Forest Service Shield
USDA Forest Service

Chattahoochee-Oconee
National Forests

Forest Facts

Chattahoochee-Oconee Logo
Chattahoochee-Oconee
National Forests

Home Page | Recreation Information | Forest History | Forest Facts | Forest Management | Environmental Education


2003 Fingertip Fact SheetPortable Document Format requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click logo to download.

Acreage (as of October 1, 2000)

  • There are two National Forests in Georgia managed by the Supervisor's Office in Gainesville Georgia and seven Ranger Districts.
  • The Chattahoochee National Forest covers 749,689.59 acres in North Georgia and is managed out of six ranger district offices.
  • The Oconee National Forest covers 115,353.71 acres and is administered by one ranger district.
  • Total Acreage: 865,043.3 acres; 7 ranger districts; 26 counties.
    In 2002, the Armuchee and Cohutta Districts were combined into one administrative unit.
Chattahoochee National Forest Acreage by County and Ranger District
County

Armuchee

Brasstown

Chattooga

Cohutta

Tallulah

Toccoa

TOTAL

Banks    

649.61

     

649.61

Catoosa

6.40

         

6.40

Chattooga

19,390.04

         

19,390.04

Dawson          

6,760.38

6,760.38

Fannin      

40,006.58

 

66,097.37

106,103.95

Floyd

6,620.34

         

6,620.34

Gilmer      

16,273.09

 

38,445.02

54,718.11

Gordon

8,076.36

         

8,076.36

Habersham    

39,874.02

     

39,874.02

Lumpkin  

 20,603.90

 8,029.00

   

28,309.27

56,942.17

Murray      

51,360.35

   

51,360.35

Rabun        

148,640.33

 

148,640.33

Stephens    

23,304.32

     

23,304.32

Towns  

50,978.49

1,391.85

 

5,167.75

 

57,538.09

Union  

85,924.39

4,170.76

   

7,770.39

97,865.54

Walker

18,844.16

         

18,844.16

White    

41,276.02

     

41,276.02

Whitfield

11,719.40

         

11,719.40

TOTAL

64,656.70

157,506.78

118,695.58

107,640.02

153,808.08

147,382.43

749,689.59

 

Oconee National Forest Acreage by County
Greene

26,659.31

Oconee

157.00

Jasper

30,312.65

Oglethorpe

3,762.12

Jones

16,461.34

Putnam

37,443.26

Morgan

308.03

Monroe

250.00

TOTAL

115,353.71


Recreation/Unique Areas

Wilderness

There are 10 wildernesses that total 114,537 acres or roughly 15% of the Chattahoochee National Forest. At 35,268 acres, the Cohutta Wilderness is the largest federally designated wilderness in the National Forest System in the Southeast.

 

Wilderness Acres by Counties in Georgia
Wilderness Name

Rabun

Fannin

Gilmer

Murray

Towns

Lumpkin

Union

White

Habersham

TOTAL

Ellicott Rock

2,021

               

2,021

Cohutta  

29,202

908

5,158

         

35,268

Southern Nantahala

3,371

     

8,399

       

11,770

Big Frog  

89

             

89

Raven Cliffs          

1,853

1,675

5,587

 

9,115

Brasstown        

5,096

 

7,800

   

12,896

Tray Mountain

2,453

     

2,497

   

1,504

3,248

9,702

Rich Mountain  

10

9,466

           

9,476

Blood Mountain          

6,014

1,786

   

7,800

Mark Trail        

3,040

 

6,005

7,355

 

