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(From: [[US Forest Service - Sequoia National Forest (CA)]] )
+
(From: [[US Forest Service - Shasta-Trinity National Forests (CA)]] )
  
 
{{USFSinCA}}
 
{{USFSinCA}}
  
== '''Sequoia National Forest (SQF - Forest #13) "Porterville" KMB 7-4-0''' ==
+
== '''Shasta-Trinity National Forests (SHF - Forest #14) "Redding" KME 2-5''' ==
  
On July 1, 1908 Theodore Roosevelt established the Sequoia National Forest from a portion of Sierra Forest Reserve by Presidential Proclamation.  Because the Sierra Forest at that time was over six million acres, the Sequoia was administered as a separate unit known then as the Sierra South Reserve. In 1910 President Taft cut off the southern half of the Sierra and proclaimed it the Kern National Forest.  Five years later President Woodrow Wilson abolished the Kern Forest, drastically reduced its lands and designated what remained the Sequoia National Forest.and now the Forest covers 1,193,315 acres.  On April 15, 2000 Bill Clinton, by Presidential Proclamation, created the Giant Sequoia National Monument on two portions of the Sequoia National Forest, totaling 328,000 acres to be administered by the U.S. Forest Service as part of the Forest.  
+
The Shasta-Trinity National Forest, the largest of the 18 National Forests in California, was established by President Theodore Roosevelt’s proclamation of 1905. Initially, there were two forests; the Trinity National Forest (headquartered in Weaverville) and the Shasta National Forest (headquartered in Mt. Shasta City). The two forests were administratively combined into one in 1954. Forest Service employees, both on this forest and from National Forests all over the west, refer to the Shasta-Trinity National Forest as "the Shasta-T"  
  
The Sequoia is one of 18 National Forests in California. It takes its name from the giant sequoia, the world's largest tree, which grow in 38 groves on the forest's lower elevation slopes, the greatest concentration of giant sequoia groves in the world.. Protected within the Giant Sequoia National Monument, these groves and the areas around them are managed by the U.S. Forest Service for today and for future generations.  The Sequoia's landscape is as spectacular as its trees. Soaring granite monoliths, glacier-carved canyons, roaring whitewater, and more await your discovery at the Sierra Nevada's southern end. Elevations range from 1,000 feet in the foothill region to peaks over 12,000 feet in the rugged high country, providing visitors with some of the most spectacular views of mountainous landscape in the entire west.  
+
The more westerly section of the forest (formerly the Trinity National Forest) is located in the eastern portions of the California Coast Ranges, with an area of 1,043,677 acres. The more easterly part of the forest (formerly the Shasta National Forest) section is located between California's Central Valley and the Shasta Valley to the north, with an area of 1,166,155 acres. This is a total of 2.1 million acres with over 6,278 miles of streams and rivers ad well as hundreds of lakes. It ranges from 1,000 in elevation (Shasta Lake and its general area) to the spectacular Mt. Shasta with its impressive elevation of 14,162 feet.  The Shasta–Trinity NF lies at the intersection of the eastern Klamath Mountains and the southern Cascades and is largely forested, though at low elevations there are areas of chaparral, woodland, and grassland. At high elevations in the Trinity Alps, Eddys, and Mt. Shasta, forest gives way once again to montane chaparral, subalpine woodlands, and ultimately to alpine rock and scree.  The SHF includes portions of five designated Wilderness Areas: Castle Crags, Chanchellulla, Mount Shasta, Trinity Alps and Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel. The main branch of the Trinity River is a designated Wild and Scenic River which runs through the forest. It is located within the 246,087 acre Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area.
  
