About Brown Mountain South Trailhead
Provides access to: FacilitiesNo picnic tableNo fire pitNo drinking waterNo toiletNo garbage disposal - Please pack it out
Keno, Oregon · Klamath County · Facility
Provides access to: FacilitiesNo picnic tableNo fire pitNo drinking waterNo toiletNo garbage disposal - Please pack it out
Live forecast for the park. Plan your visit accordingly.
Forecast data © Open-Meteo. Refreshed every 6 hours. Always check the most recent forecast before heading out.
Provides access to: FacilitiesNo picnic tableNo fire pitNo drinking waterNo toiletNo garbage disposal - Please pack it out
From White City, OR, travel east on State Highway 140 to the Junction with Forest Road 37. Turn right (south), and go approximately 2 .25 miles to the junction with Forest Road 3705. Continue on Forest Road 3705 to the intersection with Forest Road 3720 and turn left. Continue to intersection with Forest Road 740 and turn left (east). Go approximately 200 yards to a gated dirt road on the right. Park here and walk approximately 0.3 mile to the shelter.From Ashland, OR, turn left on Dead Indian Memorial Highway (County Road 722) for approximately 28 miles to Forest Road 3720 and turn left (north). Go approximately 2 miles to Forest Road 740 road and turn right (east). Go approximately 200 yards to a gated dirt road on the right. Park here and walk approximately 0.3 mile to the shelter.
Driving directions (Google Maps) →Heading to Brown Mountain South Trailhead? A few things to know before you go:
Oregon's longest mapped hiking trails, ranked by distance with notes on what makes each route worth the commitment.
Steep is hard. These are the ten Oregon trails with the most total elevation gain — quad-burners earned by hard climbing.
Ten gentle, well-marked Oregon trails perfect for first-time hikers, families, or recovery days.
Oregon's ten hardest hikes — expert difficulty, big mileage, or serious exposure. Reserved for experienced hikers.
Federal parks and recreation areas in Oregon ranked by what they actually offer hikers and campers, not just popularity.
Oregon's best hikes to named waterfalls — from short family-friendly viewpoints to all-day cascade chasing.