Southwest Missouri
Mark Twain National Forest land lies in Barry County
Parts of Barry County include federal Mark Twain National Forest land, which follows different access, camping, and use rules than state parks or private property and is managed by a separate federal agency
Some of Barry County’s wooded hills are part of the Mark Twain National Forest. This is Missouri’s national forest, and it is run by the USDA Forest Service. National forest land is not the same as a state park or a conservation area. It has its own rules for camping, fires, motor vehicles, and hunting. These rules are set by the federal government. They can change from one district to the next, and they can change with current conditions like fire danger.
Here is the useful part for you. Before you plan a hike, a backcountry campsite, or a fire, find out which agency runs that piece of land. (Dispersed camping means camping outside a built campground.) It is easy to mix up federal forest, state park, and private land, and that leads to wrong guesses.
Check with the Forest Service for the right ranger district, current fire rules, and access rules. Do not rely on memory or general lake-area advice.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Barry County. See every local note for the county on its page.