The Giant Sequoia (''Sequoiadendron giganteum'') groves are part of this National Forest's 196,000 acres of old growth forests. Tree species in the old growth consist of Jeffrey pine (''Pinus jeffreyi''), Red Fir (''Abies magnifica''), Douglas fir (''Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii''), Ponderosa pine (''Pinus ponderosa''), White fir (''Abies concolor'') and Lodgepole pine (''Pinus contorta'').
+
Congress established the Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity NRA on November 8, 1965. Each of the units encompasses a large reservoir (man made lake) and its surrounding natural features, habitats, and terrain. Whiskeytown NRA, managed by the National Park Service, is comprised of 42,503 acres including the 6,209-foot Shasta Bally (a mountain peak). The U.S. Forest Service manages the 203,587 acre Shasta-Trinity units. Shasta Lake is the largest man-made reservoir in California. When full, the lake has 370 miles of shoreline, which exceeds that of San Francisco Bay. Shasta Lake contains 30,000 surface acres and holds 4,550,000 acre-feet of water. Shasta Lake lies behind Shasta Dam, which is the second largest (after Grand Coulee Dam) and second tallest concrete dam (after Hoover Dam) in the United States. The Shasta Lake area includes three arms: Sacramento, McCloud, and Squaw / Pit. Each is a wonderland of scenic beauty and phenomenal outdoor recreation.
  
The names Sequoia National Forest, Giant Sequoia National Monument, and Sequoia - Kings Canyon National Parks are confusing for people. The National Monument is split in two by Sequoia National Park, the northern portion located on the Hume Lake Ranger District of the Forest, which nearly encloses the Grant Grove Village area of Kings Canyon National Park. The southern portion of the monument is located on the western boundary of the forest just east of the small foothill community of Springville. Who manages which and where, the folks in the grey shirts (NPS) or the people in the khaki shirts (USFS)?  Many people don't know of the difference between the two agencies or that they are actually separate agenciesThere is also the conception that all National Monuments are managed by the National Park Service. Giant Sequoia National Monument is a monument within a forest and administered by the men and women with the khaki shirts.  With all that your scanner hobby has allowed you to be well informed, better than most and certainly not confused.  
+
Trinity Lake, when full, has 145 miles of shoreline, contains 17,000 surface acres and holds 2,500,000 acre-feet of water. Trinity Lake Dam is one of the highest earth filled dams in the worldThe Trinity Lake area can be divided into four subunits: Lewiston lake, Trinity Dam, Stuart Fork, and North Lake areas. .
  
The Forest is divided into the Western Divide (District 2), the Hume Lake (District 3) and the Kern River (District 4) Ranger Districts with the Forest Supervisor's Office in Porterville, on the east side of the Porterville Airport.  
+
The Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area was established to manage the recreation use the lakes attract.  The dams forming these lakes are a part of the greater Central Valley Project, built to provide irrigation water for both the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys.
  
 +
This National Forest contains about 230,136 acres of old growth forest.  The primary tree species include Douglas fir (''Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii''), Tanoak (''Lithocarpus densiflorus''), Pacific madrone (''Arbutus menziesii''), Red fir (''Abies magnifica''), White fir (''Abies concolor''), Ponderosa pine (''Pinus ponderosa'') and Jeffrey pine (''Pinus jeffreyi'').
 +
 +
The forest is divided into management units and Ranger Districts, those being:  the South Fork Management Unit consisting of the Yolla Bolla (District 1) and Hayfork (District 2) Ranger Districts; the Trinity River Management Unit consisting of the Big Bar (District 3) and Weaverville (District 4) Ranger Districts; Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity NRA Management Unit consisting of the Shasta Lake (District 5) Ranger District; and the Shasta-McCloud Management Unit consisting of the Mt. Shasta (District 6) and McCloud (District 7) Ranger Districts. The NRA management unit has an office in the Shasta Lake Ranger Station in Redding and shares office space with the Trinity River unit in the Weaverville Ranger Station. The NRA unit also operates the Shasta Lake Visitor Center located across the street from the Shasta Lake Ranger Station, which is located next to northbound I-5 north of Redding just south of the small community of Mountain Gate.  The Forest Supervisor's Office is located adjacent to the Redding Airport, the Redding Air Attack Base, the home of the Redding Hotshot Crew and the Redding Smoke Jumpers and the Operations Northern California GACC. 
  
  
  
[[File:R5 2014 Sequoia NF RD Map.jpg]]
+
[[File:R5 2014 Shasta Trinity NF Ranger Distict Map.JPG]]
  
  
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==='''RADIO SYSTEM'''===
 
==='''RADIO SYSTEM'''===
  
The Sequoia NF has microwave linked remote base stations at Parkridge Lookout, Jordan Peak Lookout, Sherman Peak, Tobias Peak and Breckenridge MountainAll of these sites have repeaters as well. The forest has a few UHF frequencies assigned to it, but it is not known how they are used.   It has 3 nets, the Emergency Net, the Fire Net and the Admin Net. There are no repeaters on the Admin Net, units use simplex to reach the nearest remote base radio to speak to the Communications Center or a District Ranger StationThe Emergency and Fire Nets can be used in a direct or simplex mode and can be used to reach the Comm Center or a Ranger District Station.  Each of these nets have 13 repeaters. It is unknown how radio traffic is categorized and assigned to each of the repeater nets.   
+
The Shasta-Trinity National Forest radio system is not like any other in Region 5.  There are two nets with repeaters, the Forest Net and the Service NetThe Forest does not have a net called "admin," however, there are 4 management area simplex nets. Local reports are needed to understand how the management area nets are used. For example, is there ever any fire traffic on the management unit nets?  How do field units communicate with each other when they are unable to do so on a management unit net, if at the same time, the Forest Net is saturated with fire traffic?  How is the Service Net used? Other features of the forest's radio system are needed as wellAre repeaters and/or remote bases linked with microwave, UHF or some combination of such? It is also not known how many remote bases exist on the Forest and where they are located.   
  
 
==='''Other'''===
 
==='''Other'''===
  
The unit identifier system for non-fire personnel on the Sequoia National Forest is unknown.  Before the function name, district number, position number system was prescribed the function numbering was as follows: 1 District Ranger and various positions such as assistant District Ranger, PIO and planning, 3 Recreation, 4 Maintenance, 5 Timber Management, 6 Resources, 7 Timber Pre-Sale, 8 Range and Wildlife and 9 AdministrativeThe Central California Communications Center in Porterville, located on the west side of the Porterville Airport, provides dispatch services for the Sequoia National Forest; the Bakersfield, Hollister and Mother Lode Field Offices of the Central California District of the BLM; and the Tule Indian Reservation Fire DepartmentBLM units have a 4 digit identifier that begins with a 3 (California), followed by a 1 (Central California District), followed by the type of apparatus or person; 0 for chiefs, division chiefs, 1 for battalion chiefs, 3 for Type III engines, 4 for Type VI engines, 5 for prevention and misc., 8 for dozers and 9 for water tenders. Tule Indian Reservation Fire Department units have a 2 digit format with the first digit being 9, except for a Type III engine, Engine 392.  The identifier for the Center is "Porterville.
+
Non fire personnel are assigned identifiers using the '''district number''', function number and position number system.  Redding Interagency Command Center provides dispatch services for the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, Whiskeytown National Recreation Area and CAL FIRE Shasta-Trinity UnitIt is located the the Cal Fire unit headquarters in Redding.
  
  
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{| border="4" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 2px #777777 solid; border-collapse: collapse;" class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| border="4" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 2px #777777 solid; border-collapse: collapse;" class="wikitable sortable"
|+ style="font-size: larger" | '''Sequoia National Forest Channel Lineup'''
+
|+ style="font-size: larger" | '''Shasta-Trinity National Forests Channel Lineup'''
 
|'''Channel '''||'''Tone(s) '''||'''Rx '''||'''Tx '''||'''Alpha Tag '''||'''Description '''
 
|'''Channel '''||'''Tone(s) '''||'''Rx '''||'''Tx '''||'''Alpha Tag '''||'''Description '''
 
|-
 
|-
 +
|1||||171.5750||171.5750||SHF1 Frst Dir||Shasta-Trinity NF Forest Net Direct
 
