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If you're a fan of eskers, moraines, kettles, and kames, Wisconsin's Kettle Moraine State Forest is the right place for you.
Contact Information:
KMSF-Northern Unit N1765 Hwy. G Campbellsport, WI 53010 262/626-2116 KMSF-Southern Unit S91 W39091 Hwy. 59 Eagle, WI 5311-0070 262-594-6200
Location: Kettle Moraine is located in southeast Wisconsin, about 45 minutes from Milwaukee. If you need restaurants or lodging, try Kewaskum, Dundee, Campbellsport, or Greenbush.
Getting There: The State Hwys. 12, 59, and 67 all lead to the Southern Unit. Take Hwy. 45 from Milwaukee (Hwy. 23 from Fond du Lac) to the Northern Unit.
Seasonal Information: In summer, temperatures are between 75 and 95 degrees F. In winter, temperatures are perfect for skiing at 0 to 32 degrees F. Bike trails are open from mid-April through November depending on trail conditions.
Wildlife: You might see whitetail deer, hawks, turkey vultures, raccoons, squirrels, possums, and turtles frolicking through Kettle Moraine, but no bears in this area.
Insects: Mosquitoes abound in summer.
Plant Life: The plant life along the area's trails is as unique and varied as the geologic history. Because the Kettle Moraine landscape is so rugged and forbidding to human settlers, many rare plants thrive in the diverse sanctuary of the forests. Fields that dance with wildflowers one week can become a blanket of shimmering straw grasses just a few weeks later. Groves of fiery sumac, maple, and oak resemble tapestries of green, wine, and pink-orange in fall. Stands of silver-trunked birch carpet the ground with yellow leaves.
Facilities: There are two family campgrounds in the Northern Unit ~ Long Lake and Mauthe Lake ~ with over 275 sites between them. They are 75 percent reservation, 25 percent first-come, first-served. Hook-ups, flush toilets, showers, and water are available.
There are three family campgrounds ~ Ottawa Lake, Pinewoods, and Whitewater Lake~ in the Southern Unit. All campgrounds accept reservations. You can call 1-888-974-2757 to reserve a site.Pinewoods and Ottawa Lake has showers, flush toilets, and water available. The other sites only provide pit toilets and water.
Visitors can also camp at primitive backpack shelters. Backpack camping along the Ice Age Trail is permitted only at the three designated shelter sites. A roofed shelter, fire ring, and pit toilet are provided at each site. Reservations are required and can be made by phone for one-night stays.
Reservations are recommended. They are limited to one night at each site and can be made by calling the park office. Reservations are accepted 11 months in advance.
The Ice Age Visitor Center (414/533-8322) is open on weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and weekends from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. There is also a nature center located at Southern Unit office.
Parking: If you're biking the Greenbush and New Fane trails, there is parking available near the Greenbush Shelter and the Greenbush Picnic Area. For those backpacking, there are sites available near the shelters. Many other parking areas are available throughout the forest. Most parking areas require a valid vehicle admission sticker. For short stays, visitors can park off county roads.
Permits: Vehicle admission is $5 per day for Wisconsin residents, $7 for non-residents. Annual parking stickers (good at all Wisconsin state parks and forests for one calendar year) are $18 for Wisconsin residents, $25 for non-residents. A state trail pass is also required for those 16 and over who are biking or horseback riding. The trail pass is $3 for a daily or $10 for an annual. There are senior citizen discounts. Annual or daily trail passes and vehicle stickers can be purchased at any self-registration pay station. A $5 service fee will be charged for failure to use self-registration station when available. Fishing and hunting also require permits.
Memorial Day through Labor Day the camping cost is $7 for Wisconsin residents, $9 non-residents on weekdays. On summer weekends and holidays, all prices increase $2. At other times of year, it's $7 for Wisconsin residents, $9 for non-residents on both weekdays and weekends. Sites with electrical hook-ups are $3 additional per night. The reservation fee is $4.
Policies:
Hazards:
Leave No Trace:
Maps:
Five USGS topos cover the area: Kewaskum and Dundee maps for the Northern Unit; Eagle, Little Prairie, and Palmyra for the Southern Unit.
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