Loading Page...

Can you touch the sequoias?

The trees are so huge, a hug is merely a fantasy. However, one already damaged tree, an iconic one foolishly cored for a road decades ago, is accessible enough to have your photo take inside, to touch, view up close and feel humbled by its age, its ability to recover and, of course, its enormity.



People Also Ask

Visit the Parker Group Sequoias This is a group of giant sequoia trees that are huddled close to each other. We were thrilled to get up and close to some of the largest Sequoia trees. Unlike the General Sherman Tree, which is fenced off, one can walk up close to these trees and even touch them.

MORE DETAILS

Weapons (including, but not limited to, BB, Pellet and Paint Guns, Bow/Arrow, Slingshots, Bear Spray and other compressed gas irritant devices) are illegal to possess. Discharge of a firearm or weapon is prohibited within Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.

MORE DETAILS

All bears in these parks are American black bears (Ursus americanus).

MORE DETAILS

The General Sherman Tree measures 103 around, and soars 275 feet into the blue Sierra sky—and it's still growing.

MORE DETAILS

Whitebark pine, Western juniper and Douglas-fir can live more than 1,000 years while giant sequoias can live more than 3,000 years. Giant sequoias are the third longest-lived tree species with the oldest known specimen to have been 3,266 years old in the Converse Basin Grove of Giant Sequoia National Monument.

MORE DETAILS

Bobcats and mountain lions are common throughout the foothills of the parks. While you may catch a glimpse of a bobcat, mountain lions are rarely seen.

MORE DETAILS

If you have a trip planned to Yosemite National Park this summer, go ahead and leave the bear spray at home. It's not allowed within park boundaries. Bear spray is actually considered a weapon according to the park's regulations.

MORE DETAILS