The United States Congress designated the Sacatar Trail Wilderness in 1994 and it now has a total of 50,440 acres. All of this wilderness is located in California and is managed by the Bureau of Land Management. The Sacatar Trail, an old wagon road and one of the few reminders that humans ever traveled regularly through this area, provides relatively easy access into this rugged and pristine Wilderness on the eastern slope of the southern Sierra Nevada Mountains. Valleys, canyons, and alluvial fans rise into steep hills that eventually peak along ridge tops and granite summits with elevations of more than 7,800 feet. Creosote bush, Joshua trees, and desert shrubs in the lower elevations change to scattered piñon and juniper woodlands dotted with cactuses higher up. In several of the canyons, you'll find springs that feed riparian habitats of cottonwoods, willows, and grasses. Mule deer flourish, along with golden eagles, prairie falcons, and other raptors, as well as game birds such as quail and dove. The Pacific Crest Trail passes not far to the west outside the boundary.
Back to California >The Wilderness Land Trust PO Box 1420, Carbondale, CO 81623 • phone: 970.963.1725 • fax: 970.963.6067 | site design by kissane viola design

