There are four developed campgrounds maintained in the Redwood National Park. Elk Prairie, Mill Creek and the Jedediah Smith campgrounds are within the forest side of the park. The Gold Bluffs Beach Campground is located on the coastline wi… read more
To spend time looking up at old-growth redwood giants--Sequoia sempervirens--is a privilege only Pacific coast travelers can experience. The Redwood Park area is an amalgam of national and state parks established to conserve the tallest liv… read more
The tallest trees in the world are found in the redwood forests of California. The area consists of a national park and state parks. Redwood National Park is free to visitors. The state parks charge fees for day visits and camping. Twenty-s… read more
California's redwood trees are some of the natural world's most magnificent specimens. Vast redwood forests once covered the West Coast; now their presence has been reduced to northern California and southern Oregon, close enough to the Pac… read more
Redwoods National Park offers some of the most awe-inspiring camping in the entire country. Surrounded by these dazzling and majestic trees that seem to reach into the outer space above you, is like being lost on a planet of giants. Reserva… read more
Camping in the Redwoods National and State Parks (RNSP), a system of protected reserves in northern California's coastal ranges, offers the opportunity to immerse yourself in one of the most magnificent forests anywhere: the fog-belt groves… read more
Redwood National Park extends over a vast 206 square miles. The only accommodations in the park are a spartan youth hostel that is open only part of the year, making camping a necessity for those who want to make long stays among the redwoo… read more
The Redwood National and State Park system covers a mammoth 206 square miles. Except for a spartan youth hostel, there are no permanent accommodations within its grounds. Therefore, visitors who wish to stay inside the park and have better… read more
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