16,400

TOTAL

7,845

29,301

10,374

5,158

19,032

7,867

17,266

14,446

3,248

114,537

 
  • Four different pieces of legislation created the wilderness areas on the Chattahoochee National Forest (1975, 1984, 1986, 1991).
  • The Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests have 37 developed recreation areas; 500 developed campsites; 200 picnic sites; 6 swim beaches; 530 miles of trail.
  • Unique features of the forest include the southern terminus of the Appalachian Trail at Springer Mountain (79 miles in Georgia); the Chattooga Wild and Scenic River (about 7,550 acres in Georgia); Springer Mountain National Recreation Area (23,166 acres); two scenic byways; six rugged/high elevation areas with an emphasis on primitive recreation (23,766 acres); Coosa Bald Scenic Area-the only congressionally designated scenic area in Georgia (7,100 acres) ; seven scenic areas designated through the Land Management Plan (4,210 acres).
  • The Forest receives more than 10 million visitors every year.
  • During the Southern Appalachian Assessment Roadless Inventory process, 61,557 acres (20 areas) or 8% of the Chattahoochee National Forest was identified as potentially roadless areas.

Road Construction

There are 1,617 miles of forest development roads on the Chattahoochee-Oconee. During fiscal year 1994 about 4.1 miles of road were constructed and 9.4 miles reconstructed. About 75% of all new roads are reseeded and closed after use. The Forest's Land and Resource Management Plan limited the forest to 20 miles of road construction each year.


Economics and Staffing

In 1995, 26 Georgia counties containing National Forest land received $758,829.26 for 25% returns of all national forest receipts. This money is to be used by the counties for schools and roads. Counties within the Chattahoochee National Forest received $0.95 per acre. Counties within the Oconee National Forest received $0.40 per acre.

There are 220 permanent full-time employees who work on the two forests; 152 senior worker enrollees worked on the forest last year, and performed 70 person-years of work valued at $1.1 million; 2,054 volunteers performed 54 person-years of work appraised at a value of $953,965.

Indirectly, the National Forests in Georgia provide employment for 5,500 people, income to local communities of $119 million, and federal income taxes of $18 million.


Timber

The Chattahoochee National Forest is mostly an Appalachian-oak forest type.

The Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests provide 3% of the timber volume in Georgia. In North Georgia, the Chattahoochee provides 25% of the timber volume for local mills. Some mills depend on National Forest timber for 90% of their volume. The Chattahoochee is the primary provider of quality hardwood timber in Georgia.

On the Chattahoochee-Oconee, 542,240 acres (about 63% of the forest) are classified as suitable for timber production.

Each year less than one-half of one percent of the Chattahoochee-Oconee is harvested for timber. On the Chattahoochee the average size of harvested area is 20-25 acres. On the Oconee the average size of harvested areas is 30-35 acres.

Before 1986, almost 100% of harvesting was done using clearcutting. Because of public concern expressed during the planning process over the visual impacts of this harvesting method, forest managers committed to reduce clearcutting to 50% of all harvesting done each year. In 1995, clearcutting accounts for 24% of planned harvests.

In fiscal year 1997, a total of 27 million board feet of sawtimber and wood products were harvested from the Chattahoochee-Oconee: 67% was sawtimber, 31% was roundwood, 2% was firewood.

In fiscal year 1997, the timber program resulted in 372 jobs and over $12.88 million in income to local communities with an additional $1.99 million in federal income taxes.


Wildlife Management

There are over 500 wildlife and fish species on the Chattahoochee-Oconee. In fiscal year 1993, biologists sampled 650 sites for neo-tropical birds on the two forests.

Almost 100% of the cold water stream fishing on public lands occurs on the Chattahoochee National Forest. The Forest has 1,770 miles of cold or cool-water streams; 430 miles of warm-water streams; 19,000 acres of lakes; 3,900 acres of wetlands. 90,000 fishermen generate over $43 million in revenue for Georgia from National Forest land.

About 80% of hunting on public lands is done on the Chattahoochee-Oconee. Hunting accounts for 11% of all recreation use on the Chattahoochee-Oconee. 65,000 hunters generated over $41 million in revenues from National Forest land. 14 wildlife management areas are located on Chattahoochee-Oconee.

 

Home Page | Recreation Information | Forest History | Forest Facts | Forest Management | Environmental Education


Last Updated: