Sykes was accessible, prior to its closure, from the lower Pine Ridge Trail, Terrace Creek and Ventana Camp trails. The strenuous hike hike from the coast requires climbing from the trailhead at to in about. Before the camp was impacted by the heavy rains and resultant flooding during the 2017-18 winter, there were seven campsites along both sides of the Big Sur River, both upstream and downstream from where the trail intersects the river. There was a pit toilet downstream of this intersection.
When the camp site was open, there were three small man-made pools, trapping the flow of a hot spring, carved out of the southern hillside about downstream from where the trail intersects the river. The largest of the hot springs pools, adjacent to the river, was about across and about deep, suitable for about four adults. The temperature was depending on rain. According to the Forest Service, the man-made tubs were illegal impoundments that are inconsistent with the intention of a wilderness experience. The U.S. Forest Service proposed asking rangers or volunteers to remove, and discouraging visitors from rebuilding, the containment structures when they wash out after winter rains. The hot tubs were characterized by the Ventana Wilderness Alliance as "an attractive nuisance" that required an undue amount of time and attention of the U.S.Forest Service and volunteers due to ongoing needs for visitor education, overuse, fire restriction enforcement, and the chronic need to clean-up after careless visitors and pack out hundreds of pounds of trash and abandoned gear. The pools were wiped out by heavy rains during the 2017-18 winter. In January 2020, the Forest Service stated that when the Pine Ridge Trail is reopened, it would not allow the rudimentary hot spring enclosures destroyed by floods to be rebuilt. "The hot tubs are not going to be allowed back," Forest Service spokesperson Lynn Olson stated. The artificial structures violate wilderness ethics and laws that do not permit man-made structures.
Overuse issues
Sykes Camp is within the Ventana Wilderness and alongside the protected Big Sur River. The challenging trail to the camp from the coast has been littered with abandoned backpacks and tents, bras, jackets, food wrappers, water bottles, and toilet paper. The campsite and hot springs were at times very crowded, especially on holidays and weekends. Over 200 people have been counted camping near the river, although there are only seven officially designated campsites designed to host 20 visitors and a single pit toilet. Some visitors report that improperly buried human waste is readily visible. Many visitors to Sykes are unaware that unlike state parks, the wilderness camp site does not provide garbage service. Unprepared for the difficult hike, they abandon trash and gear at Sykes, which encourages others to do the same. Richard Popchak of the Ventana Wilderness Alliance reported that, "The U.S. Forest Service is woefully underfunded and understaffed. In the Monterey Ranger District, they have not employed a Wilderness Ranger since the 1980s."
Closure
The Los Padres Forest and Ventana Wilderness around Sykes Camp were closed during as a result of the Soberanes Fire in June 2017. During a heavy winter storm in 2016–2017, the Pine Ridge Trail to Sykes Camp was severely damaged and completely wiped out in several places. The man-made improvements that captured the hot springs in pools were wiped out as well., the trail was blocked by multiple washouts along creeks and dozens of fallen trees across the path. Reopening the trail requires an environmental assessment and perhaps re-routing the trail. The trail was closed indefinitely. Entering the closed areas can result in a penalty of $5,000 and/or six months in jail. In January, 2020, the Forest Service announced that trail crews were restoring and partially rerouting the Pine Ridge Trail. It might open in the summer of 2020.