Kings Canyon National Park
Campgrounds of Kings Canyon
Grant Grove Area
All Grant Grove campgrounds are located 0.25-mile from Grant Grove Village. The campgrounds cost $18 per night. Flush toilets, phones, camper store, -cabins, hotel rooms, restaurant, public showers and horses in summer are available. In winter, only one loop in Azalea Campground is plowed. -
Azalea Campground
This campground has 110 sites, located 0.25-mile north of the Grant Grove Village, at an elevation of 6,500 feet. -
Crystal Springs Campground
This campground, which features 36 family sites and 14 sites for groups of 7—15, is located 0.25-mile north of Grant Grove Village and has an elevation of 6,500 feet. It is closed mid-September to Memorial Day. -
Sunset Campground
Sunset Campground boasts 157 sites located 0.25-mile south of Grant Grove Village at an elevation of 6,500 feet, and is closed mid-September to Memorial Day. -
Cedar Grove Area
All Cedar Grove campgrounds are located 30 miles east of Grant Grove on Highway 180 and cost $18 per night. The road is closed mid-October to mid-May. Amenities include flush toilets, bear-proof storage boxes and a phone. The camper store, motel, short-order food service, laundromat, pay showers and horses are available from mid-May to September.
Sheep Creek Campground
Featuring 111 sites at an elevation of 4,600 feet.
Sentinel Campground
Featuring 82 sites at an elevation of 4,600 feet. (Partial accessibility) -
Canyon View Campground
Featuring 23 family sites and five sites for groups of 7—15 at an elevation of 4,600 feet. (Partial accessibility) -
Moraine Campground
Featuring 120 sites at an elevation of 4,600 feet.
News from the Parks
August 18, 2008 - 4:49pm
Regina Jones-Brake remembers the day she met Lady Bird Johnson. Jones-Brake was 22 and setting type at the Benjamin Franklin print shop in Philadelphia's historic district. "I was called a printer's devil," said Jones-Brake. "I wore a mop cap and 18th century attire. I set type, I inked the ink balls, I wet the paper and I ran it through. I was so excited about the job that I worked on Sundays; nobody else wanted to work on Sundays."
August 18, 2008 - 4:29pm
A group of Boy Scouts from Maplewood on a backpacking and rafting trip near the Grand Canyon were evacuated by helicopter Sunday after an earthen dam failed and flood waters threatened their campsite. The six boys and three adult leaders were among scores of people rescued from campgrounds and tribal lands after days of heavy rains caused flooding along two creeks that flow into the Colorado River. "Some boys had enough time to grab their backpacks and some did not," said Bridget Lai, whose husband Michael and son Kyle, 13, are on the trip. "There's not a whole lot you can do about a dam breaking. There's not a lot you can prepare for."
August 18, 2008 - 4:26pm
Why go to a national park if you can experience one via an Internet podcast? Park officials across the country are hopeful the podcasts themselves will make people want to visit their parks. But if a trip just isn't possible, podcasts are seen as the next best thing.
August 18, 2008 - 4:21pm
A park service pilot on a routine flight over the North Cascades National Park service area helped discover a large marijuana farm worth nearly $48 million -- the first such grow operation found in a national park site in the state. Officials said the farm, which law enforcement officials raided this week, contained more than 16,700 plants. It was well established and resembled the elaborate grow sites run by Mexican drug traffickers plaguing national parks in California, authorities said.
August 18, 2008 - 4:16pm
Next year will be a big celebration for Zion National Park and all who value the majestic views that can be seen within this natural landmark. Zion didn't receive national park status until 1919, but it was recognized for its beauty in 1909, when it was designated as Mukuntuweap National Monument. According to "A History of Washington County: From Isolation to Destination," by Doug Alder and Karl Brooks, The monument designation came after a survey report by St. George resident Leo A. Snow shared the secret of what has become a place of sanctuary befitting its name.




