Plumas National Forest
Plumas National Forest is a United States National Forest spanning 1,146,000 acres of mountainous terrain in the northern Sierra Nevada of northeastern California, primarily within Plumas County but extending into adjacent counties including Butte, Lassen, Sierra, and Yuba.[1][2] Established as the Plumas Forest Reserve in 1905 by proclamation of President Theodore Roosevelt and later modified through mergers such as with the Diamond Mountain Forest Reserve in 1908, it is administered by the USDA Forest Service to balance resource conservation with public use.[3] The forest features diverse geography including craggy peaks, high-elevation lakes such as Bucks Lake, and winding rivers like the Feather and North Fork, supporting a range of elevations from about 1,000 to over 8,000 feet.[4] Vegetation consists predominantly of coniferous species such as ponderosa pine, Jeffrey pine, red fir, and sugar pine, interspersed with oak stands, brush fields, and aspen groves, which contribute to its ecological variability.[1] Wildlife includes black bears, mountain lions, deer, and various pollinators like bats, butterflies, and birds, thriving in habitats that range from dense forests to open meadows.[5] Recreational opportunities abound, with approximately 75 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail traversing deep canyons and ridges, alongside activities such as hiking, camping, off-road vehicle use on designated routes, horseback riding, fishing, and limited mining claims.[6] The area has faced management challenges, including lawsuits over motorized route closures and post-fire logging proposals, reflecting tensions between access, conservation, and fire risk mitigation in a region prone to wildfires.[7][8]