|
Campgrounds
Campgrounds by County
Canadian Campgrounds
Contact
|
Black Butte Country Store and RV Park
Corner of Mendocino Pass Road and Etsel Ridge Rd.
Covelo, California 95428
Phone: 707 983-9434 Fax: Toll Free:
|
| Type of Campground: | Privately Owned |
Credit Cards Accepted: | Please Contact Campground |
| Campground Season: | Please Contact Campground |
Nearest Fishing Area: | Please Contact Campground |
| Numer of Camp Sites: | Please Contact Campground |
RV's Allowed: | Yes |
| Hookups: | Please Contact Campground |
Pets Allowed: | Yes |
| Campground Rates: | Please Contact Campground |
| |
Attractions near the campground: Please Contact Campground
Directions to the campground: Please Contact Campground
Campground Desciption and details: The only one of California's 18 national Forests not crossed by a paved road or highway, the Mendocino National Forest is especially attractive to people seeking an outdoor experience of tranquility and solitude. The Forest, however, is a working Forest as well as a recreation land, and resource activities such as logging and mining do occur on both National Forest lands and private holdings within the Forest. Elevations in the Forest range from 750 feet in the Grindstone Creek Canyon in the Sacramento Valley foothills on the Forest's eastern edge to the 8092 feet of South Yolla Bolly Mountain in the northern part of the Forest. The average elevation is about 4000 feet. HISTORY Thousands of years before pioneer explorers from the eastern United States entered the area, five Native American peoples lived off its bounty - the Yuki, Nomlaki Wintu, Patwin Wintu, Eastern Pomo, and Northeastern Pomo. Archaeological artifacts and records from more than 1,800 sites have told us a number of things about the distant past of these peoples, but we have much more to learn. Between 1850 and 1900, many small sawmills operated within what are now the Forest Boundaries. Mining also played a role in the history of the area. Copper City and Pacific City, now just place names on the map, were mining communities before the turn of the century. Most mining activity was limited to exploration for copper in the late 1800's, completely disappearing before 1900. During World War II, responding to the needs of the war industry, miners re-entered the Forest to do exploratory digging for manganese and chrome. The minerals that attracted most people, however, were the ones dissolved in waters of the Forest's gurgling, steaming hot springs. During the early 1900's, visitors would travel many miles to soak up the supposed health benefits of baths in several resorts and spas. You can see remains of three resort hotels, mineral baths, and a bottling plant for mineral water at Bartlett Flats. Fouts Springs, Hough Springs, and Allen Springs also boasted popular resort facilities, although little evidence of their buildings remains. First set aside as a "forest reserve" by President Roosevelt in 1907. it was first named the Stony Creek Reserve and then the Stony Creek National Forest. It was later named the California National Forest and in 1932 became the Mendocino National Forest. ORGANIZATIONAL OVERVIEW The Mendocino National Forest is divided into three Ranger Districts: Covelo, Grindstone, and Upper Lake. There are two units managed by the Forest which are not located within the Forest proper, the Genetic Resource Center and Lake Red Bluff Recreation Area. Two Wilderness areas which are partly or wholly managed by the Mendocino National Forest are the 37,679 acre Snow Mountain Wilderness and the 147,070 acre Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel Wilderness.
To find more campgrounds in the region please use the following links:
Black Butte Country Store and RV Park Reviews:Query failed! |