Loading Page...

Does the redwood forest still exist?

96 percent of the original old-growth coast redwoods have been logged. How much of the remaining old-growth redwood forest exists within Redwood National and State Parks? Redwood National and State Parks contains 45 percent of the remaining protected old-growth redwoods in California.



People Also Ask

And while the fantastic creatures of that age have long since disappeared, the redwoods continue to thrive, in the right environment. California's North Coast provides the only such environment in the world. A combination of longitude, climate, and elevation limits the redwoods' range to a few hundred coastal miles.

MORE DETAILS

Fewer than 120,000 acres, or 5 percent, of the original redwood forest remains today. It's a tragedy to have lost most of the ancient redwoods; however, science-based forest restoration holds the key to bringing back what we've lost.

MORE DETAILS

There are three drive-through coastal redwood (not giant sequoia) trees on U.S. 101 along the “Avenue of the Giants” highway in northern California. All are private businesses, which charge a small fee to drive your car through the tree.

MORE DETAILS

Recreational climbers are generally prohibited from climbing into canopy of national and state redwood parks. But a few people illegally sneak into redwoods without permission. Photos and videos have appeared online, proving this. Most recreational climbers climb legally.

MORE DETAILS

No, you can't stay inside the Redwood National Forest, only in nearby towns. However, you can stay in the campgrounds which are located in Del Norte Coast Redwoods State Park and Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, the parks that are joint together with Redwood.

MORE DETAILS

Coast redwoods sometimes regenerate as seedlings but more often grow from sprouts, which start easily on lateral roots or from stumps or downed logs. Young redwoods grow quickly—two to six feet a year—so that a 20-year-old tree will often be 50 feet tall and about eight inches in diameter.

MORE DETAILS

As its nickname suggests, giant or coastal redwoods thrive in the moist, humid climate of the Northern California coast, where marine fog delivers precise conditions necessary for its growth. The fog adds moisture to the soil and helps trap it there by lowering the rate of evaporation.

MORE DETAILS

Threats to your Redwoods
  • Phytophthora Root Rot. Phytophthora root rot is caused by a soil-borne organism. ...
  • Armillaria Root Rot. Armillaria root rot rarely infects healthy coast redwoods. ...
  • Botryosphaeria Canker. ...
  • Watering Issues. ...
  • Pests.


MORE DETAILS

These trees are able to grow to be so tall because they're ancient and because they're well adapted to their temperate, foggy climate.

MORE DETAILS

Get thee to the Smith River! Passing through Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park at the far north of the Redwood National and State Parks complex, the Smith River offers swimming holes and (in some locations) peaceful water that's perfect for paddling.

MORE DETAILS

The coast redwood and Douglas-fir forests, and oak woodlands of Redwood National Park are home to many black bears {Ursus americanus). The black bear is the most common species of bear in North America, and is the only one found in California since the grizzly bear (U. horribilis) was extermi- nated in the 1920s.

MORE DETAILS