|-
 
|-
|1||8||168.6750||168.6750||SQF F1||Emergency Net Direct
+
|2||1-15||171.5750||169.1000||SHF2 Frst Rpt||Shasta-Trinity NF Forest Net Repeater
 
|-
 
|-
|2||1-14||168.6750||170.5750||SQF F2||Emergency Repeater Net
+
|3||7||167.2250||167.2250||SHF3 S Fork||Shasta-Trinity NF - South Fork Management Unit
 
|-
 
|-
|3||8||168.7750||168.7750||SQF F3||Fire Net Direct
+
|4||7||168.9625||168.9625||SHF4 T Riv||Shasta-Trinity NF - Trinity River Management Unit
 
|-
 
|-
|4||1-14||168.7750||170.6000||SQF F4||Fire Repeater Net
+
|5||7||166.9875||166.9875||SHF5 ShstMcC||Shasta-Trinity NF - Shasta McLoud Management Unit
 
|-
 
|-
|5||8||168.1750||168.1750||SQF F5||Admin Net Direct
+
|6||7||167.7250||167.7250||SHF6 NRA||Shasta-Trinity NF - National Recreation Area
 
|-
 
|-
|6||||169.7250||169.7250||SQF F6||BLM Central CA District Admin Net Direct
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|7||1||154.3400||154.3400||SHF7 Med-A||Med-Alph (Old Medical Net)
 
|-
 
|-
|7||4,5,8||169.7250||165.4500||SQF F7||BLM Central CA District Admin Repeater
+
|8||6||156.0750||156.0750||SHF8 Clcd||Calcord Tone 6 Rx and Tx Sides
 
|-
 
|-
|8||||169.7750||169.7750||SQF F8||BLM Central CA District Fire Net Direct
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|9||||171.5000||171.5000||SHF9 Svc Dir||Shasta-Trinity NF Service Net Direct
 
|-
 
|-
|9||2-8||169.7750||163.0250||SQF F9||BLM Central CA District Fire Repeater Net
+
|10||1,4,6,12||171.5000||164.8250||SHF10 Svc Rpt||Shasta-Trinity NF Service Net Repeater
 
|-
 
|-
 
+
|11||||168.0500||168.050||SHF11 NIFC T1||NIFC Tac 1
|}
 
 
 
 
 
==='''Channel Plan Upcoming Changes'''===
 
 
 
{| border="4" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 2px #777777 solid; border-collapse: collapse;" class="wikitable sortable"
 
|+ style="font-size: larger" | '''Sequoia National Forest Channel Lineup'''
 
|'''Channel '''||'''Tone(s) '''||'''Rx '''||'''Tx '''||'''Alpha Tag '''||'''Description '''
 
|-
 
|-
 
|1||8||169.9000||169.9000||SQF F1||Emergency Net Direct (Changing Fall 2016)
 
|-
 
|2||1-14||169.9000||166.0000||SQF F2||Emergency Repeater Net (Changing Fall 2016)
 
 
|-
 
|-
|3||8||170.5500||170.5500||SQF F3||Fire Net Direct (Changing in 2017)
+
|12||||168.2000||168.2000||SHF12 NIFC T2||NIFC Tac 2
 
|-
 
|-
|4||1-14||170.5500||165.7000||SQF F4||Fire Repeater Net (Changing in 2017)
+
|13||||168.6000||168.6000||SHF13 NIFC T3||NIFC Tac 3
|-
 
|5||8||168.9625||168.9625||SQF F5||Admin Net Direct (Changing Fall 2015)
 
|-
 
|?||?||172.4000||164.1250||SQF F?||Service Net Repeat (Changing Fall 2015)
 
 
|-
 
|-
 +
|14||||167.6000||167.6000||A/G43 CA1 P||National Air-Ground 43 CA Zone 1 Primary
  
 
|}
 
|}
 +
 +
Tone 7 must be used on Channels 3-6 to transmit to any District Office on these frequencies.
  
