Ramblings and images of some of the wonderful places we've visited
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Little River Trail to Goshen Prong Trail Junction - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
We started hiking the Little River Trail upstream from Elkmont with the plan to take the Cucumber Gap Trail and Jakes Creek Trail to make a loop hike. However, the river was so enticing we decided to follow it upstream to Goshen Prong Trail before returning along the same route for a 7.4 mile hike. We hiked in mid-March 2016.
Elkmont is an interesting location in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Once a pioneer community, then a logging camp, it became a resort community for the wealthy of East Tennessee to gather away from the summer heat of the Tennessee valley in the early 1900s. When the national park was created in 1934, lifetime leases were created for the cabin owners in Elkmont. In 1952, these were converted into twenty year leases and renewed in 1972. In 1992, the park refused to renew the leases and made plans to remove the Wonderland Hotel and all the cabins. However, the Elkmont Historic District, consisting of the hotel and several cabins, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. This listing gave the structures special status that precluded their demolition. By 2005, the hotel collapsed due to years of minimal or no maintenance by the park service. In 2009, the National Park Service reached an agreement with the Tennessee Historical Commission and other stakeholders to restore the Appalachian Clubhouse and eighteen cabins while removing the remaining structures. While restoration work has been completed on the Appalachian Clubhouse, much of the restoration and demolition work awaits funding. In the interim, many of the structures are demolishing themselves. Signs posted along the Little River Trail warn visitors to stay away from the dilapidated structures near the trail.
The trail begins at a gate near the hiker parking area. The first 0.2 miles is asphalt and the next 0.8 miles is a gravel road. At one mile, boulders have been placed on the trail at a vehicle turnaround. The gravel surface continues for the most part to the Little River Bridge at 2.7 miles. The final mile is a graded dirt and rock single-lane road. The trail climbs about 600 feet in the 3.7 mile distance we hiked for a very gentle grade of about 3%.
Just beyond the Cucumber Gap Trail junction, a portion of the hillside had slid down onto the trail. This has narrowed the trail to little more than a footpath for a hundred feet or so. Large stones have been placed in muddy places to allow rock hopping through this area. Once past the slide area, the trail widens back out to a one lane gravel road.
Due to the proximity to the river, the Little River Trail is one of the most continuously and consistently beautiful trails in the park.
Topographic map with GPS track
Trail elevation profile
One of the Elkmont cabins visible from the trail
Another cabin beside the river
Little River flows over a flat stone and around boulders
Whitewater
The southernmost cabin in Elkmont
More whitewater
Typical trail conditions for the "road" portion of the trail
Boulders fill a section of the river
The old logging railroad route has become an excellent riverside trail
The river swiftly flowing through a narrow section
Another cascade
Several benches have been placed along the trail
Cascade visible from the bench above
Another view of the cascade
Driftwood lodged in a small cascade
Boulders mark the end of the "road" section of the trail
The trail is still in excellent condition beyond the end of the "road"
A series of nearly symmetrical cascades
A closer view of the falling water
The trail takes a straighter path through the valley than the river
The wide, shallow river meanders across the valley
Deep water below the shallow boulder field...
...and a vacant bench create a great place for lunch
Our lunchtime view
Looking upstream toward Sugarland Mountain
Husky Branch Falls
Cucumber Gap Trail junction to right
Trail reduced to a foot path through the slide area above the Cucumber Gap Trail junction
More Little River whitewater
Bridge over Little River
Looking upstream from the bridge
Looking back at the bridge
Riverside view of the bridge
Small waterfall upstream of the bridge
Trail beyond the Little River bridge with Husky Gap Trail junction on left
The trail continues to climb get narrower
The Little River is much smaller this far upstream
Henderson Branch
The trail strays away from the river...
...but quickly returns
Groundhog Branch
Beside the river again
Bridge over Lost Creek
Goshen Prong Trail Junction, our turnaround point
Entry to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is free.
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