Welcome to the Angeles National Forest

San Gabriel Mountains National Monument! It appears that your browser doesn't support HTML5 video. DIRECT LINK TO MP4 FOR ALTERNATE VIEWING (MP4) Forest Seeks Holding Public Meetings on State OHV Grant Public meetings will be held February 24th at Rowher Flats and San Gabriel OHV areas. The purpose of these meetings is to seek input on what types of CA state OHV grants should be applied for. Categories include Law Enforcement, Ground Operations (trail, road, and cleaning staging areas), Restoration, Development, Acquisitions, Education, and Planning. Grant requests are sent to state officials to help manage some of the only local off-highway vehicle areas located in the Angeles National Forest, San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and the Los Angeles basin. OHV Grant Comment Card (PDF) Comments can also be mailed to:

US Forest Service - Acton Work Center

Attn: OHV Grants

33708 Crown Valley Rd, Acton, CA 93510 March 6th - May 6th - Second Comment Period Opens During this period, the forest and state will accept comments on the draft grant application(s) to the state. The draft applications can be found on the state's OHV Grants and Cooperative Agreements Program. Hard copies will be available at our offices in Arcadia, Slymar, and Glendora. Forest Fire Restoration Program The Angeles National Forest is located within one of the driest, most fire-prone areas in the United States – where human-caused wildland fires are becoming larger and more frequent - significantly damaging natural resources as well as important human infrastructure on these invaluable public lands. Not all areas and resources impacted by these fires will recover naturally, so forest managers and partners have launched a number of restoration efforts intended to produce ecosystems that are able to adapt and thrive over time. Projects located within the areas burned by the Copper Fire (2002), Ranch Fire (2007), and Sayre Fire (2008) focus on forest or upland vegetation and stream or riparian ecosystem restoration, sensitive wildlife species management, infrastructure improvements, and other beneficial projects. Learn more about these fire restoration projects by viewing a Story Map.