 
==='''Tones'''===
 
==='''Tones'''===
  
Tone transmitted on repeater output frequency not available.
+
Information about the tones transmitted on the output frequency is unavailable.
  
 
{| border="4" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 2px #777777 solid; border-collapse: collapse; float;"
 
{| border="4" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 2px #777777 solid; border-collapse: collapse; float;"
|+ style="font-size: larger; font-weight: bold;" |SQF Repeaters
+
|+ style="font-size: larger; font-weight: bold;" |SHF Repeaters
 
!Tone
 
!Tone
 
!Location
 
!Location
 
!CTCSS Tone
 
!CTCSS Tone
 
|-
 
|-
|1
+
|1||Bonanza King||110.9
|Delilah Lookout
+
|-
|110.9
+
|2||Hogback||123.0
 
|-
 
|-
|2
+
|3||Grizzly Peak||131.8
|Buckrock Lookout
 
|123.0
 
 
|-
 
|-
|3
+
|4||Hayfork Bally||136.5
|Mule Peak Lookout
 
|131.8
 
 
|-
 
|-
|4
+
|5||Ironsides||146.2
|Baker Point
 
|136.5
 
 
|-
 
|-
|5
+
|6||Grey Butte||156.7
|Oakflat
 
|146.2
 
 
|-
 
|-
|6
+
|7||Bully Choop||167.9
|Piute BM
 
|156.7
 
 
|-
 
|-
|7
+
|8||Pickett Peak||103.5
|Chimney Peak
 
|167.9
 
 
|-
 
|-
|8
+
|9||Oregon Mtn.||100.0
|Jordan Peak Lookout
 
|103.5
 
 
|-
 
|-
|9
+
|10||Sugarloaf||107.2
|Sherman Peak
 
|100.0
 
 
|-
 
|-
|10
+
|11||Plummer Peak||114.8
|Tobias Peak
 
|107.2
 
 
|-
 
|-
|11
+
|12||McFarland||127.3
|Breckenridge
 
|114.8
 
 
|-
 
|-
|12
+
|13||Bass||141.3
|Parkridge
 
|127.3
 
 
|-
 
|-
|13
+
|14||Tomhead||151.4
|Converse
 
|141.3
 
 
|-
 
|-
|14
+
|15||Antelope||162.2
|Olancha
 
|151.4
 
  
 
|}
 
|}
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{{USFSinCA}}
 
{{USFSinCA}}
  
 +
[[Category:California Fire Services]]
 +
[[Category:California Fire Services Frequencies]]
 +
[[Category:California Fire Services Aviation]]
 +
[[Category:California Fire Services Aviation Frequencies]]
 +
[[Category:California Medical]]
 +
[[Category:California Medical Frequencies]]
 
[[Category:California Recreation or Attractions]]
 
[[Category:California Recreation or Attractions]]
 
[[Category:California Recreation or Attractions Frequencies]]
 
[[Category:California Recreation or Attractions Frequencies]]
 
[[Category:US Forest Service in California]]
 
[[Category:US Forest Service in California]]
 
[[Category:US Forest Service Frequencies in California]]
 
[[Category:US Forest Service Frequencies in California]]

Revision as of 19:24, 29 June 2016

(From: US Forest Service - Shasta-Trinity National Forests (CA) )

US Forests in California:

Angeles Inyo Lassen Modoc Sequoia Six Rivers
Cleveland Klamath Los Padres Plumas Shasta-Trinity Stanislaus
Eldorado Lake Tahoe BMU Mendocino San Bernardino Sierra Tahoe


Shasta-Trinity National Forests (SHF - Forest #14) "Redding" KME 2-5

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest, the largest of the 18 National Forests in California, was established by President Theodore Roosevelt’s proclamation of 1905. Initially, there were two forests; the Trinity National Forest (headquartered in Weaverville) and the Shasta National Forest (headquartered in Mt. Shasta City). The two forests were administratively combined into one in 1954. Forest Service employees, both on this forest and from National Forests all over the west, refer to the Shasta-Trinity National Forest as "the Shasta-T"

