Jackson F. Kimball State Recreation Site | |
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Type | Public, state |
Location | Klamath County, Oregon |
Nearest city | Klamath Falls |
Coordinates | 42°44′18″N 121°58′48″W / 42.7384669°N 121.9800213°WCoordinates: 42°44′18″N 121°58′48″W / 42.7384669°N 121.9800213°W |
Area | 19 acres (7.7 ha) |
Operated by | Oregon Parks and Recreation Department |
Jackson F. Kimball State Recreation Site is a state park in southern Oregon. The park is operated and maintained by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, and is located approximately 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Crater Lake National Park and 3 miles (4.8 km) north of Fort Klamath. The park was established in 1955, and covers 19 acres (7.7 ha) including the headwaters of the Wood River.
Visitors to Kimball State Recreation Site can camp or picnic and enjoy water activities like fishing, canoeing, and kayaking. A short trail connects the main campground to the Wood River’s headwaters spring site.
The park has ten primitive campsites near the headwaters lagoon. Toilet facilities are primitive and potable water is not available in the park.
There is a popular horse trail that begins at Collier Memorial State Park that leads through the forest to Kimball State Recreation Site. Riders must make a round trip from Collier State Park since there are no horse corrals at Kimball Recreation Site.
The headwaters of the Wood River emanate from a spring located in Kimball State Recreation Site. The aquifer that feeds the spring is believed to originate twenty miles (32 km) northeast of the park on the east side drainage of Crater Lake National Park. Wood River meanders through pine forest and agricultural land for ten miles (16 km) before flowing into Agency Lake. The park itself is forested with ponderosa and lodgepole pine with some quaking aspen.
The river offers fine fishing that can be accessed from the shore or by canoe or kayak. Brook, brown, and rainbow trout are found in the Wood River and its tributaries. In addition, Bureau of Land Management biologists have found native Great Basin redband trout in the river between the Kimball State Recreation Site and the confluence of Annie Creek about a mile downstream from the park.