3 Best Sights in Southern Oregon, Oregon

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We've compiled the best of the best in Southern Oregon - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Table Rock

Fodor's Choice

This pair of monolithic rock formations rise some 700 to 800 feet above the valley floor. Operated by a partnership between the Bureau of Land Management and the Nature Conservancy, the Table Rock formations and surrounding 4,864 acres of wilderness afford panoramic valley views from their summits, and glorious wildflower viewing and migratory bird-watching in spring. This is one of the best venues in the Rogue Valley for hiking; you can reach Lower Table Rock on a moderately challenging 5½-mile round-trip trail, and Upper Table Rock via a shorter (about 3 miles round-trip), less-steep route. The trailheads to these formations are a couple of miles apart—just follow the road signs from Table Rock Road, north of TouVelle State Park.

The Oregon Vortex and House of Mystery

Between Grants Pass and Medford, there’s a place that seems to defy all the laws of physics—where a ball rolls uphill and a person’s height appears to change as they move. Optical illusion or some strange paranormal activity? That question has made the Oregon Vortex and House of Mystery a popular diversion since the 1930s.

4303 Sardine Creek Left Fork Rd., Gold Hill, OR, 97525, USA
541-855–1543
Sight Details
$22
Closed mid-Dec.–Feb.

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Rogue River–Siskiyou National Forest, Medford

Covering 1.8 million acres, this immense tract of wilderness woodland has fishing, swimming, hiking, and skiing. Motorized vehicles, boats, and equipment—even bicycles—are prohibited in the 113,849-acre Sky Lakes Wilderness, south of Crater Lake National Park. Its highest point is the 9,495-foot Mt. McLoughlin.

3040 Biddle Rd., OR, 97503, USA
541-618–2200
Sight Details
Free, but $5 parking at trailheads
Office closed weekends

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