The more westerly section of the forest (formerly the Trinity National Forest) is located in the eastern portions of the California Coast Ranges, with an area of 1,043,677 acres. The more easterly part of the forest (formerly the Shasta National Forest) section is located between California's Central Valley and the Shasta Valley to the north, with an area of 1,166,155 acres. This is a total of 2.1 million acres with over 6,278 miles of streams and rivers ad well as hundreds of lakes. It ranges from 1,000 in elevation (Shasta Lake and its general area) to the spectacular Mt. Shasta with its impressive elevation of 14,162 feet. The Shasta–Trinity NF lies at the intersection of the eastern Klamath Mountains and the southern Cascades and is largely forested, though at low elevations there are areas of chaparral, woodland, and grassland. At high elevations in the Trinity Alps, Eddys, and Mt. Shasta, forest gives way once again to montane chaparral, subalpine woodlands, and ultimately to alpine rock and scree. The SHF includes portions of five designated Wilderness Areas: Castle Crags, Chanchellulla, Mount Shasta, Trinity Alps and Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel. The main branch of the Trinity River is a designated Wild and Scenic River which runs through the forest. It is located within the 246,087 acre Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area.

Congress established the Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity NRA on November 8, 1965. Each of the units encompasses a large reservoir (man made lake) and its surrounding natural features, habitats, and terrain. Whiskeytown NRA, managed by the National Park Service, is comprised of 42,503 acres including the 6,209-foot Shasta Bally (a mountain peak). The U.S. Forest Service manages the 203,587 acre Shasta-Trinity units. Shasta Lake is the largest man-made reservoir in California. When full, the lake has 370 miles of shoreline, which exceeds that of San Francisco Bay. Shasta Lake contains 30,000 surface acres and holds 4,550,000 acre-feet of water. Shasta Lake lies behind Shasta Dam, which is the second largest (after Grand Coulee Dam) and second tallest concrete dam (after Hoover Dam) in the United States. The Shasta Lake area includes three arms: Sacramento, McCloud, and Squaw / Pit. Each is a wonderland of scenic beauty and phenomenal outdoor recreation.

Trinity Lake, when full, has 145 miles of shoreline, contains 17,000 surface acres and holds 2,500,000 acre-feet of water. Trinity Lake Dam is one of the highest earth filled dams in the world. The Trinity Lake area can be divided into four subunits: Lewiston lake, Trinity Dam, Stuart Fork, and North Lake areas. .

The Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area was established to manage the recreation use the lakes attract. The dams forming these lakes are a part of the greater Central Valley Project, built to provide irrigation water for both the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys.

This National Forest contains about 230,136 acres of old growth forest. The primary tree species include Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii), Tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflorus), Pacific madrone (Arbutus menziesii), Red fir (Abies magnifica), White fir (Abies concolor), Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) and Jeffrey pine (Pinus jeffreyi).

The forest is divided into management units and Ranger Districts, those being: the South Fork Management Unit consisting of the Yolla Bolla (District 1) and Hayfork (District 2) Ranger Districts; the Trinity River Management Unit consisting of the Big Bar (District 3) and Weaverville (District 4) Ranger Districts; Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity NRA Management Unit consisting of the Shasta Lake (District 5) Ranger District; and the Shasta-McCloud Management Unit consisting of the Mt. Shasta (District 6) and McCloud (District 7) Ranger Districts. The NRA management unit has an office in the Shasta Lake Ranger Station in Redding and shares office space with the Trinity River unit in the Weaverville Ranger Station. The NRA unit also operates the Shasta Lake Visitor Center located across the street from the Shasta Lake Ranger Station, which is located next to northbound I-5 north of Redding just south of the small community of Mountain Gate. The Forest Supervisor's Office is located adjacent to the Redding Airport, the Redding Air Attack Base, the home of the Redding Hotshot Crew and the Redding Smoke Jumpers and the Operations Northern California GACC.


