#1 Native Am. RedtailedHawk Teepee
Canvas tent · Sleeps 5 This Tipi is our MIRACLE TIPI! We had the tragic TwoFourTwo fire sweep through our campgrounds last September (caused by a careless campfire in another campgrounds 5 miles away!) Our Red Tailed Hawk Tipi survived in pristine condition! As of Memorial Day Weekend, we will have two tipis open, and will no longer have any other campsites available.
Camp in our stunning Redtailed Hawk Native American Teepee. Primitive camping Native American style, find out what the total Western experience was really like. Lakota style genuice Native American tipi (owned and run by Native Americans), 18' diameter, wake up to the quiet sound of birds in the stress free lovely area of an old Northwestern forest. See wildlife, birds and all kinds of trees and plants to give you good privacy in this experience. Hike on our gentle trails of our 250 acre ranch, which is 90% Forest.
. Most campgrounds have campers right on top of each other, ours gives you room to hike, see the wildlife, trees and room for privacy just down from Crater Lake. In this 250 acre ranch, we have open only2 tipis. There are wildflowers (in season) , you have space to 'be' here, and that's how we plan on keeping it. We just have a dirt road, and no electricity, and an on-demand hot water shower. ( The well is solar in our desire to keep compatible with the national forest that we are beside.) The norm here is to hear the buzz and whir of hummingbirds, dragon flies and birds of all kinds. You can see the stars at night, and hear cows off in the distance, and since we are beside Crater Lake Highway, we are an easy distance to Crater Lake, so you will hear some traffic now and then. You are across the street from Pelican Butte, a beautiful mountain range, and also see Agency Lake off in the distance.
Since the TwoFourTwo fire which decimated some of our land and forest, you can also see wildlife that has come in to help regenerate our forest. Work still goes on as we clear and watch new plants and trees begin again. We are not going to clear-cut burned trees, but in the Native tradition, allow the roots of the burned trees to help regenerate the new ones coming in.There are woodpeckers that crack open pinecones only after a fire has happened, to regenerate the area. You may see him, he looks like a red-headed woodpecker, only has a black and white stripped head. He is all over here, helping us to regain our forest, though it is a slow process. But still much beauty and peace here. We have a lot of beautiful regrowth this year, and our birds and wildlife (deer and elk) are back.