General Grant Tree Trail
A short paved loop to the second-largest tree on Earth by volume, with a fallen sequoia you can walk through along the way. No permit.
California · Stamp 29 / 63
A canyon carved a mile deep by two rivers, sharing a boundary and a management office with Sequoia next door.
Kings Canyon shares a boundary, a single entrance fee, and a joint management office with Sequoia National Park next door, but its centerpiece couldn't feel more different from Sequoia's Giant Forest. The canyon of the South Fork Kings River drops more than 8,000 feet from rim to floor, deeper in places than the Grand Canyon, carved by glaciers and the relentless work of two rivers over millions of years.
The park's northern grove, Grant Grove, holds the General Grant Tree, the second-largest tree on Earth by volume, and typically far fewer visitors than the General Sherman Tree an hour south in Sequoia. Deeper in, along Highway 180, Cedar Grove opens onto the canyon floor itself, with granite walls rising thousands of feet on either side of the Kings River.
Come for the canyon most visitors to the Sierra never see. Stay long enough to notice how much quieter it feels than its more famous neighbors. Read the story, trust the live data above for what is open today, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
It's a rival of the Yosemite, and the sublimest and most beautiful of all the canyons of the Sierra Nevada.John Muir, describing the canyon of the South Fork Kings River
Six ways to spend your time, from a quiet grove of giant sequoias to a canyon floor a mile below the rim.
The second-largest tree on Earth by volume, on a short paved loop with far fewer crowds than Sequoia's General Sherman.
The signature walkA scenic descent onto the canyon floor, with granite walls rising thousands of feet on either side of the Kings River.
The signature driveA flat loop through a lush meadow ringed by canyon walls, one of the most scenic easy walks in the park.
Everyone · 1 hrA short, paved path to a powerful waterfall a few steps from the road, easy enough for any visitor.
Everyone · 20 minA short walk from a parking area near Grant Grove to a sweeping view of the Sierra Nevada high country.
Everyone · sunsetA hollowed-out fallen sequoia in Grant Grove you can walk straight through, once used as a stable and even briefly a saloon.
Families · 15 minAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on which grove or canyon floor it belongs to.
A short paved loop to the second-largest tree on Earth by volume, with a fallen sequoia you can walk through along the way. No permit.
A flat loop through a scenic meadow with towering canyon walls on both sides, one of Cedar Grove's best short walks. No permit.
A short paved path to a powerful waterfall, one of the easiest big payoffs in the park. No permit.
A short paved climb to a sweeping view of the Sierra Nevada, best timed for sunset. No permit.
A grueling climb from the canyon floor to a fire lookout with a panoramic view over Kings Canyon. No permit.
One of the classic multi-day High Sierra backpacking loops, past a chain of alpine lakes below Fin Dome. A wilderness permit is required.
No permit for day hikes · wilderness permits via Recreation.gov for overnight backpacking · single entrance fee covers both Kings Canyon and Sequoia
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
Common in both developed areas of the park. Food storage lockers are mandatory at every trailhead and campsite.
A federally endangered subspecies found only in these mountains, occasionally visible on remote high ridges above the canyon.
Common in Zumwalt Meadow and the meadows around Cedar Grove, especially active at dawn and dusk.
Patrols the canyon and surrounding forest almost entirely unseen, keeping deer populations in check.
Nests on the sheer granite walls of Kings Canyon, occasionally visible diving at high speed over the river below.
Common in the sequoia groves, harvesting cones from the giant trees and helping seeds reach the forest floor.
Native to the Kings River and its tributaries, a draw for anglers with the appropriate California fishing license.
Grant Grove holds some of the largest sequoias on Earth, including the General Grant Tree, second only to Sequoia's General Sherman by volume.
Shares the mid-elevation forest with the sequoias, identifiable by its unusually long cones.
A tall, broad-leafed plant common in the wet meadows of Cedar Grove, part of the lush understory along the canyon floor.
Covers the lower, drier foothills near the park's western entrance, blooming with small pink-white flowers in late winter.
Common throughout the park's mid-elevation forests, its reddish, fibrous bark distinct from the sequoias it grows alongside.
A native shrub found almost exclusively in the shade beneath giant sequoias, part of a specialized community unique to the groves.
The canyon of the South Fork Kings River drops more than 8,200 feet from rim to floor, deeper in places than the Grand Canyon.
The General Grant Tree is the second-largest tree on Earth by volume, after Sequoia's General Sherman.
Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Park are managed jointly under a single administration and a single entrance fee.
The park's Cedar Grove area is only accessible via Highway 180, which is closed by snow for much of the winter.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Kings Canyon deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
One entrance, one fee, one drive south: from a mile-deep canyon to the largest tree on Earth.
Open Stamp 14 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Kings Canyon into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.