boggs
Lake · Bolsa
Chica · Bonny
Doon · Buena Vista
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Slough · Butte Creek
Canyon · Butte Creek
House · Buttonwillow ·
By Day
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Carlsbad
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Plains · China
Point · Clover
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Landing · Elkhorn
Slough · Estelle
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Mills · Fish
Slough · Fremont
Valley · Goleta
Slough · Indian Joe
Spring · Kaweah ·
Kerman ·
King
Clone · Laguna
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Vernal Pool · Lokern ·
Magnesia
Spring · Marin
Islands · Mattole
River · McGinty
Mountain · Morro
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Hills · Peytonia
Slough · Piute
Creek · Pleasant
Valley · Point
Lobos · Rancho
Jamul · Redwood
Shores · River Springs
Lakes · Saline
Valley · San Dieguito
Lagoon · San
Elijo Lagoon · San Felipe
Creek · San Joaquin
River · Santa Rosa
Plateau · Springville ·
Stone
Corral · Sycamore
Canyon · Sycuan
Peak · Thomes
Creek · Tomales
Bay · Upper Newport
Bay · Watsonville
Slough · West Mojave
Desert · Woodbridge ·
Yaudanchi
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| Marine Protected
Areas |
Abalone
Cove · Agua
Hedionda Lagoon · Albany
Mudflats · Anacapa ·
Anacapa ·
Año
Nuevo · Asilomar ·
Atascadero
Beach · Bair
Island · Batiquitos
Lagoon · Big Creek ·
Big
Creek · Big Sycamore
Canyon · Bodega ·
Bolsa
Chica · Buena Vista
Lagoon · Cambria ·
Cardiff and San
Elijo · Carmel
Bay · Carmel
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Point · Catalina Marine Science
Center · Corte Madera
Marsh · Crystal
Cove · Dana
Point · Del Mar
Landing ·
Doheny ·
Doheny ·
Duxbury
Reef · Edward F.
Ricketts · Elkhorn
Slough · Elkhorn
Slough · Encinitas ·
Estero de
Limantour · Fagan
Marsh · Farallon
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Bank · Fort Ross ·
Gerstle
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Slough · Greyhound
Rock · Gull
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Point · Heisler
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Irvine
Coast · James V.
Fitzgerald · Judith
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Burns · La Jolla ·
Laguna
Beach · Lovers Cove (Catalina
Island) · Lovers
Point · MacKerricher ·
Manchester and Arena
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Tegner · Moro Cojo
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Morro
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Gardens · Painted
Cave · Peytonia
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Blancas · Piedras
Blancas · Pismo ·
Pismo-Oceano
Beach · Point
Buchon · Point
Buchon · Point
Cabrillo · Point
Fermin · Point
Lobos · Point Reyes
Headlands · Point Sur ·
Point
Sur · Portuguese
Ledge ·
Punta
Gorda · Redwood
Shores · Refugio ·
Richardson
Rock · Robert E.
Badham · Robert W.
Crown · Russian
Gulch · Salt
Point · San
Diego-Scripps · San Dieguito
Lagoon · San Elijo
Lagoon · Santa Barbara
Island · Scorpion ·
Skunk
Point · Sonoma
Coast · Soquel
Canyon · South Laguna
Beach · South
Point · Tomales
Bay · Upper Newport
Bay · Van Damme ·
Vandenberg ·
White Rock (Cambria)
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