Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Dinkey Lakes Wilderness

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Nearest city
  
Address
  
Lakeshore, CA 93634, USA

Established
  
September 28, 1984

Governing body
  
U.S. Forest Service

Area
  
121.4 kmĀ²

Dinkey Lakes Wilderness

Location
  
Fresno County, California, USA

Management
  
United States Forest Service

Similar
  
Jennie Lakes Wilderness, Sierra Nevada, Indio Hills Palms, John Little State Natural R, Ellicott Slough National

Dinkey lakes wilderness part one


The Dinkey Lakes Wilderness is a federally designated wilderness area located 45 miles (72 km) northeast of Fresno, in the state of California, USA. It comprises 30,000 acres (12,141 ha) within the Sierra National Forest and was added to the National Wilderness Preservation System by the California Wilderness Act of 1984.

Contents

Elevations range from 8,200 feet (2,500 m) to 10,619 feet (ft).

Recreational activities in the wilderness include day hiking, backpacking, horseback riding, fishing, rock climbing and cross-country skiing.

The landscape of Dinkey Lakes Wilderness is composed of subalpine forests with high, rolling ridges made up of granitic bedrock intersparsed with large, wet meadows. A high divide along the southwestern boundary has several peaks over 10,000 ft (3,000 m). elevation, including the Three Sisters, Brown Peak and Eagle Peak. Extensive glaciation is evident by the many cirques located at timberline.

4 wheeling in dinkey lakes wilderness


Flora and faunaEdit

Wildlife include the North Kings and Huntington deer herds, black bear, golden-mantled ground squirrel, coyote and the Sierra red fox. Also martins and pikas in rocky areas above timberline.

Dinkey Lakes Wilderness has forests of red fir, lodgepole pine, western white pine, with mountain hemlock and whitebark pine at higher elevations.

RecreationEdit

The large John Muir Wilderness (580,323 acres) is to the east of Dinkey Lakes and is separated from it by the Dusy-Ershim Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) route. This corridor links Kaiser Pass in the north to the Courtright Reservoir in the south. There are three other OHV routes to the west of the wilderness boundary and are popular in the summer months.

Three entry points into the wilderness are; the Cliff Lake trailhead at Courtright Reservoir, Dinkey Creek trailhead and the California Riding and Hiking trailhead located at D and F Pack Station on Kaiser Pass road. There are 50 miles (80 km) of trails offering a variety of one way and loop trips into the lake basin areas and mountain summits.

The summits of Dogtooth Peak (10,256 feet or 3,126 metres) and Three Sisters (10,548 feet or 3,215 metres) offer Class 2 and Class 3 rock climbing routes.
There are 17 lakes in the wilderness with 14 of those being stocked with golden, brook and rainbow trout.

Winter recreation is limited by the long distance from plowed roads. The nearby Sierra Ski Summit Area on highway 168 provides access to the D and F Pack Station and trailhead which is two miles (3 km) north of the wilderness boundary.

A California campfire permit and a wilderness permit are required all year for overnight trips and can be obtained at various ranger stations of the Sierra National Forest as well as the Courtright Reservoir Homeowners Association building at Courtright Reservoir.

Quotas are in place for Dinkey Lakes Wilderness to limit and control the number of visitors. Permits are in effect all year and are divided up between advance reservations (60%) and walk-ins (40%). Each trailhead has a quota limit.

The Forest Service encourages the practice of Leave No Trace principles of wilderness travel to minimize human impact on the environment.

References

Dinkey Lakes Wilderness Wikipedia


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