USDA Forest Service
 

Siuslaw National Forest

  
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Siuslaw National Forest
4077 S.W. Research Way
P.O. Box 1148
Corvallis, Oregon 97339

(541) 750-7000
Fax: (541) 750-7234

TTY for hearing & speech impaired:
(Oregon Relay)

United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service

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About The Siuslaw

Home : About Us : About The Siuslaw

Forest Offices | Staff Officers | District Rangers | Forest Facts & Figures | Forest Narrative | National Acreages

Location Map

The Siuslaw National Forest is located along the central Oregon Coast and extends into the Coast Range Mountains.

map of siuslaw national forest

Siuslaw National Forest Offices

The Siuslaw National Forest is administered through a Forest Supervisor’s Office (Corvallis, OR) and two Ranger Districts, Hebo Ranger District (Hebo, OR) and Central Coast Ranger District-Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. The Central Coast Ranger District-Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area has four offices along Highway 101.

  • Siuslaw NF Supervisor’s Office
  • Hebo Ranger District
  • Central Coast Ranger District-Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area
    • Waldport Office
    • Cape Perpetua Visitor Center
    • Florence Office
    • Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area Visitor Center.

Visit our Contact Us page to visit or get in touch with one of our Forest Offices.

Staff Officers

  • Forest Supervisor: Barnie Gyant

  • Administrative Officer: Kathy Harbick (acting)

  • Engineering: Charlie Raines

  • Fire: Carl West

  • Natural Resources: Mary Zuschlag

  • Public Affairs: Joni Quarnstrom

  • Recreation: Mike Harvey

  • Safety: Bruce Oerter

  • Civil Rights: Kathy Fletcher

District Rangers

  • Hebo Ranger District: George Buckingham

  • Central Coast Ranger District-Oregon Dunes NRA: Pam Gardner

Forest Facts & Figures

Geography

Acres 630,000
Elevation: Lowest Sea level
Elevation: Highest 4097 feet (1,248.7 meters)
Length of Forest 135 miles (217 kilometers)
Width of Forest 27 miles (44 kilometers)
Natural Lakes 30
Anadromous Streams 1200 miles

 

Acreages by County (approximate)

Benton 18,000
Coos 11,000
Douglas 66,000
Lane 246,000
Lincoln 172,000
Polk 1,000
Tillamook 91,000
Yamhill 25,000
TOTAL 630,000

 

Acreages by Ranger District (approximate)

Hebo RD 151,000
Central Coast-ODNRA 479,000
Total Forest 630,000

 

Major Forest Tree Species

Douglas-Fir Sitka Spruce
Western Hemlock Red Alder
Western Red Cedar Big Leaf Maple

 

Wildlife

Amphibians and Reptiles 26 species
Birds 235 species
Fishes Over 200 species
Mammals 69 species

 

See the Siuslaw National Forest Annual Report for a summary of forest facts including acreages, types of natural resources found on the forest, and budget and expenditures.

National Forest Service Acreages & Statistics

View Land Areas of the National Forest System for the latest statistics available on land areas administered by the Forest Service. link goes offsite

Forest Narrative

The Siuslaw National Forest is a very diverse and productive region extending from Tillamook to Coos Bay along the Oregon coast. The forest encompasses over 630,000 acres of unique and varying ecosystems.

The Forest is situated within the Oregon Coast Range, a mountain range that runs north to south from the Columbia River to north central California. The Siuslaw National Forest is bordered on the east by the Willamette Valley and the west by the Pacific Ocean and is one of only two national forests located in the lower 48 states to claim oceanfront property. Marys Peak, the highest peak in the Coast Range at elevation 4,097, is a prominent view west of Corvallis.

Pacific Coast Scenic Byway Highway 101 runs parallel along the west side of the Forest and the Pacific Ocean, while Highways 26, 6, 18, 22, 20, 34, 126 and 38 provide access from the Portland metro area and central and southern Willamette Valley.

Four major rivers flow out of the Siuslaw National Forest into the Pacific Ocean: the Nestucca, Alsea, Siuslaw, and Umpqua providing excellent habitat for anadromous fish. Many other smaller streams and tributaries add to the annual route salmon and steelhead take to their ancestral spawning ground.

Abundant rainfall and mild winters provide growing conditions for a variety of vegetation species. The Siuslaw’s temperate rain forest, coastal influence, ocean-forest interface, relatively young Douglas-fir forest, and cultural history make it unique among all other national forests.

The Siuslaw has two distinct vegetation zones, Sitka spruce and western hemlock. The hardy Sitka spruce zone grows where the coast influence of mild temperatures, winds, and dense fog discourage other types of vegetation. Western hemlock grows well in shade beneath the dense Douglas-fire canopy. As Douglas fir matures, western hemlock takes over. Both zones contain freshwater, upland, offshore, and estuarine habitats that support a wide variety of vegetation, fish, and wildlife.

The climate of the Siuslaw is best described as a Pacific maritime with recorded rainfall of up to100 inches per year in some parts of the Forest. Temperatures are moderate, averaging in the 30’ to 40’s during the winter with a very occasional snowfall. Summers are warm and dry, with cooler temperatures along the coast, warming up as you travel inland. A typical summer day at the Oregon Coast ranges in the 60’s with fog as a very common occurrence. People who live on the Coast often say September and October are their favorite months of the year due to dry days and warm temperatures.

USDA Forest Service, Siuslaw National Forest
Last modified Tuesday, November 04 2008


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