Bootheel
Butler County meets the edge of Mark Twain National Forest
Butler County sits where the Bootheel flatlands give way to the Ozark foothills, and federal national forest land nearby is governed by the U.S. Forest Service, not state or county rules.
West and north of Poplar Bluff, the Bootheel starts to feel like the Ozarks.
That is where Mark Twain National Forest becomes part of Butler County’s outdoor map. A national forest is federal land managed by the USDA Forest Service, so rules for camping, trail use, hunting access, and land use do not come from the county courthouse.
The boundary can matter on the ground. Federal land, private land, state land, and county roads can sit close together, and each layer has different rules and contacts.
For a hike, hunt, campsite, or land question near the forest edge, use the Forest Service for current conditions, boundaries, closures, and allowed uses. Use county or state offices for the parts they actually control.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Butler County. See every local note for the county on its page.