Ozarks (Rural)
Mark Twain National Forest land sits within the county
Federal forest land brings different access, use, and ownership rules than state or private land, and it borders private parcels in parts of the county.
Part of Crawford County sits inside the Mark Twain National Forest. A national forest is public land owned by the whole country, not the state. This one is large and spreads across the Missouri Ozarks. The U.S. Forest Service runs it under federal rules. Those rules are not the same as the rules for state parks, conservation areas, or private land. They cover things like camping, riding motor vehicles off-road, and how hunting works. If you own land nearby, your property may sit right next to this public forest. So before you go, find out which agency runs the spot you want to visit. Then check the Forest Service’s own website for current rules, closures, and what you can and cannot do. Do not assume every piece of public land works the same way. When in doubt, call the local Forest Service office to confirm.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Crawford County. See every local note for the county on its page.