LOGGER FLAT GROUP
Group Campground

LOGGER FLAT GROUP

Sequoia National Forest, CA

Logger Flat Group serves one purpose: getting a large group together near Hume Lake without the hassle of coordinating multiple individual sites. The single group site handles up to 50 people and sits three miles south of one of Sequoia National Forest's most popular lakes, putting you close enough for easy lake access but far enough to avoid the day-use crowds.

Campground Details

β›ΊType
Group
πŸ•οΈTotal Sites
1
πŸ’΅Fee per Night
$242
πŸ“‹Reservations
Reservation Required
πŸ”οΈElevation
5,600 ft
πŸ“GPS
36.77600, -118.89460
🌀️Best Seasons
spring, fall
🐾Pets Allowed
Yes
πŸ“žPhone
559-335-2232
πŸ—ΊοΈAddress
CA

Amenities

πŸ’§Potable Water
🚻Vault Toilets

The Camp

You get one large group site at 5,600 feet elevation, accommodating up to 50 people with parking for 30 vehicles or a mix of 20 cars and 10 RVs. The setup is straightforward: vault toilets, drinking water, picnic tables, and fire rings, but no electric hookups. The campground sits in timber country within the Kings River Watershed, part of the Sierra Nevada's logged-over landscape that's grown back into working forest.

What to Know

At $242 per night, this is group camping with a price tag that reflects the convenience of having everyone in one spot rather than scattered across individual sites. Reservations are required, and the campground operates during spring and fall seasons when conditions allow access and the elevation isn't buried in snow or baked by summer heat.

Nearby

Hume Lake sits three miles north and serves as the area's main draw. The lake offers fishing and non-motorized boating, plus a family-friendly 2.6-mile loop trail with interpretive signs and benches. The lake's history ties to the area's logging past β€” it was originally built to support commercial timber operations.

For day trips, Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park and Giant Sequoia National Monument are within reach. The national forest itself contains more than 30 groves of giant sequoias scattered across its 1.1 million acres, with elevations ranging from 1,000 to 12,000 feet and waterfalls like Salmon Creek Falls and Grizzly Falls accessible to those willing to explore the backcountry.