Yaa Naa Néx Kootéeyaa (Yah Nah NEX Koo-TEA-Uh), the Healing Totem Pole, stands at the head of the public dock in Bartlett Cove, Glacier Bay National Park. Designed by tribal elders, culture bearers, artists and National Park Service staff, it compresses centuries of history into 20 feet of yellow cedar. It tells the story of the evolving relationship between the National Park Service and the Hoonah Indian Association, the federally recognized tribal government of the Huna Tlingit clans. Mixing traditional form line design and modern artistic representations, it depicts the Huna Tlingit’s tragic migration from Glacier Bay Homeland, a painful period of alienation, and more recent collaborative efforts between the tribe and the NPS. The Healing Totem Pole was specifically designed not only to relate the difficult history between NPS and the Huna Tlingit, but also to relay the history of people working to overcome past hurts and heal.
Friday, September 30, 2022
The Healing Totem Pole - Glacier Bay National Park
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Whale Exhibit - Glacier Bay National Park
View from the rear on the trail from the lodge to the dock |
Mouth and head |
Spine, ribs, and flippers |
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Bartlett Cove Visitor Center - Glacier Bay National Park
Information Desk |
Reference material |
Reading room |
View east from the reading room |
Locked merchandise racks |
Pacific Coast exhibits |
More coastal exhibits |
Glacial carving exhibits |
Icy Strait exhibits |
Lower Bay exhibits |
Upper Bay exhibits |
Muir Inlet exhibits |
Bartlett Cove exhibits |
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Gravel Roads - Cades Cove - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Besides the paved 11-mile scenic loop drive, there are several gravel roads in Cades Cove that also provide scenic views. The roads include two-way Sparks Lane, Hyatt Lane, and Forge Cree Road, as well as one-way roads leaving the park such as Parsons Branch Road and Rich Mountain Road. Here are views from a few of them. We visited Cades Cove in mid-August 2022.
Mill Creek near the Whitehead Place on Forge Creek Road |
View from Hyatt Lane |
Another view from Hyatt Lane |
Methodist Church in Cades Cove from Rich Mountain Road |
Closer view of the Methodist Church |
View of Horseshoe Ridge across Cades Cove |
View of the Foothills mostly outside the park from Rich Mountain Road |
There is no entrance fee at Great Smoky Mountains National Park. However, a parking fee will be levied beginning March 1, 2023. The fee will be $5 for a daily tag, $15 for a seven-day tag, and $40 for an annual tag.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park website is https://www.nps.gov/grsm/index.htm.
Monday, September 26, 2022
Henry Whitehead Place - Cades Cove - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
The Henry Whitehead Place is located on the gravel Forge Creek Road in the Cades Cove area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It currently consists of two cabins and a smokehouse. There once was a barn onsite as well. The surrounding forest was likely row crop and pasture land. A small garden was probably located somewhere near the cabins. The story of the cabins is both a sad and a happy one. The smaller, older, rougher cabin in the rear was hastily built by Dave, George, and Zack Shields in 1881 to provide shelter for their sister Matilda Shields Gregory after her husband, Ebeneezer Gregory, abandoned her and their son. In 1882, Matilda acquired the title to 50 acres of land surrounding her cabin from her brothers. In 1887, she married Henry Whitehead, a local carpenter. Sometime during the period 1895 to 1898, he built the larger story-and-a-half cabin immediately in front of the old cabin utilizing the newest construction techniques including square log walls instead of round logs that required chinking and a brick chimney instead of a stone one. The park is left with examples of the worst and best construction techniques of the day in one compact site.
North |
West |
Another view from the west |
West and south |
Smokehouse |
East |
There is no entrance fee at Great Smoky Mountains National Park. However, a parking fee will be levied beginning March 1, 2023. The fee will be $5 for a daily tag, $15 for a seven-day tag, and $40 for an annual tag.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park website is https://www.nps.gov/grsm/index.htm.
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Cable Mill - Cades Cove - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Cades Cove - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
We returned to Cades Cove, one of our favorite places, again in August 2022. While we didn't see much in the way of wildlife, the scenery didn't disappoint.
There is no entrance fee at Great Smoky Mountains National Park. However, a parking fee will be levied beginning March 1, 2023. The fee will be $5 for a daily tag, $15 for a seven-day tag, and $40 for an annual tag.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park website is https://www.nps.gov/grsm/index.htm.
Friday, September 23, 2022
Clingmans Dome - Great Smoky Mountains National Park
In mid-August 2022, we looked for a cooler hike in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. We found it at Clingmans Dome on the Tennessee-North Carolina border. We drove up the Newfound Gap Road (US 441) from the Sugarlands Visitor Center in Gatlinburg, Tennessee to the state line at Newfound Gap and then drove just a bit farther to the seven-mile Clingmans Dome Road and followed it to its end in a large, but often full parking lot. The parking lot has over 140 passenger-vehicle spaces including six handicap-accessible spaces. There is no parking for motor homes, trailers, or other oversized vehicles.
After finding a place to park, we walked to the trailhead at the west end of the parking lot. This was the only level part of the hike. Upon reaching the trailhead, the paved trail ascends at about a 10% grade. At the summit, a curving ramp leads to a tower that provides an elevated overlook. Unfortunately for us, the tower was mostly in the clouds when we visited. However, we had some good views from the trail.
Ben Morton Overlook on Newfound Gap Road |
View from Newfound Gap Overlook |
Another view from the gap |
View from the Clingmans Dome parking lot toward Fontana Lake |
View from the trail as the clouds roll in |
Typical trail conditions |
Clingmans Dome Tower |
Very limited visibility from the tower |
View just three minutes later |
Clouds begin to obscure this view from the parking lot |
View from Collins Gap pullout on Clingmans Dome Road |
View from another pullout on Clingmans Dome Road |
View from the Luftee Overlook on Newfound Gap Road |