R5 2014 Shasta Trinity NF Ranger Distict Map.JPG



RADIO SYSTEM

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest radio system is not like any other in Region 5. There are two nets with repeaters, the Forest Net and the Service Net. The Forest does not have a net called "admin," however, there are 4 management area simplex nets. Local reports are needed to understand how the management area nets are used. For example, is there ever any fire traffic on the management unit nets? How do field units communicate with each other when they are unable to do so on a management unit net, if at the same time, the Forest Net is saturated with fire traffic? How is the Service Net used? Other features of the forest's radio system are needed as well. Are repeaters and/or remote bases linked with microwave, UHF or some combination of such? It is also not known how many remote bases exist on the Forest and where they are located.

Other

Non fire personnel are assigned identifiers using the district number, function number and position number system. Redding Interagency Command Center provides dispatch services for the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, Whiskeytown National Recreation Area and CAL FIRE Shasta-Trinity Unit. It is located the the Cal Fire unit headquarters in Redding.


Channel Plan

Shasta-Trinity National Forests Channel Lineup
Channel Tone(s) Rx Tx Alpha Tag Description
1 171.5750 171.5750 SHF1 Frst Dir Shasta-Trinity NF Forest Net Direct
2 1-15 171.5750 169.1000 SHF2 Frst Rpt Shasta-Trinity NF Forest Net Repeater
3 7 167.2250 167.2250 SHF3 S Fork Shasta-Trinity NF - South Fork Management Unit
4 7 168.9625 168.9625 SHF4 T Riv Shasta-Trinity NF - Trinity River Management Unit
5 7 166.9875 166.9875 SHF5 ShstMcC Shasta-Trinity NF - Shasta McLoud Management Unit
6 7 167.7250 167.7250 SHF6 NRA Shasta-Trinity NF - National Recreation Area
7 1 154.3400 154.3400 SHF7 Med-A Med-Alph (Old Medical Net)
8 6 156.0750 156.0750 SHF8 Clcd Calcord Tone 6 Rx and Tx Sides
9 171.5000 171.5000 SHF9 Svc Dir Shasta-Trinity NF Service Net Direct
10 1,4,6,12 171.5000 164.8250 SHF10 Svc Rpt Shasta-Trinity NF Service Net Repeater
11 168.0500 168.050 SHF11 NIFC T1 NIFC Tac 1
12 168.2000 168.2000 SHF12 NIFC T2 NIFC Tac 2
13 168.6000 168.6000 SHF13 NIFC T3 NIFC Tac 3
14 167.6000 167.6000 A/G43 CA1 P National Air-Ground 43 CA Zone 1 Primary

Tone 7 must be used on Channels 3-6 to transmit to any District Office on these frequencies.

Tones

Information about the tones transmitted on the output frequency is unavailable.

SHF Repeaters
Tone Location CTCSS Tone
1 Bonanza King 110.9
2 Hogback 123.0
3 Grizzly Peak 131.8
4 Hayfork Bally 136.5
5 Ironsides 146.2
6 Grey Butte 156.7
7 Bully Choop 167.9
8 Pickett Peak 103.5
9 Oregon Mtn. 100.0
10 Sugarloaf 107.2
11 Plummer Peak 114.8
12 McFarland 127.3
13 Bass 141.3
14 Tomhead 151.4
15 Antelope 162.2

Related Links

  • National Incident Radio Support Cache - These frequencies are used for large incidents, usually when a Type I or Type II Incident Management Team is assigned. This cache is used for fires, floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, visits of high ranking officials, such the U.S. President and the presidents of other countries, large law enforcement incidents, special events and other incidents where the federal government is utilizing the Incident Command System.



Return to DB page: United States Forest Service (CA)

US Forests in California:

Angeles Inyo Lassen Modoc Sequoia Six Rivers
Cleveland Klamath Los Padres Plumas Shasta-Trinity Stanislaus
Eldorado Lake Tahoe BMU Mendocino San Bernardino Sierra Tahoe