Big Basin Redwoods State Park Launches Summer Shuttle Service for Weekends, Holidays

Contacts:
California State Parks
Newsroom@parks.ca.gov

Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks
Jennifer Murray
Jennifer@MillerMaxfield.com

 

Free pilot shuttle program and increased METRO bus service will increase park access on summer weekends and holidays in 2024

 

BOULDER CREEK, Calif. Just in time for the busy Memorial Day holiday weekend, California State Parks and Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks announced today that access to Big Basin Redwoods State Park will increase this summer with the addition of a free pilot shuttle program, a new interim parking area, and weekend Santa Cruz METRO bus service to the park.

The new State Parks shuttle will operate on a loop within Big Basin from a new interim satellite parking area at Saddle Mountain, located at the intersection of Highway 236 and Little Basin Road, to the main day-use area near the park’s former headquarters. This will augment existing reservation parking located in the historic core of the park at the main day-use area. This pilot shuttle program will increase day-use access to the park in this interim period while permanent park facilities are being planned after being lost in the 2020 CZU Fire.

The new 14-passenger, ADA-accessible shuttle, with a bike rack for two bicycles, will operate from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends and holidays from Memorial Day weekend, May 25, 2024 to Labor Day, September 2, 2024. Reservations will be available for day-use parking at the park for $8 ($6 day-use parking fee plus a $2 reservation fee). Once parking reservations in the heart of the park are full, visitors will be able to make reservations to park at Saddle Mountain to ride the shuttle into the park. State Parks’ day-use passes and other park entry programs are honored, but a $2 reservation fee still applies.

Visitors are encouraged to check availability and make a reservation online in advance to guarantee access to the limited parking areas.If the shuttle parking area isn’t fully reserved, first-come, first-served parking will be available for $10 per vehicle, payable by credit card at the kioskAll fees will support the park

Santa Cruz METRO started offering weekend bus service to the park on Bus Route 35 in March. Service will continue through spring and summer with five stops a day at the park. Bus riders can park for free at the METRO station in Scotts Valley to catch the bus. Single-ride tickets are $2 each, a day pass is $6, and K-12 students with student ID ride for free. Visitors who arrive by bus access the park for free.

Background on CZU Lightning Complex Fire
The CZU Lightning Complex Fire devastated Big Basin in 2020, burning more than 97% of the park and destroying nearly every structure, including the Park Headquarters, campgrounds and housing for park employees. View the short documentary Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks created in 2021 to mark the one-year anniversary of the CZU Fire.

Reimagining Big Basin
The park reopened in July 2022 through a limited access day-use reservation system created and operated by Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks. An interim visitors center is now open, and miles of trails and fire road are accessible. Also, camping has returned to the coastal side of the park through an interim walk-in campground at Rancho del Oso. The introduction of the shuttle program this summer will mark the largest increase in access to the park in two years.

The old-growth redwood forest in Big Basin continues to recover. Park visitors can witness the regrowth of the iconic trees and can also see signs of wildlife returning to the park’s recovering forest including deer, raccoon, fox, mountain lion, coyote, bats, many bird species, and other wildlife.

Learn more and plan a visit: www.thatsmypark.org/bigbasin.To make a reservation for camping at Rancho del Oso, on the coastal side of Big Basin, visit www.thatsmypark.org/rancho-del-oso-unit.

California State Parks continues the planning process to bring permanent facilities back to the park. It will be several years before the park is fully reopened, including rebuilding the entire trail network, campgrounds and utilities. For more information and to get involved please visit www.reimaginingbigbasin.org.

History of Big Basin Redwoods State Park
Big Basin is the oldest state park in California, acquired in 1902. The lands known today as Big Basin Redwoods State Park were originally the homelands of the Quiroste and Cotoni tribes, ancestral relatives of today’s Amah Mutsun Tribal Band and the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe.

Top left: The new interim parking area where a new pilot shuttle program can pick up visitors going to Big Basin Redwoods State Park. Top right: Site of the former Administration Building and Auto Tree at Big Basin Redwoods State Park. Bottom left: Hihn Hammond Fire Road to Mount McAbee Overlook trail is currently open. Bottom right: A view of Redwood Regrowth inside Big Basin Redwoods State Park
Top left: The new interim parking area where a new pilot shuttle program can pick up visitors going to Big Basin Redwoods State Park. Top right: Site of the former Administration Building and Auto Tree at Big Basin Redwoods State Park. Bottom left: Hihn Hammond Fire Road to Mount McAbee Overlook trail is currently open. Bottom right: A view of Redwood Regrowth inside Big Basin Redwoods State Park

 


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